With new leadership for the Department of Religious Education comes a new initiative. The Department of Religious Education of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America is pleased to announce the launch of the Sunday Sermon Series.
Starting today, an easy-to-download sermon based on the upcoming Sunday Gospel will be available online. Every week a new sermon will be released until the Sunday Sermon Series accessible database has one for every Sunday of the ecclesiastical year. The Series will include both the Gospel readings and insights and analyses about them. They will provide inspirational material for sermons for clergy, as well as catechetical material for educators of Sunday School, Adult Education, and Bible Study. The Sunday Sermon Series can be easily accessed on the Department of Religious Education website or by simply subscribing to the Religious Educators email list, both at: religioused.goarch.org. The Series will also be posted weekly on the Department’s new social media accounts — Instagram, Twitter, Facebook: @goarchDRE — so follow to stay up-to-date. The Sunday Sermon Series logo is a golden color in honor of Saint John Chrysostom. The epithet Χρυσόστομος (Chrysostom) means "golden-mouthed" in Greek and denotes his renowned eloquence as a preacher. www.goarch.org/departments/religioused/sermons This September 11th, Saint Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church and National Shrine will join the Nation and the world to observe the Twentieth Anniversary of the tragic day we call 9/11. On September 10, as the sun sets, the rebuilt Saint Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church and National Shrine will be illuminated from within for the very first time. Join us here and in spirit, as we behold light overcoming darkness, and honor the lives lost and remember the sacrifice of the heroes of 9/11.
A discussion with Dr. Fiona Greenland about returning the Parthenon Marbles to Greece. As the Greeks began their war of independence from the Ottoman Empire 200 years ago, they sought to preserve the artifacts of their historical legacy from the ravages of battle. However, many of Greece’s cultural antiquities remain outside of her borders. In particular, marble sculptures from the Parthenon, known as the Parthenon Marbles, are still housed in the British Museum to this day. With the construction of the New Acropolis Museum, pressure is mounting to return the marbles back to Greece.
The Hellenic Bar Association of Michigan is excited to invite Dr. Fiona Greenland to discuss the story of the Parthenon Marbles. Fiona Greenland is Assistant Professor of Sociology and Assistant Professor of Anthropology (by courtesy) at the University of Virginia. She studies cultural policy and the politics of national heritage. Her book, Ruling Culture: Art Police, Tomb Robbers, and the Rise of Cultural Power in Italy, will be published by the University of Chicago Press in 2021. It situates the emergence of national symbols and icons in Italy’s longer historical entanglements of cultural elites, state officials, and tombaroli, or tomb robbers. Her new work examines the relationship between cultural destruction and civilian deaths in the Syrian war. Greenland’s work has been published in Sociological Theory, Qualitative Sociology, Nations and Nationalism, and the International Journal of Cultural Property, among other outlets. She was a classical archaeologist for 10 years before training as a sociologist. As we celebrate the bicentennial of Greece’s fight for independence, please join us to hear how Greece is now fighting to bring its history home. Click this link for more information and to join the discussion: www.eventbrite.com/e/bringing-history-home-returning-the-parthenon-marbles-to-athens-tickets-14993085020 The Los Angeles Greek Film Festival, LAGFF, a festival showcasing films from Greece, Cyprus, and filmmakers of Greek heritage from around the world, will be online and on-demand this year taking place from May 10 - 30, 2021. The 15th LAGFF will proudly present, the exclusive Official Premiere screenings, of Man of God, a film depicting the trials and tribulations of Greek Orthodox Saint Nektarios of Aegina, as he bears the unjust hatred of people while preaching the Word of God. Click the link below for more information.
Showings: On May 22rd Saturday at 7:00 pm PST, and May 23rd Sunday at 6:00 pm PST, Click her for more info and tickets. |
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Church Address
Saint Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church
3109 Scio Church Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48103
Phone: (734) 332-8200
Fax: (734) 332-8201
NEW MAILING ADDRESS
St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church
P.O. Box 1033
Ann Arbor, MI 48106