Posted on 01/05/2006 3:20:08 PM PST by DocRock
CLEARWATER - For its 100th anniversary, the Tarpon Springs annual Epiphany Day celebration is going international.
And it's doing so in a big way.
His All Holiness Bartholomew, the ecumenical patriarch of all Eastern Orthodox churches, will travel from Istanbul, Turkey. High-ranking Orthodox clergy from around the world are expected to attend, as well as ambassadors to the United States from Greece, Turkey, Russia and Cyprus, representatives of the U.S. Senate and House and, possibly, the White House, said Bill Planes, chairman of the Patriarchal Centennial Visitation Committee.
And when 53 teens, most of Greek descent, dive into the waters of Spring Bayou to retrieve a cross thrown in celebration of Orthodox Epiphany, the baptism of Jesus Christ, much of the world will be watching.
The event, beginning with morning services at St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Cathedral, will be televised live.
"We expect to reach 177 countries, with 360 to 400 million viewers," Planes said.
Numerous changes have been made to accommodate the thousands of additional spectators expected to attend. Some are intended to allay residents' concerns about the influx of visitors, Planes said.
The Epiphany Glendi, or "happy party," which begins after the cross retrieval and runs until midnight Friday and from noon until midnight Saturday, has been moved from Craig Park to the Sponge Docks, where streets will be closed off and Greek dining and other cultural offerings will abound.
To maximize the number of people who can attend the Liturgy that precedes the diving for the cross, an open square on the north side of St. Nicholas Cathedral will be enclosed with tenting, and it, along with the community hall on the cathedral's south side, will be turned into an extension of the cathedral. That will allow about 1,000 to participate, three times the cathedral's normal capacity, Planes said.
The usual seats in the sanctuary will be reserved for the Yiayia Des, the widows and grandmothers who never miss a service, he said.
Also, there will be big-screen televisions set up at the cathedral and at Spring Bayou so the crowd waiting to see the cross divers can watch the Liturgy and those who attend the Liturgy can see the cross dive, a first for Epiphany Day.
"I think it is going to be more inclusive and less exclusive," said Planes, an archon of the Order of St. Andrew, who nonetheless acknowledged that, with just 12 years of membership at St. Nicholas, "I'm probably a baby to the community."
The Epiphany Day celebration has come a long way from the first Dive for the Cross in 1906. That was organized by a handful of sponge divers who emigrated from Greece the year before.
In the early celebrations, divers who retrieved the cross were allowed to dive again in ensuing years. That practice ended in the 1930s, after Ierotheos Athanasiou, who had retrieved the cross for three years in a row in the mid-1920s, retrieved it a fourth time.
The original crosses were made of gold, but several were lost or broken during the dive, prompting a switch to weighted wooden crosses in the 1960s.
All divers receive a special blessing, and the diver who retrieves the cross receives an additional blessing that is said to stay with him throughout the year. The cross retriever also receives a gold cross necklace and a trophy.
In 2000, an emphasis on the spiritual side of the dive was reinforced at the direction of the Rev. Tryfon Theophilopoulos, who died in 2004 after serving as dean at St. Nicholas for 30 years.
The previous year, two former cross retrievers were charged with attempted second-degree murder after a road rage incident left two Tampa men seriously injured.
Now, in addition to being Orthodox Christians in good standing, cross dive participants, ages 16 to 18, must attend church and go to confession on a regular basis and take two special seminars. The youths must apply for the honor of diving and are selected by a church committee.
Epiphany Day begins early with prayer services at St. Nicholas Cathedral. It is considered the oldest and largest such celebration in the United States and is designated as the official rite for the Western Hemisphere.
After a procession from the cathedral, a dove symbolizing the Holy Spirit is released. The dove bearer is a teenage girl selected at the Christmas Day service. The 2006 Dove Bearer is Kaliope Hatzileris.
Greek ping list---thanks Kolokotronis!
I Sincerely thank you for posting this...it brings back warm memories of my childhood and Tarpon Springs.
Merry Xmas to all Orthodox Christians.
No, the Greek Church adopted the Gregorian Calendar sometime in the 1920's along with some of the other Orthodox Churches. The Russian and Serbian Orthodox Churches rejected the move, as did the Jerusalem Patriarchate and many of the Mount Athos monasteries.
The previous year, two former cross retrievers were charged with attempted second-degree murder after a road rage incident left two Tampa men seriously injured. ....
Is this for real????? And you think us Brits are eccentric!
I haven't been to Tarpon Springs in 40 years, do they still sponge dive?
God Bless the Greek Orthodox Church and their Faithful.
Thanks for posting this. I was able to bring my class over to the computer room to watch the cross-diving live. Pretty cool!
Oh, yes, they still sponge dive- the major sponge market seems to be the tourist trap shops all along the docks! Tarpon is a fun place to visit, no doubt. :)
Thanks for the ping eleni121 and I can't wait to see the pictures doc!
Although, my Pastor was raised a Baptist in So. Carolina - where Baptist is pronounced BapdTidst. He read himself into the church while studying at UChicago.
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