Posted on 09/08/2007 7:45:49 PM PDT by annalex
Holy relics of saints Joachim and Anna will be given to St. Anna Greek Orthodox Church in a ceremony Saturday in Sacramento, CA.
Relics in the possession of the Roman Catholic Church for more than 1,100 years will be officially handed over to a Roseville Greek Orthodox Church this weekend.
(Excerpt) Read more at sacbee.com ...
Holy relics of saints Joachim and Anna will be given to St. Anna Greek Orthodox Church in a ceremony Saturday.
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Courtesy The holy relics of saints Joachim and Anna, the parents of Mary, the mother of Jesus, will be displayed during services throughout this weekend that are open to the public. |
Though it has been nearly 1,000 years since the early Christian Church split into Eastern and Western doctrines, this weekend will witness a coming together of the Catholic and Orthodox Christian faithful of the Sacramento and Roseville area.
A series of celebrations begin today to acknowledge the arrival of the holy relics of saints Joachim and Anna in America, which were originally gifted to an Orthodox monastery in Greece by Cardinal Joachim Meisner, Archbishop of Cologne, Germany, in 1997.
The celebrations will be attended by Bishop William Keith Weigand of the Catholic Diocese of Sacramento and Metropolitan Gerasimos of the Greek Orthodox Metropolis of San Francisco.
A Service of Thanksgiving will take place at 7:30 p.m. today at the Catholic Cathedral of the Blessed Sacrament, located at 1017 11th St. in Sacramento.
A Service of the Supplication will be take place at 5 p.m. Sunday at Saint Anna Greek Orthodox Church, located at 1001 Stone Canyon Drive in Roseville.
The holy relics of saints Joachim and Anna, the parents of Mary, the mother of Jesus, will be brought forth for veneration following both services.
The parish of Saint Anna will be distinguished by the Metropolitan as a Shrine of the Orthodox Church, designated to the sanctity of marriage and family, the first of its kind in the world.
A reception will follow. All are invited to attend.
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Catholic/Orthodox Caucus?
4. And, behold, an angel of the Lord stood by, saying: Anna, Anna, the Lord hath heard thy prayer, and thou shalt conceive, and shall bring forth; and thy seed shall be spoken of in all the world. And Anna said: As the Lord my God liveth, if I beget either male or female, I will bring it as a gift to the Lord my God; and it shall minister to Him in holy things all the days of its life. And, behold, two angels came, saying to her: Behold, Joachim thy husband is coming with his flocks. For an angel of the Lord went down to him, saying: Joachim, Joachim, the Lord God hath heard thy prayer Go down hence; for, behold, thy wife Anna shall conceive. And Joachim went down and called his shepherds, saying: Bring me hither ten she-lambs without spot or blemish, and they shall be for the Lord my God; and bring me twelve tender calves, and they shall be for the priests and the elders; and a hundred goats for all the people. And, behold, Joachim came with his flocks; and Anna stood by the gate, and saw Joachim coming, and she ran anti hung upon his neck, saying: Now I know that the Lord God hath blessed me exceedingly; for, behold the widow no longer a widow, and I the childless shall conceive. And Joachim rested the first day in his house.
I want to see what happens outside of it. Perhaps, people have questions.
In the last fresco of the upper register the composition is concentrated on the encounter between Joachim and Anne: Joachim is accompanied by a shepherd, who is partly cut off in the fresco. On the one hand, Giotto uses this completely new device in painting to create the impression that the succession of pictures, intersected by the framework, would unfold before our eyes in one continuous procession. On the other hand, a figure cut short in such a manner increases the dynamics within the picture field and makes us focus on the action at its centre.
Even the verticals of the architecture and the golden arch of the city gate respectively illustrate and mirror the way the couple lean towards one another. The two meet on a bridge, on the border between the outside world and the security of the city. They embrace with great tenderness and kiss one another. The way in which the volumes of the figures fuse underlines the tenderness of the moment, in which the faces also melt, as it were, into one another.
The story of Mary's parents begins with a painful rejection and concludes with this intense encounter. The sensitive portrayal of their meeting already contains the germ for the start of the next narrative, which commences with the Birth of the Virgin Mary and which leads to the youth of Christ by way of the Bridal Procession of the Virgin.
(Source)
Apolytikion in the Second Tone
As we celebrate the memory of Thy righteous ancestors, O Lord, through them we beseech Thee to save our souls.
Kontakion in the Second Tone
Now Anna is glad, for from the bonds of barrenness hath she been released; and nourishing the all-pure one, she doth summon all together, that they might praise Him Who from her womb hath bestowed upon mortal men the only pure Mother who hath not known man.
Would love to witness this! St. Ann is the patron saint of our parish.
And we’re still waiting to get some of our churches back in Ukraine aren’t we?
Don’t start. The only ones that are ‘yours’ are the ones you build after the Unia. Do we get back all of the ones that were ours when the Unia was formed, and taken from us by the Principality of Poland?
It was a beautiful gesture don’t ruin it. (Though I must confess I’ve been surprised at the waning of the cult of relics in the Latin church. Our local bishop has been given relics fairly regularly by Latin churches that don’t want, not as a public gesture of unity or good will, but just because some Latin diocesan doesn’t know what to do with them any more. And yes, it matters: the cult of relics is an affirmation of classical Christian anthropology and the doctrine of the General Resurrection. Should it die out in the Latin church that would be a new impediment to reunion.)
I would too! St. Anna is my 9y.o. daughter’s most beloved Saint. At least I live in SoCal which puts the church just within reach.
Our Maronite Church will gladly accept them :-). Which RC diocese are you in?
You wrote:
“Dont start. The only ones that are yours are the ones you build after the Unia. Do we get back all of the ones that were ours when the Unia was formed, and taken from us by the Principality of Poland?”
1) Those built before Brest remained in the hands of their own bishops. The bishops reconciled with the Church. You might be able to make a case that the buildings belong to the Russian or Ukrainian orthodox who did not reconcile. But only maybe.
2) Whatever was done by Poland is not my problem since I am not Polish, neither is the Church.
“It was a beautiful gesture dont ruin it.”
Let’s do better than “not ruining it”. Let’s see the Orthodox reciprocate? Wouldn’t that be nice? They’ve never done much of ANYTHING yet.
“(Though I must confess Ive been surprised at the waning of the cult of relics in the Latin church. Our local bishop has been given relics fairly regularly by Latin churches that dont want, not as a public gesture of unity or good will, but just because some Latin diocesan doesnt know what to do with them any more.”
Yep, pretty sad. A friend of mine collected relics from a convent that threw them out. The custodian just couldn’t let them go like that. He collected them and gave them to my friend. These are FIRST CLASS relics too. Sad.
“And yes, it matters: the cult of relics is an affirmation of classical Christian anthropology and the doctrine of the General Resurrection. Should it die out in the Latin church that would be a new impediment to reunion.)”
Yes, it would be. It won’t happen, however. It is a logical impossibility.
I’m not sure which RC diocese includes Wichita (the seat of Bishop BASIL of Wichita and Mid-America)—doubtless Wichita—is the relevant question. It could be any of the RC diocese that overlap with his diocese (and there are a fair number, since Wichita and Mid-America is basically all of the US from the Mississippi to the front-range of the Rockys).
I’m not sure which RC diocese includes Wichita (the seat of Bishop BASIL of Wichita and Mid-America)—doubtless Wichita—is the relevant question. It could be any of the RC diocese that overlap with his diocese (and there are a fair number, since Wichita and Mid-America is basically all of the US from the Mississippi to the front-range of the Rockys).
Why don't you write your Pope and see what he has to say on the matter?
You wrote:
“Why don’t you write your Pope and see what he has to say on the matter?”
Oh, he wants the Orthodox to reciprocate too.
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