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Holy Trinity has chosen Pentecost Sunday, also known as Trinity Day, the name day
of our parish, as a day to honor its members both deceased and living. The parish is blessed by many extraordinary people
who work tirelessly on its behalf and on behalf of others. We will be having a special awards ceremony at the close of the vespers service around 12 noon to honor several individuals.
Metropolitan Herman will be visiting our church and
will personally present these special recognitions. We are honored to have him with us on this special day. After the awards presentation, a banquet will be held in the educational building on the church
grounds. All are welcome. Tickets are available by calling the rectory at 914 965 6815. Adults are $20 and children are free.
Schedule of Events:
9:45 am - Procession 10:00am - Hierarchal Liturgy and Vespers 12:00noon - Awards 1:00pm -
Banquet in the Educational Building
Reservations call 914 965 6815 - Adults $20, Children
FREE
What is Pentecost (Trinity Day)?
In
the Old Testament Pentecost was the feast which occurred fifty days after Passover. As the passover feast celebrated the exodus
of the Israelites from the slavery of Egypt, so Pentecost celebrated God's gift of the ten commandments to Moses on Mount
Sinai.
In the new covenant of the Messiah, the passover event takes on its
new meaning as the celebration of Christ's death and resurrection, the "exodus" of men from this sinful world
to the Kingdom of God. And in the New Testament as well, the pentecostal feast is fulfilled and made new by the coming of
the "new law," the descent of the Holy Spirit upon the disciples of Christ. When
the day of Pentecost had come they were all together in one place. And suddenly a sound came from heaven like the rush of
a mighty wind, and it filled all the house where they were sitting. And there appeared to them tongues as of fire, distributed
as resting upon each one of them. And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit ... (Acts 2:1-4). The Holy Spirit that Christ had promised to his disciples came on the day of Pentecost (Jn 14:26, 15:26; Lk 24:49;
Acts 1:5). The apostles received "the power from on high," and they began to preach and bear witness to Jesus as
the risen Christ, the King and the Lord. This moment has traditionally been called the birthday of the Church.
In the liturgical services of the feast of Pentecost, the coming of the
Holy Spirit is celebrated together with the full revelation of the divine Trinity: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. The fulness
of the Godhead is manifested with the Spirit's coming to man, and the Church hymns celebrate this manifestation as the
final act of God's self-disclosure and self-donation to the world of His creation. For this reason Pentecost Sunday is
also called Trinity Day in the Orthodox tradition. Often on this day the icon of the Holy Trinity -- particularly that of
the three angelic figures who appeared to Abraham, the forefather of the Christian faith - is placed in the center of the
church. This icon is used with the traditional pentecostal icon which shows the tongues of fire hovering over Mary and the
Twelve Apostles, the original prototype of the Church, who are themselves sitting in unity surrounding a symbolic image of
"cosmos," the world.
On Pentecost we have the final fulfillment
of the mission of Jesus Christ and the first beginning of the messianic age of the Kingdom of God mystically present in this
world in the Church of the Messiah. For this reason the fiftieth day stands as the beginning of the era which is beyond the
limitations of this world, fifty being that number which stands for eternal and heavenly fulfillment in Jewish and Christian
mystical piety: seven times seven, plus one.
Thus, Pentecost is called an
apocalyptic day, which means the day of final revelation. It is also called an eschatological day, which means the day of
the final and perfect end (in Greek eschaton> means the end). For when the Messiah comes and the Lord's Day is at hand,
the "last days" are inaugurated in which "God declares: ... I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh."
This is the ancient prophecy to which the Apostle Peter refers in the first sermon of the Christian Church which was preached
on the first Sunday of Pentecost (Acts 2: 1 7; Joel 2: 28-32).
Once again
it must be noted that the feast of Pentecost is not simply the celebration of an event which took place centuries ago. It
is the celebration of what must happen and does happen to us in the Church today. We all have died and risen with the Messiah-King,
and we all have received his Most Holy Spirit. We are the "temples of the Holy Spirit." God's Spirit dwells
in us (Rom 8; 1 Cor 2-3, 12; 2 Cor 3; Gal 5; Eph 2-3). We, by our own membership in the Church, have received "the seal
of the gift of the Holy Spirit" in the sacrament of chrismation. Pentecost has happened to us.
The Divine Liturgy of Pentecost recalls our baptism into Christ with the verse from Galatians again
replacing the Thrice-Holy Hymn. Special verses from the psalms also replace the usual antiphonal psalms of the liturgy. The
epistle and gospel readings tell of the Spirit's coming to men. The kontakion sings of the reversal of Babel as God unites
the nations into the unity of his Spirit. The troparion proclaims the gathering of the whole universe into God's net through
the work of the inspired apostles. The hymns 0 Heavenly King and We have seen the True Light are sung for the first time since
Easter, calling the Holy Spirit to "come and abide in us", and proclaiming that "we have received the heavenly
Spirit." The church building is decorated with flowers and the green leaves of the summer to show that God's divine
Breath comes to renew all creation as the "lifeÄcreating Spirit." In Hebrew the word for Spirit, breath and
wind is the same word, ruah. Blessed art Thou, O Christ our God, who hast revealed
the fishermen as most wise by sending down upon them the Holy Spirit: through them Thou didst draw the world into Thy net.
0 Lover of Man, Glory to Thee (Troparion).
When the Most High came down and
confused the tongues, he divided the nations. But when he distributed the tongues of fire, he called all to unity. Therefore,
with one voice, we glorify the All-Holy Spirit! (Kontakion) The Great Vespers of
Pentecost evening features three long prayers at which the faithful kneel for the first time since Easter. The Monday after
Pentecost is the feast of the Holy Spirit in the Orthodox Church, and the Sunday after Pentecost is the feast of All Saints.
This is the logical liturgical sequence since the coming of the Holy Spirit is fulfilled in men by their becoming saints,
and this is the very purpose of the creation and salvation of the world. "Thus says the Lord: Consecrate yourselves therefore,
and be holy, for I your God am holy" (Lev 11:44-45, 1 Pet 1:15-16).
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