September 14, 2015
St. Petersburg, FL: Metropolitan Hilarion visits St. Andrew’s Church
and leads Patronal Feast Day
On
Monday, August 31, and Tuesday, September 1, His Eminence Hilarion,
Metropolitan of Eastern America & New York, paid an archpastoral
visit to St. Andrew’s Church in St. Petersburg, FL and led the
divine services on the patronal feast day of the parish, dedicated
to the Holy Martyr Andrew Stratelates. The First Hierarch of the
Russian Church Abroad was co-served by parish rector Archpriest Igor
Chitikov, Deacon Igor Tarasov (parish cleric), Deacon Vladimir
Trushin (cleric of the Mid-American Diocese), and clergy of the
Florida parishes.
The Orthodox community in St. Petersburg, FL was founded in 1948 by
refugees from Russia. In the 1950s-70s, St. Petersburg was a unique
spiritual and cultural center of the first wave of the Russian
emigration. From the 1970s on, Russian émigrés of the second wave
began to fill the parish. The parish began to grow quickly, thanks
primarily to retirees from the northern U.S. and Canada moving to
Florida. In the middle of the 1980s, the church was damaged by a
fire. With time, the Russian community obtained a new church
building, to which the altar table from the old church was
transferred in January 2010, just before the feast of Christ’s
Nativity. This year, the parish reopened its children’s Sunday
school.
Roughly 100 parishioners prayed at the festal Liturgy, many of whom
communed of Christ’s Holy Mysteries. Metropolitan Hilarion addressed
worshippers with a sermon, in which he spoke on the life and
ascetical labors of the Holy Martyr Andrew Stratelates, and called
on the faithful to become better acquainted with the lives of the
saints, who through their struggles give us an example of service to
God, and are a beacon on the path to salvation.
Upon completion of the Liturgy, a procession was held around the
church. The St. Xenia Sisterhood prepared a festal luncheon for the
clergy and parishioners. The parish choir performed a concert,
including Russian and Ukrainian folk songs. This year, in addition
to singing songs, several parishioners, who work as circus artists,
included several numbers from their repertoire.
Their interaction proceeded in an upbeat and familial spirit; the
clergy and parishioners had much to speak about with His Eminence
and with one another. Many of those present noted that the tropical
storm expected in that region of Florida benevolently bypassed St.
Petersburg just in time for Metropolitan Hilarion’s arrival, giving
the clergy and faithful an opportunity to joyously celebrate the
church’s patronal feast.
Media Office of the Eastern
American Diocese