St. Nectarios Greek Orthodox Mission Church
Publish Date: 2025-08-12
Bulletin Contents

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St. Nectarios Greek Orthodox Mission Church

General Information

  • Phone:
  • (509) 547-3968
  • Fax:
  • none / Facebook Group: "Saint Nectarios - Pasco"
  • Street Address:

  • 627 West Bonneville Street

  • Pasco, WA 99301
  • Mailing Address:

  • 627 West Bonneville Street

  • Pasco, WA 99301


Contact Information




Services Schedule

    Online DIVINE LITURGY - 10:00am

or

    In-church TYPICA Reader Service - 10:00am


Past Bulletins


St Nectarios Weekly Bulletin

(Updated 8/13/2025)

08/17/2025

WEEKLY SERVICES REMINDER
Saint Nectarios Greek Orthodox Mission Church
627 West Bonneville St., Pasco, WA 99301
IN CHURCH SERVICES:
     The Small Paraklesis to the Most-holy Theotokos Service will start at 7pm on Wednesday August 13. This sixth Paraklesis Service Servce will be held at Nectarios Church, 627 West Bonneville St., Pasco, WA 99301. Come celebrate the Service and meet Deacon Haralambos and Daikonissa Ryburn!
    If you cannot attend in person, and have persons that you would like to have included in the prayers for well-being, please send their names by email to Deacon Haralambos at [email protected].
     The GOARCH website tells us that "the service of the Small Paraklesis, conducted in alternation with the Great Paraklesis during the Dormition fast (August 1-14) as well as on many other occasions, is chanted in times of distress and sorrow of soul and is one of the most popular services of the Orthodox Church."
ONLINE PARTICIPATION SERVICES:
Vesperal Liturgy - Dormition of our Most Holy Lady Theotokos. 
    This online Service with Father John will start at 7pm on Thursday August 14. Vespers and Divine Liturgy Services with Father John will be celebrated online on Saturday (5 pm PST) and a Divine Liturgy Reader Service will be celebrated online on Sunday (10 am PST).
For information, questions, and appointments – call 5O9 547-3968 / 5O9 366-8745. You may also send an email to Deacon Haralambos at [email protected].
All are welcome at St. Nectarios!

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Service Calendar

  • Saint Nectarios

    August 13 to September 7, 2025

    Wednesday, August 13

    7:00PM In-Church Service of the Small Paraklesis(Pacific Standard Time-USA)

    Thursday, August 14

    7:00PM VESPERAL LITURGY on Zoom / Facebook Online

    Saturday, August 16

    5:00PM Vespers Service - Online

    Sunday, August 17

    10:00AM Divine Liturgy - Zoom / Facebook Online (Pacific Standard Time-USA)

    Saturday, August 23

    5:00PM Vespers Service - Online

    Sunday, August 24

    10:00AM Divine Liturgy - Zoom / Facebook Online (Pacific Standard Time-USA)

    Saturday, August 30

    5:00PM Vespers Service - Online

    Sunday, August 31

    10:00AM Typica (in church) Reader Service + Fellowship

    10:00AM Divine Liturgy - Zoom / Facebook Online (Pacific Standard Time-USA)

    Saturday, September 6

    5:00PM Vespers Service - Online

    Sunday, September 7

    10:00AM Divine Liturgy - Zoom / Facebook Online (Pacific Standard Time-USA)

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Message from Father John

Weekly Message

Honor the Mother of God

The Falling Asleep, the Dormition of Mary, the Mother of God, provides us with the opportunity to reflect on the life of our Spiritual Mother Mary.

The Archangel Gabriel came to bring her the good news that she would give birth to Jesus, the Son of God.  Mary was surprised by the unexpected news, but she consented to God’s Holy Will after the Archangel explained to her God’s plan.  “Here  is your servant;  let it be to me according to your word,” she said to the Archangel.  And the Divine Plan for our salvation began to unfold.  For Mary willingly offered to God our human nature and agreed to cooperate with Him.  What we lost in Eve, our progenitor, with her disobedience, we regained with Mary, our Spiritual Mother, with her obedience to, and cooperation with God’s Plan.  The closed doors of Paradise were opened again in Jesus.

Matthew and Luke, the Evangelists, offer us vivid glimpses from the early life of the Holy Family.  Mary treasured in her heart all that God was doing through her Divine Son, Jesus.  She enjoyed  listening to the teachings and witnessing the miracles of her Son for the benefit of the sick, the sufferings, and the possessed by demons.  Mary suffered vicariously with her Son under His Cross, and she rejoiced exceedingly when her Divine son rose from the dead.  For our Lord Jesus defeated forever the devil, our archenemy, who used the fear of death to enslave us to his demonic will.

When the Holy Spirit descended on the day of Pentecost, the Theotokos was with the Apostles and the other disciples.  She spent the rest of her earthly  life  in communion with her Son and assisting the first Christians to grow in the Faith.  The Apostles and early Christians rejoiced to have Mary, the Mother of their Risen  Lord in their midst, to give them strength and inspiration at the time of their persecution by the Jewish and Roman Authorities..

When the time came for the Mother of Jesus to go to her Son in Heaven, the Archangel Gabriel came to inform her that Her Son would soon come to take her.  She prepared herself, distributed her meager belongings to her poor neighbors, and was ready to go to Her Son.

All the Apostles miraculously gathered for her funeral.  The Icon of the Dormition depicts Jesus holding in His hands the soul of His Mother as a baby and the Apostles and the other Hierarchs gathered around her pure body.

Mary was taken up to heaven, where she stands before the throne of God interceding for us, Her spiritual children.  She lived a holy life on earth, doing the Will of God and serving His people.  She wants us to imitate Her holy life and live a godly life worthy of our Christian calling, so that she will rejoice for us, as she intercedes for our salvation.

Our Christian life is the best gift we can offer to our spiritual Mother as we celebrate the Holy Feast of her Dormition.

With love, Fr. John P. Angelis

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Saints and Feasts

August 01

The Holy Seven Maccabee Children, Solomone Their Mother, and Eleazar Their Teacher

The names of the Holy Maccabees are Abim, Anthony, Guria, Eleazar, Eusebona, Achim, and Marcellus. They were Jews by race and exact keepers of the Laws of the Fathers. They lived during the reign of Antiochus, who was surnamed Epiphanes ("Illustrious"), the King of Syria and an implacable enemy of the Jews. Having subjugated their whole nation and done many evil things to them, not sparing to assail the most sacred matters of their Faith, he constrained them, among other things, to partake of swine's flesh, which was forbidden by the Law. Then these pious youths, on being apprehended together with their mother and their teacher, were constrained to set at nought the Law, and were subjected to unspeakable tortures: wrackings, the breaking of their bones, the flaying of their flesh, fire, dismemberment, and such things as only a tyrant's mind and a bestial soul is able to contrive. But when they had endured all things courageously and showed in deed that the mind is sovereign over the passions and is able to conquer them if it so desires, they gloriously ended their lives in torments, surrendering their life for the sake of the observance of the divine Law. The first to die was their teacher Eleazar, then all the brethren in the order of their age. As for their wondrous mother Solomone, "filled with a courageous spirit, and stirring up her womanish thoughts with a manly wrath" (II Macc. 7:21), she was present at her children's triumph over the tyrant, strengthening them in their struggle for the sake of their Faith, and enduring stout-heartedly their sufferings for the sake of their hope in the Lord. After her last and youngest son had been perfected in martyrdom, when she was about to be seized to be put to death, she cast herself into the fire that they might not touch her, and was thus deemed worthy of a blessed end together with her sons, in the year 168 before Christ.


August 01

The Holy Seven Maccabee Children, Solomone Their Mother, and Eleazar Their Teacher

The names of the Holy Maccabees are Abim, Anthony, Guria, Eleazar, Eusebona, Achim, and Marcellus. They were Jews by race and exact keepers of the Laws of the Fathers. They lived during the reign of Antiochus, who was surnamed Epiphanes ("Illustrious"), the King of Syria and an implacable enemy of the Jews. Having subjugated their whole nation and done many evil things to them, not sparing to assail the most sacred matters of their Faith, he constrained them, among other things, to partake of swine's flesh, which was forbidden by the Law. Then these pious youths, on being apprehended together with their mother and their teacher, were constrained to set at nought the Law, and were subjected to unspeakable tortures: wrackings, the breaking of their bones, the flaying of their flesh, fire, dismemberment, and such things as only a tyrant's mind and a bestial soul is able to contrive. But when they had endured all things courageously and showed in deed that the mind is sovereign over the passions and is able to conquer them if it so desires, they gloriously ended their lives in torments, surrendering their life for the sake of the observance of the divine Law. The first to die was their teacher Eleazar, then all the brethren in the order of their age. As for their wondrous mother Solomone, "filled with a courageous spirit, and stirring up her womanish thoughts with a manly wrath" (II Macc. 7:21), she was present at her children's triumph over the tyrant, strengthening them in their struggle for the sake of their Faith, and enduring stout-heartedly their sufferings for the sake of their hope in the Lord. After her last and youngest son had been perfected in martyrdom, when she was about to be seized to be put to death, she cast herself into the fire that they might not touch her, and was thus deemed worthy of a blessed end together with her sons, in the year 168 before Christ.


August 01

Procession of the Precious Cross

Because of the many diseases that occur in the month of August, the custom prevailed of old in Constantinople to carry the precious Wood of the Cross in procession throughout the city for its sanctification and its deliverance from illnesses. It was brought forth from the imperial treasury on the last day of July and placed upon the Holy Table of the Great Church of the Holy Wisdom; and beginning today, until the Dormition of the Theotokos, it was carried in procession throughout the city and was set forth for veneration before the people.


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Hymns of the Day

Apolytikion for Proodos of the Holy Cross in the First Tone

Lord, save Your people and bless Your inheritance, granting our rulers to prevail over adversaries, and protecting Your commonwealth by Your Cross.

Apolytikion for 7 Maccabean Youths, Solomone and Eleazar in the First Tone

Be entreated, O Lord, by the sufferings endured for You by the Saints, and we pray You, heal all our pain.

Seasonal Kontakion in the Fourth Tone

Lifted up on the Cross by Your free will, Christ God, grant mercies to the new commonwealth that bears Your name. Gladden our faithful rulers by Your power, giving them victories over their adversaries. May Your alliance be for them a weapon for peace, an invincible standard.
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Gospel and Epistle Readings

Epistle Reading

Prokeimenon. Plagal First Tone. Psalm 11.7,1.
You, O Lord, shall keep us and preserve us.
Verse: Save me, O Lord, for the godly man has failed.

The reading is from St. Paul's Letter to the Hebrews 11:33-40; 12:1-2.

Brethren, all the saints through faith conquered kingdoms, enforced justice, received promises, stopped the mouths of lions, quenched raging fire, escaped the edge of the sword, won strength out of weakness, became mighty in war, put foreign armies to flight. Women received their dead by resurrection. Some were tortured, refusing to accept release, that they might rise again to a better life. Others suffered mocking and scourging, and even chains and imprisonment. They were stoned, they were sawn in two, they were tempted, they were killed with the sword; they went about in skins of sheep and goats, destitute, afflicted, ill-treated - of whom the world was not worthy - wandering over deserts and mountains and in dens and caves of the earth. And all these, though well attested by their faith, did not receive what was promised, since God had foreseen something better for us, that apart from us they should not be made perfect. Therefore, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us also lay aside every weight, and sin which clings so closely, and let us run with perseverance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus the pioneer and perfecter of our faith.


Gospel Reading

The Holy Seven Maccabee Children, Solomone Their Mother, and Eleazar Their Teacher
The Reading is from Matthew 10:16-22

The Lord said to his disciples, "Behold, I send you out as sheep in the midst of wolves; so be wise as serpents and innocent as doves. Beware of men; for they will deliver you up to councils, and flog you in their synagogues, and you will be dragged before governors and kings for my sake, to bear testimony before them and the Gentiles. When they deliver you up, do not be anxious how you are to speak or what you are to say; for what you are to say will be given to you in that hour; for it is not you who speak, but the Spirit of your Father speaking through you. Brother will deliver up brother to death, and the father his child, and children will rise against parents and have them put to death; and you will be hated by all for my name's sake. But he who endures to the end will be saved."


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About Us

ST. NECTARIOS GREEK ORTHODOX MISSION CHURCH
Diocese of the Greek Orthodox Metropolis of San Francisco.
This Tri-Cities Christian Orthodox Community has a church located at 627 West Bonneville St., Pasco, WA 99301. All are invited to attend. A light lunch fellowship time normally follows the In-Church Liturgy and Typica Services.
Prayers:  Please send us (or call us) with names of those you would like to be included in our prayers for healing.  Frist names may be entered in the St Nectarios - Pasco Group. 
INFORMATION SOURCES
For information on services and activities, you may:
1) access our "Saint Nectarios - Pasco" Facebook Group:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/334558973222227/
2) access the church website:
 (copy/paste this url) https://www.stnectariostricities.org/ for Welcome to Our Parish Website | St. Nectarios Greek Orthodox Mission (stnectariostricities.org) 
3)  The online  (copy/paste this url) ../../../../../stnectariospasco/ for Saint Nectarios Bulletin  is the best source of up to date) information on church Services and activities. ( http://bulletinbuilder.org/stnectariospasco/  )
NOTIFICATIONS 
To receive the weekly Services Reminder  by email, please send an email request.
For those not connected to the internet,  please call Jim (on 5O9 366 8745) to request either
    a) by a phone call on the 'week of the in-church Service'
       or
    b) by a weekly smart-phone Service reminder text message.
CHURCH SERVICES
Greek Orthodox Divine Liturgy.  Each month, we try to have at least one Divine Liturgy  (with a visiting Priest).  That Service is normally on a Saturday (or a Special Service/Feast weekday) and is scheduled when a Priest is available.  In addition to communion during the Service, private meetings with the Priest are available by appointment (for personal matters, planning future events, and Confession).
Special Invitation - Saint Nectarios Church welcomes all: During Divine Liturgy, which is mostly in English, the Lord's Prayer is said by parishioners in their native languages.  Currently the prayer is normally said in English, Arabic, Russian, Spanish, and Greek.  If you wish to participate (and perhaps add a language), just let us know.
On most weeks, we remotely celebrate Saturday Vespers  and Sunday Online Divine Liturgy  with Father John in the Seattle area.  During the remote Divine Liturgy, Communion is served to Father's attending family and friends - but is unavailable to those participating online.
Online Greek Orthodox Vespers and Other Special Services are normally celebrated online with Father John in Seattle.  The link for joining Zoom to actively participate in on-line Services is
https://goarch.zoom.us/j/98009355049?pwd=UmttUUN2aG4raUc4WS9Zelo1REYxdz09
On the last Sunday of each month, there normally is a Typica Reader Service  with a Parish Fellowship Time.  This in-Church Service is held as an opportunity to bring the local community together - and hopefully eventually returning St. Nectarios to having a full time Priest.
All are welcome to join in the celebration these Christian Orthodox Services.

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Coptic Church Services

Tri-Cities Coptic Church Services
Saint Mary and Saint Abanoub Coptic Orthodox Church.    This Coptic Church is currently holding services at the St. Nectarios Church.  A Saturday or Sunday Holy Liturgy with a visiting Priest is normally held once per month either in the Tricities or in Spokane.  All are invited to attend. A fellowship time and Christian Study Class for older students normally follows the Services.  For more information, please contact Nader Samaan ([email protected]) or access the website: 
 (copy/paste this url) https://www.stmary-stabanoub-tricities.org/ for https://www.stmary-stabanoub-tricities.org/

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Please help support our ministry.

St. Nectarios Greek Orthodox Mission Church  
Donate to St Nectarios Online     
https://bit.ly/30rPubP  
Contact us
Have Bulletin input? Have Suggestions/Questions?  Want Help or Information?
Call Jim/Tammy Droppo, 5O9 366-8745.

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