Posts

The End of Reason

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The end of year holiday season is stressful enough on its own, but Metropolitan Methodios made sure that this festive and holy season remained a period of anxiety, pain and spiritual numbness for hundreds of St. Athanasius parishioners . The Metropolitan stubbornly continued to be heartless, blind and deaf to the pleas of the Arlington Orthodox Christian community now in true turmoil and in need of pastoral tenderness and healing. The cacophony of the Metropolis actions, arguments, announcements, letter-writing, web-postings , accusations and sermons reached a crescendo in December of 2017. Realizing that mud-slinging accusations of 'financial improprieties'  against Fr. Nicholas Kastanas on the Metropolis web-site, did not persuade anyone, the Metropolitan resorted to acts that can only be described as pure intimidation! The Metropolitan invited (read,  ordered ) as many priests as he could find at St. Athanasius, on December 3rd, for a vesper service for the feast of 

Neither Down Nor Out: The 'Secret' Glendi

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In an expected outpouring of unity, support, love and shared appreciation, almost 300 parishioners of  the St. Athanasius Greek Orthodox Church in Arlington celebrated a re-union Advent Glendi (Greek expression for a party) yesterday. The home cooked Greek appetizers were delicious, the music and singing were fantastic, the hall expertly decorated, the raffle prizes dazzling! But most especially, the people, the hugs, and the re-union of hearts and minds were unprecedented! Some of us had not seen each other since the 'summer of unfortunate events' when Metropolitan Methodios  ravaged the thriving community of St. Athanasius with his calculated decision   to remove Fr. Nick Kastanas, the spiritual shepherd of St. Athanasius for almost 30 years, over the outcry, pleas and the opposition of the faithful. Ever since, the bustling St. Athanasius campus has fallen silent with just a tiny fraction of parishioners attending services and activities there. The key organizations

Web of Deceit: Who do you Trust?

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In an unprecedented  moral low  the Metropolis of Boston  posted on their web site  an open invitation for all to partake in their  murderous character assassination  of Fr. Nicholas Kastanas, a faithful servant of the Lord and beloved priest for over 30 years. Serious matters involving Orthodox priests,  seemingly 'obedient'  to the various Metropolis's  Despots, and dealing with sexual abuse of children, stolen parish moneys to pay for mistresses,  pictures of priest's genitals shared with parishioners, and hot-tubs of naked priests with their deacons  have been 'handled' for years silently and behind the scenes  (or should we say behind the long black robes ) of the responsible Orthodox hierarchs,  On the other hand, Fr. Nick has been put on public shameful display directed by a  web kangaroo court  where the jury-judge and executioner are one and the same , Metropolitan Methodios, Chancellor Barbas and their legal team. The web page links to a n

Reality Check

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No less than a week after the Metropolitan of Boston evaded the awaiting parishioners of St. Athanasius at Logan Airport , he emerged from his five week silence to 'shed light' on the issue that he created by dismissing Fr. Nicholas Kastanas from the St. Athanasius parish in Arlington. The Metropolitan chose to do this on a Sunday morning, as people were waking up to attend Sunday services. You would have thought that at a moment like this, and after having created havoc at the parish, he would have the wisdom to chose a forgiving and conciliatory tone towards his 'Brothers and Sisters in the Lord' to whom the letter was addressed. Instead, the letter that was posted on the St. Athanasius website, took no prisoners! In his opening paragraph the Metropolitan starts his tirade of ' setting the record straight' by   accusing of ' a  ceaseless, multi-pronged attack relying on aggressive social media and other  forms of intimidation and misinformation

Brotherly Love

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During the celebration of the Divine Liturgy and just before we proclaim the Orthodox Creed the priest calls us to ' Love one another so that in one voice we may confess '. If there are two co-celebrant priests, they each kiss each other's front right shoulder, then each other's right hand and proclaim "Christ is in our midst. He is, was and always shall be! " This is an ancient and beautiful custom, and Fr. Nick was keen to rekindle its observance among the St. Athanasius faithful! As awkward as it felt at the beginning, this physical act, and verbal exchange of Christ's presence, became a favorite point in the Divine Liturgy for all, young and old, parishioners and visitors. We learned to turn to our neighbors in the pews, hug, kiss, repeat the same words, and then proceed to recite the 'Symbol of our Faith'. Last Sunday, I found myself in another Greek Orthodox community, and as the point for the custom approached, came, and went withou

Words of Wisdom from the Heart

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This message is to all Greek Orthodox faithful. This is not about just St. Athanasius, or even Father Nick Kastanas. This is about how important the role of a good priest plays on attracting its youth and retaining its membership. As a mother and grandmother in the Greek Orthodox Church, I know full well the importance of having a priest who welcomes young people to his parish of all faiths and creed. A priest that will remember your name. A priest who will take interest in your life. A genuine true soldier in Christ that cares about his parishioners. In a moment's notice all this has changed. Our priest is dismissed for no real reason, he is banned from performing any sacraments and treated unfairly. Now what happens....our youth are disheartened. They say they will either never attend church again or attend a church of a different faith. Parishioners stopped sending their  stewardship, and young children just don't understand why their beloved priest was sent away.

Light shall overcome darkness!

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It has been a very dark week! Today marks one week since the 28 year pastoral ministry of Fr. Nicholas Kastanas (or Fr. Nick as he is best known to his community) at St. Athanasius the Great, Arlington, MA came to an abrupt end (for some) and to a long tortuous conclusion for those that had followed the story closer over the last few years. On July 27th, the Metropolitan of the Greek Orthodox Church Boston Diocese relieved Fr. Nick of his pastoral duties, and asked the executive board of the St. Athanasius to post on the Church's web site Fr. Nick's dismissal letter (what many have called a character assassination ) that among other things charged that: "the Saint Athanasius Parish has been in a state of turmoil as a result of issues revolving, in large part, around the person of Fr. Kastanas. The Spiritual environment in the Community has been severely damaged by behavior that is wholly contrary to Christian values, which has resulted in, among other things, the d