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#289053 - 05/18/08 01:30 PM St. John the Baptist ROCOR Parish, Mayfield, Pa.- YouTube
Deacon Robert Behrens Offline
Jessup B.C. Deacon
Member

Registered: 03/16/06
Posts: 953
Loc: Jermyn, Pa.

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#289058 - 05/18/08 02:50 PM Re: St. John the Baptist ROCOR Parish, Mayfield, Pa.- YouTube [Re: Deacon Robert Behrens]
Mykhayl Offline
Member

Registered: 02/16/08
Posts: 449
Loc: Pgh, PA USA
Xpucmoc Bockpece!

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#289075 - 05/18/08 06:05 PM Re: St. John the Baptist ROCOR Parish, Mayfield, Pa.- YouTube [Re: Mykhayl]
John K Offline
Member

Registered: 11/15/01
Posts: 885
Loc: Rocky Hill, CT
Wow--great to see a church with an old style Austro-Hungarian tomb and was that a prostopinijie "Christ is risen" at the beginning of the DL? Great to see that they have not totally lost their Rusyn GC heritage!

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#289110 - 05/19/08 05:52 AM Re: St. John the Baptist ROCOR Parish, Mayfield, Pa.- YouTube [Re: John K]
Deacon Robert Behrens Offline
Jessup B.C. Deacon
Member

Registered: 03/16/06
Posts: 953
Loc: Jermyn, Pa.
 Originally Posted By: John K
Wow--great to see a church with an old style Austro-Hungarian tomb and was that a prostopinijie "Christ is risen" at the beginning of the DL? Great to see that they have not totally lost their Rusyn GC heritage!


John,

Actually, that was the Galician "Christ Is Risen", slightly different than Prostipinije. The parish is formerly OCA (having left over the calendar), and originally Greek Catholic, and I am told that they followed Alexei Toth into Russian Orthodoxy. Most everything is Great Russian in usage, but the exceptions include singing Preterpivyj at Lent, the use of Trojce candles, and pews. Ethnically, the mix is Galician-Ukrainian, Lemko, and Rusyn. But, the people call themselves "Russians". The town was originally a coal-mining town. Some years back there was a "Russian volunteer fire department"! I'm not sure if they only put out Russian fires!

In Christ,
Dn. Robert

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#289130 - 05/19/08 10:29 AM Re: St. John the Baptist ROCOR Parish, Mayfield, Pa.- YouTube [Re: Deacon Robert Behrens]
John K Offline
Member

Registered: 11/15/01
Posts: 885
Loc: Rocky Hill, CT
Thank you Fr. Deacon--I knew that they were originally Greek Catholic and were returned to Orthodoxy by Fr. Toth and that they left the OCA, over the imposition of the revised Julian by Bishop (now Metropolitan) Herman, for ROCOR. I figured that at this point they would have been so totally Russified that there would be no Rusyn GC traditions left. I was pleasantly surprised to see the old style tomb. I know that St. Michael ACROD in Binghamton, NY still has this type of tomb too. Are there any Ruthenian GC churches that still use this type of tomb that anyone knows of? John K

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#289134 - 05/19/08 10:48 AM Re: St. John the Baptist ROCOR Parish, Mayfield, Pa.- YouTube [Re: John K]
AMM Offline
Member

Registered: 04/04/05
Posts: 2550
Loc: PA
Wouldn't every parish have a tomb? Where would you put the plashchanitsa before placing it on the altar?

My daughter's first holy confession was this weekend so we kind of had to work our way around the tomba because Easter was so late this year.

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#289135 - 05/19/08 11:18 AM Re: St. John the Baptist ROCOR Parish, Mayfield, Pa.- YouTube [Re: AMM]
Fr David Straut Offline
Member

Registered: 07/13/07
Posts: 308
Loc: New Jersey, United States
 Originally Posted By: AMM
Wouldn't every parish have a tomb? Where would you put the plashchanitsa before placing it on the altar?

All Orthodox (and I would presume Greek Catholic) parishes have a "Tomb" on which the Epitaphion / Plashchanitsa lies, but these vary with the different ethnic traditions. The Tomb at St John's Church in Mayfield is quite huge - even obscuring the the lower tier of the iconostasis - and deliberately like a cave. The Tomb in my Russian parish is more simple - like a small altar surrounded with flowers. Greeks and Antiochians usually have a canopied platform covered with flowers.

Fr David Straut

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#289149 - 05/19/08 01:27 PM Re: St. John the Baptist ROCOR Parish, Mayfield, Pa.- YouTube [Re: Fr David Straut]
John K Offline
Member

Registered: 11/15/01
Posts: 885
Loc: Rocky Hill, CT
 Originally Posted By: Fr David Straut
 Originally Posted By: AMM
Wouldn't every parish have a tomb? Where would you put the plashchanitsa before placing it on the altar?

All Orthodox (and I would presume Greek Catholic) parishes have a "Tomb" on which the Epitaphion / Plashchanitsa lies, but these vary with the different ethnic traditions. The Tomb at St John's Church in Mayfield is quite huge - even obscuring the the lower tier of the iconostasis - and deliberately like a cave. The Tomb in my Russian parish is more simple - like a small altar surrounded with flowers. Greeks and Antiochians usually have a canopied platform covered with flowers.

Fr David Straut



That's exactly what I meant Father--the cave like structure that simulates an actual tomb. It's very Austro-Hungarian. Many GC parishes had them, and many people in my own former parish still remember it longingly each year and wish it had not been scrapped.

http://www.saintmichaels.info/pics/28.jpg
http://www.saintmichaels.info/pics/25.jpg

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#289151 - 05/19/08 01:31 PM Re: St. John the Baptist ROCOR Parish, Mayfield, Pa.- YouTube [Re: John K]
AMM Offline
Member

Registered: 04/04/05
Posts: 2550
Loc: PA
Ours looks like the first photo on the St. Michael's site. Maybe I'll take a picture this weekend.

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#289163 - 05/19/08 05:55 PM Re: St. John the Baptist ROCOR Parish, Mayfield, Pa.- YouTube [Re: AMM]
Serge Keleher Online   content
Member

Registered: 06/22/06
Posts: 3494
Loc: Dublin
One reason for the removal of the "Austro-Hungarian" tombs may have been an association of such a tomb with the custom of placing the Holy Gifts in the tomb (turning it into an "Altar of Repose".

Fr. Serge

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#289167 - 05/19/08 07:01 PM Re: St. John the Baptist ROCOR Parish, Mayfield, Pa.- YouTube [Re: Serge Keleher]
Halia12 Offline
Member

Registered: 11/02/07
Posts: 188
Loc: Canada
How very interesting. Thanks for the pictures. I have never seen anything like that in the Ukrainian Orthodox Church.

Why is it called an "Austro-Hungarian" tomb and what is the origin of this tradition please?

Halia


Edited by Halia12 (05/19/08 07:03 PM)
Edit Reason: spelling errors

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#289169 - 05/19/08 07:35 PM Re: St. John the Baptist ROCOR Parish, Mayfield, Pa.- YouTube [Re: Serge Keleher]
Ung-Certez Offline
Member

Registered: 02/17/02
Posts: 2170
Loc: Pittsburgh, PA
Isn't this a case of "which came first the chicken or the egg" scenario with graves in both Roman Catholic and Greek Catholic churches of Austria-Hungary? Who started the "Cave" type graves, the Roman Catholic Poles, Slovaks and Hungarians? Or did these Roman Catholics borrow and adapt this custom (pieta instead of a Plashchnica, statue of Christ instead of the Resurrection Icon) from their neighboring Greek Catholic churches?

They sang the Stichera (Tone 8) and the preceeding pray for
Resurrection Matins in a similiar setting. abeit a faster choir version.

X.B.! B.B.!

Ung


Edited by Ung-Certez (05/19/08 07:52 PM)

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#289197 - 05/20/08 07:10 AM Re: St. John the Baptist ROCOR Parish, Mayfield, Pa.- YouTube [Re: Ung-Certez]
John K Offline
Member

Registered: 11/15/01
Posts: 885
Loc: Rocky Hill, CT
 Originally Posted By: Ung-Certez
Isn't this a case of "which came first the chicken or the egg" scenario with graves in both Roman Catholic and Greek Catholic churches of Austria-Hungary? Who started the "Cave" type graves, the Roman Catholic Poles, Slovaks and Hungarians? Or did these Roman Catholics borrow and adapt this custom (pieta instead of a Plashchnica, statue of Christ instead of the Resurrection Icon) from their neighboring Greek Catholic churches?

They sang the Stichera (Tone 8) and the preceeding pray for
Resurrection Matins in a similiar setting. abeit a faster choir version.

X.B.! B.B.!

Ung


Ung--I think that as with the singing of "Having Suffered," the use of a life-like tomb is very intermingled and probably impossible to determine "which came first" between RCs and GCs in the former Austro-Hungarian Empire.

My Polish (RC) church growing up had (and still does) a very life-like tomb with a statue of the buried Christ in it on Good Friday/Holy Saturday, and up until VII, had the Blessed Sacrament in it as covered with a see through veil, as though buried in a shroud.

The Ukrainian GC church right next door to my Polish parish had the Plashchnica on a more conventional (by today's standard) table-top arrangement, but also had the Blessed Sacrament (in a monstrance) along with the Gospel Book in front of it. In other words, no cave. They no longer have the Sacrament at the tomb.

Very early in the morning on Easter, usually 6AM, my RC church had a short service at the grave, with the buried Christ being removed from the tomb, and a Risen Christ statue replacing it, and the Sacrament carried in procession around the church and replaced in the tabernacle before Mass began.

My former GC parish, from what I ascertain, since the cave tomb was dispensed with in the early 70's when latinizations were removed and the iconostas installed, had the realistic cave tomb, with the Plashchnica and Gospel book in it, but not the Sacrament.

So who borrowed it from who? The world may never know... I was just wondering if any Ruthenian GC churches (not ACROD or OCA) still have the old style cave tombs.

John K

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#289208 - 05/20/08 09:15 AM Re: St. John the Baptist ROCOR Parish, Mayfield, Pa.- YouTube [Re: John K]
Chtec Offline
Member

Registered: 01/27/02
Posts: 1665
Loc: Pittsburgh, PA
Here's another "cave tomb" from the ACROD Church in Windber, PA:

Windber, PA Tomb

Dave

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#289211 - 05/20/08 09:38 AM Re: St. John the Baptist ROCOR Parish, Mayfield, Pa.- YouTube [Re: Chtec]
Ung-Certez Offline
Member

Registered: 02/17/02
Posts: 2170
Loc: Pittsburgh, PA
Dave,

That is a diminutive one. At Dormition parish in Windber, we used to have a huge "Horb" erected over the entire side altar, complete with a built-in shelf for the "Eucharistic Ciborium". \:D

X.B.! B.B.!

Ung

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