Greek Orthodox Parish & Community of Saint Spyridon Unley

Greek Orthodox Parish & Community of Saint Spyridon Unley The Greek Orthodox Church of Saint Spyridon is under the auspices of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese

This Community, along with others, has become a means for the migrant faithful to lead their religious life in the Australian Society. The Australian Community has also come to know and appreciate the Orthodox faith through public relations with other Christian denominations.

17/06/2026

We will be posting highlights from our conversation with Gerondissa Philothei.

In this clip, Gerondissa shares wise and heartfelt advice on discerning God’s will, especially for young people facing the big question of marriage or monasticism.

She emphasises:
- Don’t rush
- Don’t just follow what others do
- You’ll recognise God’s will through deep, lasting joy

She also reminds us that while we often speak of monasticism as a “calling,” marriage is also a divine calling - something we shouldn’t forget.

A beautiful and practical message for youth and parents alike!

14/06/2026

Why did Christ choose fishermen as his Disciples? Why not choose ‘wiser’ people?

Because wisdom is not found in knowledge. Wisdom is found in the depths of one’s heart and soul. This simplicity of life that allows not ambition, but allows the desire to do and to live one’s purpose in a way that does not overcome him, but in a way that leads him to God.

Fr John's Sermon
Second Sunday of Matthew
Sunday 14 June

Schedule of Services for June 2026.The English Divine Liturgy, will be on Sunday 28th June 2026.Please join us after the...
14/06/2026

Schedule of Services for June 2026.

The English Divine Liturgy, will be on Sunday
28th June 2026.

Please join us after the service, for Fellowship, friendships, a light lunch and coffee at the Simple Shepherd Cafe.

On 11th June we commemorateSAINT LUKE THE SURGEON - ARCHBISHOP OF SIMFEROPOLSaint Luke of Simferopol and Crimea (Valenti...
11/06/2026

On 11th June we commemorate
SAINT LUKE THE SURGEON - ARCHBISHOP OF SIMFEROPOL

Saint Luke of Simferopol and Crimea (Valentin Felixovich Voyno-Yasenetsky, 1877-1961) was a Russian surgeon, Professor of anatomy, and Archbishop of Simferopol and Crimea.

He was a prominent medical doctor and Saint whose life signified how the Christian faith can be combined with surgical practice and medical research.

Saint Luke is recognized as the father of the surgical treatment of pyogenic and purulent infections. He also introduced local anesthesia to Russian practice, and he performed the first renal transplantation from a calf to a human.

Although he suffered over 11 years of exile and persecution by the Communist Party, Saint Luke remained committed to his faith.

He conducted Divine Liturgies, delivered sermons to defend Orthodox Christianity, and fought against dialectic materialism.

Saint Luke's life and legacy continues to inspire not only healthcare practitioners but also those advocating for peace in the region and globally in the 21st century.

Even though St Luke departed this life in 1961, God still empowers this Archbishop and Surgeon to perform miracles amongst the faithful who venerate and honour him.

APOLYTIKION

O herald of the way of salvation, confessor and archpastor of the Crimean flock, faithful keeper of the traditions of the fathers, unshakeable pillar and teacher of Orthodoxy, pray unceasingly to Christ our Saviour to grant salvation and strong faith to Orthodox Christians, O holy hierarch Luke, physician wise in God.

MAY WE ALWAYS HAVE HIS BLESSING

His Grace Bishop Silouan of Adelaide, together with clergy, educators, and leaders from Saint Spyridon College, will spe...
11/06/2026

His Grace Bishop Silouan of Adelaide, together with clergy, educators, and leaders from Saint Spyridon College, will speak on the vital importance of raising and educating our children within an Orthodox Christian setting.

These forums will help parents understand how Orthodox schooling shapes the whole person, and why an Orthodox education is a blessing for our families and our Orthodox community.

You are invited...
Come and hear firsthand about the value of Orthodox Education. Meet other parents and families, connect with our community, and learn more in a warm and welcoming setting.

We’d love to answer any questions you may have.

Last night we were blessed to host a conversation with Gerondissa Philothei, Abbess of the Holy Monastery of Panagia Vry...
09/06/2026

Last night we were blessed to host a conversation with Gerondissa Philothei, Abbess of the Holy Monastery of Panagia Vryoulon.

Gerondissa spoke about the challenges faced by Orthodox families in modern societies, and how to preserve our faith.

She highlighted the crucial role of parents as role models, and shared practical ways to live a prayerful life amid busy schedules.

For those waiting for the recording, we are amending the captions to ensure they are faithfully translated in English, and should be ready before the end of the week.

The Apostles' Fast (also known as the Peter and Paul Fast) is a significant canonical fast in the Orthodox traditions. T...
08/06/2026

The Apostles' Fast (also known as the Peter and Paul Fast) is a significant canonical fast in the Orthodox traditions.

The fast commemorates the Apostles' time of prayer and fasting as they prepared to spread the Gospel.

The start and end dates of the fast vary each year because its commencement is determined by the date of Pascha (Easter).

The Apostles’ Fast commences on Monday, 8th June 2026 and concludes on Sunday, 28 June 2026. This provides a 21-day fast,

The fast of the holy Apostles’ is very ancient, dating back to the first centuries of Christianity. We have the testimony of St. Athanasius the Great, St. Ambrose of Milan, St. Leo the Great and Theodoret of Cyrrhus regarding it.

The oldest testimony regarding the Apostles' Fast is given to us by St. Athanasius the Great (†373). In his letter to Emperor Constance, in speaking of the persecution by the Arians, he writes: "During the week following Pentecost, the people who observed the fast went out to the cemetery to pray."

"The Lord so ordained it," says St. Ambrose (†397), "that as we have participated in his sufferings during the Forty Days, so we should also rejoice in his Resurrection during the season of Pentecost. We do not fast during the season of Pentecost, since our Lord Himself was present amongst us during those days … Christ’s presence was like nourishing food for the Christians. So too, during Pentecost, we feed on the Lord who is present among us. On the days following his ascension into heaven, however, we again fast" (Sermon 61). St. Ambrose basis this practice on the words of Jesus concerning his disciples in the Gospel of Matthew 9:14, 15: "Can the wedding guests mourn as long as the bridegroom is with them? The days will come, when the bridegroom is taken away from them, and then they will fast.”

St. Leo the Great (†461) says: "After the long feast of Pentecost, fasting is especially necessary to purify our thoughts and render us worthy to receive the Gifts of the Holy Spirit ... Therefore, the salutary custom was established of fasting after the joyful days during which we celebrated the resurrection and ascension of our Lord, and the coming of the Holy Spirit.''

The pilgrim Egeria in her Diary (fourth century) records that on the day following the feast of Pentecost, a period of fasting began.

The Apostolic Constitutions, a work no later than the fourth century describing the apostolic traditions, prescribes: "After the feast of Pentecost, celebrate one week, then observe a fast, for justice demands rejoicing after the reception of the gifts of God and lasting after the body has been refreshed."

From the testimonies of the fourth century we ascertain that in Alexandria, Jerusalem and Antioch the fast of the holy Apostles was connected with Pentecost and not with the feast of the Apostles Peter and Paul on June 29. In the first centuries, after Pentecost there was one week of rejoicing, that is Privileged Days, followed by about one week of fasting.

Canon 19 of Nikephoros, Patriarch of Constantinople (806-816), mentions the Apostles' Fast: "During the fast of the Holy Apostles and of St. Philip (or, more expressly, of the forty-days’ Lent [of Christmas]), Monks sitting in a Monastery ought to eat once a day, on Wednesday and Friday. But Monks engaged in work or labor may eat twice, after the sixth hour and in the evening."

The Rule of St. Theodore the Studite for the Monastery of Studios in Constantinople speaks of the Forty Days Fast of the Holy Apostles. "During the Fast of the Holy Apostles we do not eat fish, cheese, or eggs except on the days we do not sing the hours. Instead, we eat two cooked dishes at the ninth hour — one vegetable dish with olive oil and one of legumes without oil — and [have] two servings of wine at the ninth hour and two in the evening. On feast days, however, on which we are permitted cheese and other [such] foods, we eat at the sixth hour and drink three [measures of wine] at the sixth hour and two in the evening."

St. Symeon of Thessaloniki (†1429) explains the purpose of this fast in this manner: "The Fast of the Apostles is justly established in their honour, for through them we have received numerous benefits and for us they are exemplars and teachers of the fast ... For one week after the descent of the Holy Spirit, in accordance with the Apostolic Constitution composed by Clement, we celebrate, and then during the following week, we fast in honour of the Apostles."

The Fast of the Apostles came into practice in the Church through custom rather than law. For this reason there was no uniformity for a long time, either in its observance or its duration. Some fasted twelve days, others six, still others four, and others only one day. Theodore Balsamon, Patriarch of Antioch (†1204), regarding the Apostles' Fast, said: "All the faithful, that is the laity and the monks, are obliged to fast seven days and more, and whoever refuses to do so, let him be excommunicated from the Christian community."

From the work On Three Forty Days Fasts, which is credited to a monk of the monastic community of St. Anastasios the Sinaite (6th or 7th century), we learn that the Fast of the Holy Apostles lasted from the first Sunday after Pentecost to the feast of the Dormition of the Most Holy Mother of God on August 15. Later, however, the Fast of the Dormition was separated from it and the month of July was excluded from the Fast of the Apostles. St. Symeon of Thessaloniki speaks of the Apostles' Fast as of one week's duration.

In the Orthodox Church the Fast of the Holy Apostles lasts from the day after the Sunday of All Saints to the 29th of June, the feast of the Apostles Peter and Paul. This fast may be of longer or shorter duration depending upon which day Pascha is celebrated. According to the Julian Calendar it could last from as little as 8 days to as many as 42 days depending on the date of Pascha, but this is shortened by the Revised Julian Calendar which sometimes obliterates the Fast altogether, though rarely. If the feast of Pascha occurs sooner, then the Apostles' Fast is longer; if Pascha comes later, then the Apostles' Fast is shorter.

The Fast of the Apostles is somewhat more lenient than the Great Fast before Holy Week and Pascha. The Kievan Metropolitan George (1069-1072) approved the Rule for the Kiev Caves Monastery which does not allow meat or dairy products to be eaten during the Apostles' Fast. On Wednesday and Friday, they prescribed dry food, that is, bread and water or dry fruits. On Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday and Sunday they permitted fish, wine and oil. In addition to this, they directed that one hundred prostrations (profound bows to the ground) be made daily, excepting Saturdays, Sundays and holy days (the Feast of the Birth of John the Baptist falls on June 23rd and fish, oil and wine is permitted no matter the day). This rule was transferred to Russia via the Kiev Caves Monastery who based their rule on that of the Monastery of Studios in Constantinople. We can thus assume this was the monastic rule for the Fast practiced by both the Roman Empire and the Russian Empire, with some variations. This is the rule still practiced today with minor variations among jurisdictions.

The fast of the Apostles was established in their honour, and rightly so for through them we have been deemed worthy of many good things, having been made manifest to us as practitioners and teachers of fasting and obedience, even unto death itself persevering in self-control. To this even the Latins bear witness unintentionally, honouring the Apostles on the days of their memorials with fasting; but we, in adhering to the Apostolic Constitutions compiled by Clement,* after the Descent of the Holy Spirit rejoice for one week and then, immediately after, we fast for a week, that we may not grow weak through soft living, as we are taught. At the same time we honour through fasting the Apostles who enjoined fasting.

Source : John Sanidopoulos.

07/06/2026

This is the Sunday of All Saints. Every single saint of our church is celebrated today.

The saints not just images of ancient holy people, martyrs, monastics, or some unreachable heroes of faith. That are not able to be mimicked in the 21st century.

Sometimes we say to ourselves: ‘sainthood is only for the perfect’, or ‘it's just impossible today’.

The orthodox understanding of sainthood is much closer to home.

The saints were men and women of flesh and blood because the saints were living in the world. Just as you and I. They experienced struggles, they experienced grief, they experienced the temptations. Many of them stumbled at times and fell.

What separates them from us is not the absence of sin. What separates them from us?

Is the total reliance on repentance. Being a repented Christian within the world.

And participating in the healing of the mysteries of the church that God created in the world.

They chose to die to their old self. They chose to die to their passions and aligned their will with God's a single people as married people with children to raise as they had, just like us.

Fr John’s Sermon
Sunday of All Saints
7th June 2026

On Sunday (7th June, 2026), following Pentecost, we commemorate all the Saints of the Church, which is why this day is r...
07/06/2026

On Sunday (7th June, 2026), following Pentecost, we commemorate all the Saints of the Church, which is why this day is referred to as,
“The Sunday of All Saints.”

The Church established the commemoration of this present feast after Pentecost, the day of the descent of the Holy Spirit, in order to show that the coming of the Holy Spirit worked enormous deeds not only through the Holy Apostles but through the lives of thousands of men, women and children, who over the centuries, have given their lives completely and totally to God, and in return have been given the honour of being elevated to the rank of Sainthood.

In every generation God raises up Saints in the Church in order to encourage the fainthearted, invigorate the slothful, educate the ignorant, and to prove that no matter what life a person once led, and what sort of sins one participated in the past, through repentance holiness is attainable.

The Saints also teach us that in order to be truly identified as a Christian, we must be willing to let go of the world because we cannot be attached to the things of this life and at the same time pursue a life in Christ.

This is clearly stated in I John Chapter Two where we read, “Do not love the world or the things in the world. If anyone loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him. For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh and the lust of the eyes and the boastful pride of life, is not from the Father, but is from the world.”

Epistle Reading: 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: Matthew 10:32-33; 37-38; 19:27-30
The Lord said to his disciples, "Every one who acknowledges me before men, I also will acknowledge before my Father who is in heaven; but whoever denies me before men, I also will deny him before my Father who is in heaven. He who loves father or mother more than me is not worthy of me; and he who loves son or daughter more than me is not worthy of me; and he who does not take his cross and follow me is not worthy of me." Then Peter said in reply, "Lo, we have left everything and followed you. What then shall we have?" Jesus said to them, "Truly, I say to you, in the new world, when the Son of man shall sit on his glorious throne, you who have followed me will also sit on twelve thrones, judging the twelve tribes of Israel. And every one who has left houses or brothers or sisters or father or mother or children or lands, for my name's sake, will receive a hundredfold, and inherit eternal life. But many that are first will be last, and the last first."

The icon of the Sunday of All Saints depicts our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ seated above the throne of heaven surrounded by the Saints. The rows of Saints included the Archangel Michael and other Angels, the Theotokos and John the Baptist, the Apostles, Bishops, Great Martyrs, Ascetics and Monastics. To the side of the throne are Adam and Eve, bowing in reverence to Christ. They are joined by the Saints, who are lifting their hands in worship to the King of Glory. At the lower left of the icon is the Patriarch Abraham who has a righteous soul in his bosom, as told in the story of Lazarus and the rich man in the Gospel. At the lower center is the Good Thief who was crucified with Christ. On the lower right is the Patriarch Jacob.

HAPPY AND BLESSED NAME DAY TO EVERYONE!
XRONIA POLLA - Χρόνια πολλά!

Looking forward to seeing you all tomorrow 🙏
06/06/2026

Looking forward to seeing you all tomorrow 🙏

Address

50 Oxford Terrace
Unley, SA
5061

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