Donkey Bells and a soft bed for Jesus

Denny and Joanie’s donkey




Another tradition that Nazareth House Apostolate continues during Advent is that of pinning a tiny silver bell (one that actually rings) in the sleeve of the left arm of our clothing (the left arm because it is closer to the heart).  

Vicki’s Advent Bell pinned in her sleeve




The bell represents the bell on the donkey that Mary rode into Bethlehem, ringing with every step the donkey takes.   

Joanie and Denny’s donkey



With the bell hidden in the sleeve, every time we move our arm we hear it’s tiny tinkling ring.  Every ring reminds us that this is Advent and Jesus is coming.  The bell has a very gentle non-offensive sound and can be worn all day, wherever you are. 


There are other traditions from around the world. Catherine Doherty is well known for reviving many holy Christian Traditions.   Nazareth House Apostolate recommends her book:  Donkey Bells” 




In Seraphim’s family, an empty creche was placed in the living room.  A box filled with 2 inch strands of golden yarn sat next to it.  


Every time a family member performed a good deed during Advent, they took a strand of yarn (representing hay) and placed it into the manager creating a soft bed for the Child Jesus to lie in.  In other words, the place that Christ comes to rest in is our good deeds.


They were encouraged that the good deed and the placing of the yarn (hay) into the creche should be done in secret. That thine alms may be in secret: and thy Father which seeth in secret himself shall reward thee openly.”- Matthew 6:4
Posted in Advent, Advent bells, donkey, Jesus lying in manager | Leave a comment

THE ADVENT WREATH

In Sierra Leone, James and family are making their way back to Kabala after spending a week in Freetown, 


braving the busyness of the city to seek medical attention for Roo, 

receive packages from the post and stock up on supplies.  They are excited to return to the peacefulness of Kabala, especially as they prepare their hearts during this penitential season of Advent. 

As I type this post, the rain is falling hard and Seraphim is outside rebuilding and repairing the newly developed ditches in the gravel road at the skete.  He is drenched. 

In order to prepare for the cold Winter, we are filling the gas tanks for the buildings in use at the Skete. 


Preventative measures and preparedness are imperative to maintain our buildings, our properties and daily life.  Advent calls to attention the fact that as we give attention to the physical preparations – things that are temporary, it is even more important that we prepare our hearts and souls which are eternal.  


Nazareth House Apostolate began the Advent Season as we begin everything – in prayer.  


As the first Advent candle was lit in The Chapel of the Presentation, the Liturgy began.  It is the custom of NHA at St. Simeon Skete to place the Nativity Scene in the chapel on the first Sunday of Advent, highlighting the empty creche – signifying the Season’s reason for preparation and expectation –  the coming of Christ.  

The Wisemen are placed far to the East in the Chapel … journeying closer each Sunday of Advent, finally making their way to the site of our Lord’s Nativity after Christmas.  

After the Liturgy on this first Sunday in Advent, 



we had a wonderful time of fellowship 



at Anna House, 



a sharing and celebration as we begin the fasting and penitential observations the next day.  


The materialistic “Santa Season” serves to distract us from having a meaningful, preparatory Advent.   Consumerism, Self indulgence, Keeping up with the ‘Jones’ (people haven’t realized that the “Jones”  aren’t happy, but they still want to be like them), mammon illness – all these things take away from having a real Christmas.   There are many traditions and customs that help us to ignore these distractions and put them in proper perspective.  



One tradition, the Advent Wreath, serves to keep us focused on The Important. Each night at the dinner table one candle for each week of Advent is lit, ending with all four candles lit by the week leading into Christmas.  Usually the youngest child of the family lights the first candle.   There are many prayers that can be found on the internet search engines to be said at the lighting of the candle, but it can be more personal and meaningful (especially to the children) to incorporate your own prayers. 

The first candle is the candle of Hope (expectation). This points attention to the anticipation of the coming of Christ.  As God’s people were exploited by power hungry kings, led astray by self-centered prophets, and assuaged into apathy by half-hearted religious leaders, people began to crave a new king who would teach them how to be people of God and not of the world. They longed for the return of God in their midst. 

So, God revealed to some of the prophets that He would not leave His flock without a true Shepherd. While they expected a new earthly king, their expectations fell far short of God’s revelation of Himself in Christ. The world continues to be lead by dominative powers.  We remain in expectation, with hope, for the coming of Christ.  Our hope starts with the birthing of Christ in our own hearts.  

The sequence of lighting the candles for the remaining Sundays of Advent are that of Love, Joy, and Peace.  

Posted in Advent, Advent wreath, Nazareth house apostolate, Sierra Leone, St Simeon Skete | Leave a comment

THE ADVENT WREATH

In Sierra Leone, James and family are making their way back to Kabala after spending a week in Freetown, 


braving the busyness of the city to seek medical attention for Roo, 

receive packages from the post and stock up on supplies.  They are excited to return to the peacefulness of Kabala, especially as they prepare their hearts during this penitential season of Advent. 

As I type this post, the rain is falling hard and Seraphim is outside rebuilding and repairing the newly developed ditches in the gravel road at the skete.  He is drenched. 

In order to prepare for the cold Winter, we are filling the gas tanks for the buildings in use at the Skete. 


Preventative measures and preparedness are imperative to maintain our buildings, our properties and daily life.  Advent calls to attention the fact that as we give attention to the physical preparations – things that are temporary, it is even more important that we prepare our hearts and souls which are eternal.  


Nazareth House Apostolate began the Advent Season as we begin everything – in prayer.  


As the first Advent candle was lit in The Chapel of the Presentation, the Liturgy began.  It is the custom of NHA at St. Simeon Skete to place the Nativity Scene in the chapel on the first Sunday of Advent, highlighting the empty creche – signifying the Season’s reason for preparation and expectation –  the coming of Christ.  

The Wisemen are placed far to the East in the Chapel … journeying closer each Sunday of Advent, finally making their way to the site of our Lord’s Nativity after Christmas.  

After the Liturgy on this first Sunday in Advent, 



we had a wonderful time of fellowship 



at Anna House, 



a sharing and celebration as we begin the fasting and penitential observations the next day.  


The materialistic “Santa Season” serves to distract us from having a meaningful, preparatory Advent.   Consumerism, Self indulgence, Keeping up with the ‘Jones’ (people haven’t realized that the “Jones”  aren’t happy, but they still want to be like them), mammon illness – all these things take away from having a real Christmas.   There are many traditions and customs that help us to ignore these distractions and put them in proper perspective.  



One tradition, the Advent Wreath, serves to keep us focused on The Important. Each night at the dinner table one candle for each week of Advent is lit, ending with all four candles lit by the week leading into Christmas.  Usually the youngest child of the family lights the first candle.   There are many prayers that can be found on the internet search engines to be said at the lighting of the candle, but it can be more personal and meaningful (especially to the children) to incorporate your own prayers. 

The first candle is the candle of Hope (expectation). This points attention to the anticipation of the coming of Christ.  As God’s people were exploited by power hungry kings, led astray by self-centered prophets, and assuaged into apathy by half-hearted religious leaders, people began to crave a new king who would teach them how to be people of God and not of the world. They longed for the return of God in their midst. 

So, God revealed to some of the prophets that He would not leave His flock without a true Shepherd. While they expected a new earthly king, their expectations fell far short of God’s revelation of Himself in Christ. The world continues to be lead by dominative powers.  We remain in expectation, with hope, for the coming of Christ.  Our hope starts with the birthing of Christ in our own hearts.  

The sequence of lighting the candles for the remaining Sundays of Advent are that of Love, Joy, and Peace.  

Posted in Advent, Advent wreath, Nazareth house apostolate, Sierra Leone, St Simeon Skete | Leave a comment

And so this is Advent

Today begins the preparatory Season of Advent.


Advent wreath at table in Holy Trinity Kellia, St. Simeon Skete



The Gospel for 1st Sunday of Advent
St. Matthew xxi. 1.

WHEN they drew nigh unto Jerusalem, and were come to Bethphage, unto the mount of Olives, then sent Jesus two disciples, saying unto them, Go into the village over against you, and straightway ye shall find an ass tied, and a colt with her: loose them, and bring them unto me. And if any man say ought unto you, ye shall say, The Lord hath need of them; and straightway he will send them. All this was done, that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the prophet, saying, Tell ye the daughter of Sion, Behold, thy King cometh unto thee, meek, and sitting upon an ass, and a colt the foal of an ass. And the disciples went, and did as Jesus commanded them, and brought the ass, and the colt, and put on them their clothes, and they set him thereon. And a very great multitude spread their garments in the way; others cut down branches from the trees, and strawed them in the way. And the multitudes that went before, and that followed, cried, saying, Hosanna to the son of David: Blessed is he that cometh in the name ‘of the Lord; Hosanna in the highest. And when he was come into Jerusalem, all the city was moved, saying, Who is this? And the multitude said, This is Jesus the prophet of Nazareth of Galilee. And Jesus went into the temple of God, and cast out all them that sold and bought in the temple, and overthrew the tables of the money-changers, and the seats of them that sold doves, and said unto them, It is written, My house shall be called the house of prayer; but ye have made it a den of thieves. 

Jesus tells His disciples to go into the city  AND He tells them to find a tethered colt that no one had ridden.   


Think about that image:  “a tethered colt which no one has ridden…”

Young mule of Denny & Joanie Markwell,  members of St. Simeon Skete



Of course the people are waiting for a dominative, powerful, substantive image – a King, A Ruler who is going to change everything from the outside (the surface).  


But Jesus says “I’m not going to come in on a horse, in triumph but …as Zechariah 9:9 prophesied… I’m coming in on a donkey to redefine what power is, worth is, strength is, trust is…



This colt/donkey, THIS powerless image is a tethered colt, its been tied up in all of history.  No one’s ever wanted to use it, no one’s ridden this kind before but Jesus is going to ride it into the city to show the world a different way, a new way, the way of trust, the way of vulnerability, the way of powerlessness.  



When your generosity has been tied up, loosen it and when greed rises up and asks “what are you doing?”, say, “The Lord has need of it”  When your humility is tied up, loosen it and when pride questions you, say “The Lord has need of it.”  When your forgiveness is tied up, untie it and when mercilessness asks you “why?,  say “The Lord has need of it.” 

As Jesus rides into the city in this “different way” the people wonder “Who is this?”  “What is this new way?”  Jesus upsets the system and says: “its prayer”. 

Jeremy Lopez, in prayer before his Confirmation.  Nazareth House Apostolate, Athens, Georgia



Of all the battles that God has with human consciousness, the battle to get rid of those things (furniture) that keep us from making our souls a house of prayer must be God’s most difficult battle.   Culture wants to rearrange the “furniture” by dominative power – the ability to influence others through coercion, hiring and firing, punishing, threatening, lawsuits, money, position.  This will rearrange the “furniture” and most will respond to it.  But at best, this is all we can do: re-arrange the “furniture”.   But Jesus doesn’t re-arrange the furniture, He pitches it – throws it out – opting for a House of Prayer!  Anything in your life that is keeping you from prayer needs to be pitched! 

As the Holiday Season approaches many will be re-arranging their living rooms to prepare for Holiday guests or give a new look but only PRAYER can change the living room into a LIVING room.  

Personal milagro of Seraphim, housed where he hangs his prayer beads



Advent Collect

ALMIGHTY God, give us grace that we may cast away the works of darkness, and put upon us the armour of light, now in the time of this mortal life, in which thy Son Jesus Christ came to visit us in great humility; that in the last day, when he shall come again in his glorious majesty to judge both the quick and the dead, we may rise to the life immortal, through him who liveth and reigneth with thee and the Holy Spirit, now and ever. Amen. 

Posted in Athens Georgia, Holy Trinity Kellia, milagro, Nazareth house apostolate, NHA, Sierra Leone, St Simeon Skete | Leave a comment

And so this is Advent

Today begins the preparatory Season of Advent.


Advent wreath at table in Holy Trinity Kellia, St. Simeon Skete



The Gospel for 1st Sunday of Advent
St. Matthew xxi. 1.

WHEN they drew nigh unto Jerusalem, and were come to Bethphage, unto the mount of Olives, then sent Jesus two disciples, saying unto them, Go into the village over against you, and straightway ye shall find an ass tied, and a colt with her: loose them, and bring them unto me. And if any man say ought unto you, ye shall say, The Lord hath need of them; and straightway he will send them. All this was done, that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the prophet, saying, Tell ye the daughter of Sion, Behold, thy King cometh unto thee, meek, and sitting upon an ass, and a colt the foal of an ass. And the disciples went, and did as Jesus commanded them, and brought the ass, and the colt, and put on them their clothes, and they set him thereon. And a very great multitude spread their garments in the way; others cut down branches from the trees, and strawed them in the way. And the multitudes that went before, and that followed, cried, saying, Hosanna to the son of David: Blessed is he that cometh in the name ‘of the Lord; Hosanna in the highest. And when he was come into Jerusalem, all the city was moved, saying, Who is this? And the multitude said, This is Jesus the prophet of Nazareth of Galilee. And Jesus went into the temple of God, and cast out all them that sold and bought in the temple, and overthrew the tables of the money-changers, and the seats of them that sold doves, and said unto them, It is written, My house shall be called the house of prayer; but ye have made it a den of thieves. 

Jesus tells His disciples to go into the city  AND He tells them to find a tethered colt that no one had ridden.   


Think about that image:  “a tethered colt which no one has ridden…”

Young mule of Denny & Joanie Markwell,  members of St. Simeon Skete



Of course the people are waiting for a dominative, powerful, substantive image – a King, A Ruler who is going to change everything from the outside (the surface).  


But Jesus says “I’m not going to come in on a horse, in triumph but …as Zechariah 9:9 prophesied… I’m coming in on a donkey to redefine what power is, worth is, strength is, trust is…



This colt/donkey, THIS powerless image is a tethered colt, its been tied up in all of history.  No one’s ever wanted to use it, no one’s ridden this kind before but Jesus is going to ride it into the city to show the world a different way, a new way, the way of trust, the way of vulnerability, the way of powerlessness.  



When your generosity has been tied up, loosen it and when greed rises up and asks “what are you doing?”, say, “The Lord has need of it”  When your humility is tied up, loosen it and when pride questions you, say “The Lord has need of it.”  When your forgiveness is tied up, untie it and when mercilessness asks you “why?,  say “The Lord has need of it.” 

As Jesus rides into the city in this “different way” the people wonder “Who is this?”  “What is this new way?”  Jesus upsets the system and says: “its prayer”. 

Jeremy Lopez, in prayer before his Confirmation.  Nazareth House Apostolate, Athens, Georgia



Of all the battles that God has with human consciousness, the battle to get rid of those things (furniture) that keep us from making our souls a house of prayer must be God’s most difficult battle.   Culture wants to rearrange the “furniture” by dominative power – the ability to influence others through coercion, hiring and firing, punishing, threatening, lawsuits, money, position.  This will rearrange the “furniture” and most will respond to it.  But at best, this is all we can do: re-arrange the “furniture”.   But Jesus doesn’t re-arrange the furniture, He pitches it – throws it out – opting for a House of Prayer!  Anything in your life that is keeping you from prayer needs to be pitched! 

As the Holiday Season approaches many will be re-arranging their living rooms to prepare for Holiday guests or give a new look but only PRAYER can change the living room into a LIVING room.  

Personal milagro of Seraphim, housed where he hangs his prayer beads



Advent Collect

ALMIGHTY God, give us grace that we may cast away the works of darkness, and put upon us the armour of light, now in the time of this mortal life, in which thy Son Jesus Christ came to visit us in great humility; that in the last day, when he shall come again in his glorious majesty to judge both the quick and the dead, we may rise to the life immortal, through him who liveth and reigneth with thee and the Holy Spirit, now and ever. Amen. 

Posted in Athens Georgia, Holy Trinity Kellia, milagro, Nazareth house apostolate, NHA, Sierra Leone, St Simeon Skete | Leave a comment

Our Supporters

Nazareth House Apostolate is blessed to have friends that support the work all over the world.  We remain small in number but HUGE in heart and spirit. 

As this post is being published, there are many outlets of Nazareth House busily working together to pray and provide beyond themselves.   We are most grateful.   The needs increase daily and we are thankful for the continued support.  You are all named daily in the prayers at St. Simeon Skete .

Today we feature our chapter housed in the C.S. Lewis Student Center & St. Theodore’s Chapel located on campus of University of South Carolina in Columbia. 
Seraphim and I recently made a trip to visit the C S Lewis Center and we are amazed by their care and support for the work and the love they show for NHA and the people of Sierra Leone and us.   
Tonight they will be doing a FAST to raise awareness and funding for the work of Nazareth House Apostolate.   If you are able, join them in the fast and/or donate to NHA for the cause. 

*********************************************************************************
Their flyer reads: 

What: Fast for Africa 
When: 6:00 p.m., Friday, Nov. 18, to 6:00 p.m., Saturday, Nov. 19 
Where: C. S. Lewis Student Center and on your own 
1730 College StColumbia, SC 29201

Why: To raise funds and awareness for Nazareth House Apostolate, Sierra Leone, and to pray for their ministry
GRACE is inviting you to be involved in the ministry of Nazareth House Apostolate in Sierra Leone, West Africa. Many of you met Fr. Seraphim and Vicki Hicks, founders of Nazareth House, last month during their visit to Columbia. This Fast for Africa will allow you to participate in the ministry you heard them speak of.
Nazareth House Apostolate is especially called to pray in areas that have been abandoned and forgotten by the rest of the world. During the horrific ten-year civil war in Sierra Leone, Nazareth House went there to pray and and share God’s love. Today, Nazareth House operates a free school in Kabala, Sierra Leone (along with one meal a day to students) as well as providing medical help to those who fall between the cracks. All of this started simply with prayer! Read more at www.NazarethHouseAP .org.

Attached is a sheet for supporters to pledge a certain amount for each hour you fast. At the bottom of this page is a handy table to compute several different levels of giving, but any amount helps, and donors are free to choose their own. Ordinarily, you should collect the gifts after you have finished the fast (no fair accepting funds, and then not following through on the fast). Check off the right column when you collect the donation. If you have medical issues that preclude you from a total fasting from solid food, just do as much as you can, but be upfront with your donors. The normal fast would mean only consuming water during the 24-hour period, but if you need to adjust it to your own situation, then do as much as you can. It really only means missing two meals (breakfast and lunch on Saturday, assuming you eat just prior to the 6:00 p.m. start on Friday), and very few people have ever had to be rushed to the hospital for missing two meals! You may also choose to fast from something besides food, but it should be a real sacrifice of something you ordinarily partake of (tv, computer, etc.).
As with any fast, use the hunger pains as an opportunity to remind yourself that your hunger for God is more important than any physical hunger you may experience. When your stomach grumbles, turn it into a prayer. You may want to use the following prayer, which is recited by the students daily at the Nazareth House School:
“Merciful God, receive the prayers we offer for our anxious and troubled world. Send thy light into our darkness and guide the nations as one family into the ways of peace. We, together on the earth, belong to you. May we see one another as you see us. Help us to love one another, teach us to understand each other, just as you understand us. Make us as fresh as the morning, make our hearts free of fear. May we forgive each other and forget the past. Strengthen in us, day by day, the desire for you. Amen.”
You will be able to participate in the fast completely on your own, but we will have group activities at the beginning and end of the fast, if you would like to participate. Friday, we will start with Evening Prayer at 6:00, praying especially for Nazarath House, and our efforts in this fast. We will follow that by a screening at 6:45 of Blood Diamond, the 2006 film starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Djimon Hounsou, which tells the story of Sierra Leone’s brutal civil war (Location TBA).
Saturday, we will end the fast with Evening Prayer at 5:30, followed by an African supper at 6:00.
(Help us support Nazareth House Apostolate in Sierra Leone, West Africa. Please download this sheet for more information: http://www.sttheodoresc.org/fortnight/Fast%20for%20Africa%2011-11.pdf)

*********************************************************************************During our visit,  The C.S. Lewis Center offered a Taste of Africa dinner to raise awareness and support.  
Groundnut Soup with Rice as well as the cucumber and smoked fish dish were big hits with everyone – the students at USC


 and at the subsequentTaste of Africa dinner at the Cathedral of the Epiphany Church in Columbia, SC.   
What a welcome we received!  
The fellowship was wonderful.  
The “Freetown Fridge” remains (drinks are offered for a donation to NHA) in place at the C.S. Lewis Center. 

It has been raising awareness and funding for Nazareth House for many years now. 

One of my favorite events of the visit was the High Tea 


on the porch of the Center.  

We enjoyed great togetherness and mutual support.  
We were quite pleased at the brilliance of the students 
and their eagerness to help those in need.   
If you find yourself in the Columbia area, look the C.S. Lewis Center  and/or the Cathedral of Epiphany up – you are sure to find a gracious welcome. 


Join in the love of Nazareth House Apostolate…

Follow us on our Facebook Page
See us in action on our Youtube Channel;   www.youtube.com/SaloneNHA



Posted in C.S. Lewis Center, Cathedral of the Epiphany, Columbia SC, fr paul sterne, Groundnut soup, Nazareth house apostolate, NHA, st theodore chapel | Leave a comment

Our Supporters

Nazareth House Apostolate is blessed to have friends that support the work all over the world.  We remain small in number but HUGE in heart and spirit. 

As this post is being published, there are many outlets of Nazareth House busily working together to pray and provide beyond themselves.   We are most grateful.   The needs increase daily and we are thankful for the continued support.  You are all named daily in the prayers at St. Simeon Skete .

Today we feature our chapter housed in the C.S. Lewis Student Center & St. Theodore’s Chapel located on campus of University of South Carolina in Columbia. 
Seraphim and I recently made a trip to visit the C S Lewis Center and we are amazed by their care and support for the work and the love they show for NHA and the people of Sierra Leone and us.   
Tonight they will be doing a FAST to raise awareness and funding for the work of Nazareth House Apostolate.   If you are able, join them in the fast and/or donate to NHA for the cause. 

*********************************************************************************
Their flyer reads: 

What: Fast for Africa 
When: 6:00 p.m., Friday, Nov. 18, to 6:00 p.m., Saturday, Nov. 19 
Where: C. S. Lewis Student Center and on your own 
1730 College StColumbia, SC 29201

Why: To raise funds and awareness for Nazareth House Apostolate, Sierra Leone, and to pray for their ministry
GRACE is inviting you to be involved in the ministry of Nazareth House Apostolate in Sierra Leone, West Africa. Many of you met Fr. Seraphim and Vicki Hicks, founders of Nazareth House, last month during their visit to Columbia. This Fast for Africa will allow you to participate in the ministry you heard them speak of.
Nazareth House Apostolate is especially called to pray in areas that have been abandoned and forgotten by the rest of the world. During the horrific ten-year civil war in Sierra Leone, Nazareth House went there to pray and and share God’s love. Today, Nazareth House operates a free school in Kabala, Sierra Leone (along with one meal a day to students) as well as providing medical help to those who fall between the cracks. All of this started simply with prayer! Read more at www.NazarethHouseAP .org.

Attached is a sheet for supporters to pledge a certain amount for each hour you fast. At the bottom of this page is a handy table to compute several different levels of giving, but any amount helps, and donors are free to choose their own. Ordinarily, you should collect the gifts after you have finished the fast (no fair accepting funds, and then not following through on the fast). Check off the right column when you collect the donation. If you have medical issues that preclude you from a total fasting from solid food, just do as much as you can, but be upfront with your donors. The normal fast would mean only consuming water during the 24-hour period, but if you need to adjust it to your own situation, then do as much as you can. It really only means missing two meals (breakfast and lunch on Saturday, assuming you eat just prior to the 6:00 p.m. start on Friday), and very few people have ever had to be rushed to the hospital for missing two meals! You may also choose to fast from something besides food, but it should be a real sacrifice of something you ordinarily partake of (tv, computer, etc.).
As with any fast, use the hunger pains as an opportunity to remind yourself that your hunger for God is more important than any physical hunger you may experience. When your stomach grumbles, turn it into a prayer. You may want to use the following prayer, which is recited by the students daily at the Nazareth House School:
“Merciful God, receive the prayers we offer for our anxious and troubled world. Send thy light into our darkness and guide the nations as one family into the ways of peace. We, together on the earth, belong to you. May we see one another as you see us. Help us to love one another, teach us to understand each other, just as you understand us. Make us as fresh as the morning, make our hearts free of fear. May we forgive each other and forget the past. Strengthen in us, day by day, the desire for you. Amen.”
You will be able to participate in the fast completely on your own, but we will have group activities at the beginning and end of the fast, if you would like to participate. Friday, we will start with Evening Prayer at 6:00, praying especially for Nazarath House, and our efforts in this fast. We will follow that by a screening at 6:45 of Blood Diamond, the 2006 film starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Djimon Hounsou, which tells the story of Sierra Leone’s brutal civil war (Location TBA).
Saturday, we will end the fast with Evening Prayer at 5:30, followed by an African supper at 6:00.
(Help us support Nazareth House Apostolate in Sierra Leone, West Africa. Please download this sheet for more information: http://www.sttheodoresc.org/fortnight/Fast%20for%20Africa%2011-11.pdf)

*********************************************************************************During our visit,  The C.S. Lewis Center offered a Taste of Africa dinner to raise awareness and support.  
Groundnut Soup with Rice as well as the cucumber and smoked fish dish were big hits with everyone – the students at USC


 and at the subsequentTaste of Africa dinner at the Cathedral of the Epiphany Church in Columbia, SC.   
What a welcome we received!  
The fellowship was wonderful.  
The “Freetown Fridge” remains (drinks are offered for a donation to NHA) in place at the C.S. Lewis Center. 

It has been raising awareness and funding for Nazareth House for many years now. 

One of my favorite events of the visit was the High Tea 


on the porch of the Center.  

We enjoyed great togetherness and mutual support.  
We were quite pleased at the brilliance of the students 
and their eagerness to help those in need.   
If you find yourself in the Columbia area, look the C.S. Lewis Center  and/or the Cathedral of Epiphany up – you are sure to find a gracious welcome. 


Join in the love of Nazareth House Apostolate…

Follow us on our Facebook Page
See us in action on our Youtube Channel;   www.youtube.com/SaloneNHA



Posted in C.S. Lewis Center, Cathedral of the Epiphany, Columbia SC, fr paul sterne, Groundnut soup, Nazareth house apostolate, NHA, st theodore chapel | Leave a comment

 We received a lab report on Roo and it showed he was severely anemic.  Everything else seemed okay and no malaria showed in the blood.

 From these photos we can see he is thin and doesn’t feel well.   We are starting him on iron vitamins as we do not trust the blood supply for transfusions.

Thank you for your prayers for Roo and the work in Sierra Leone by Nazareth House Apostolate.  Its not easy, but we don’t give up.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

 We received a lab report on Roo and it showed he was severely anemic.  Everything else seemed okay and no malaria showed in the blood.

 From these photos we can see he is thin and doesn’t feel well.   We are starting him on iron vitamins as we do not trust the blood supply for transfusions.

Thank you for your prayers for Roo and the work in Sierra Leone by Nazareth House Apostolate.  Its not easy, but we don’t give up.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Eleven. Eleven. Eleven. Updates: bits & pieces

In the spirit of Eleven, we give thanksgiving for the Eleven Patronal Saints of St. Simeon Skete and NHA. 

  1. Holy Prophet, Elijah, who heard God in the stillness
  2. Holy Simeon, the God Receiver & Confessor, who found God to be enough
  3. John the Baptist, Forerunner & Baptizer of Jesus in the Jordan River where Heaven opened
  4. Saint Mary of Bethany, who chose the better part
  5. Saint John the Beloved who with Mary Magdalene & Mary, the mother of our Lord, bore witness at the foot of the cross
  6. Saint Paul,  the Apostle, who showed us the Way of the Name
  7. Saint Pachomius of the Rule who gave us the Angel’s holy Rule of Prayer
  8. Saint Arsenius, who fled, found solitude and prayed always
  9. Saint Mary of Egypt, for whom repentance was enough
  10. Saint Isaac the Syrian, who showed us the beyond to be in our midst
  11. Saint Gregory of Sinai, who stayed with the prayer
“Lord, Jesus Christ our God,  by the prayers of your saints, have mercy upon us and save us.”



Today’s blog post will be a bit of a “catch up” on recent events.  


At this writing James and Kadijah are tending to Roo who is experiencing a very high fever of 104.  Please keep him in your prayers. 


The NHA Matching Fund campaign has ended and was a success.  We have now received the matching funds to match all the donations.   Thank you so very much for all the support.  You’ll be hearing more about this very soon.


Nazareth House Apostolate has purchased 100 worm pills ($319) and they are on their way to Sierra Leone along with medications received from the Anglican Church Women of St. Augustine Church in Chico, California.



We want to send our love and congratulations to Mohammad Sanu and his family.  



His wife gave birth (successfully) to their youngest child. 





 Last year they lost a child at birth – it was too premature.  



Sanu has joined the NHA team and works with James to provide and do the work of Nazareth House in Kabala.  


James reports after Sanu’s wife’s surgery – c-section (thanks to NHA’s provision) that he met up with an adorable little dog sporting only three legs.   



Old school is this dog’s name. Some say he suffered the amputation during the war, some say he was hit by a car but no matter what his history is, he is the sweetiest dog I have ever met in my life. Whilst trying to help Sanu out as he struggle to get his wife out of the hospital after her operation, we met Old School. I was so worn out but was so moved to play with him and  there he comes wagging his tale as if I was his owner. He did make my day and every one told me so much good stories of him. Old School, as he is called, living his life as a Freetonian and had no choice but to keep his three legs going and making life happen as it is. No complain at all…….  To me he represents a lot of my people, they have nothing, many times not even their limbs, but they smile, they are genuinely happy and they make life go on as if they were richest of the world” -James Mansaray


After prayerful consideration and much research, we have decided to transfer Lucy to a Boarding School in Freetown.   



Lucy, (James daughter) plans on being a doctor and with the scarcity of that vocation in Kabala we felt it was our duty to see that she gets the adequate education and training without delay.   Our NHA School in Kabala provides very qualified education however, we are just now growing into the high school level that Lucy has already obtained, therefore we didn’t want to hold her back. We tried the excellent homeschooling but since the internet in Sierra Leone is so intermittent these days, her learning was not consistent.  The boarding school tuition, room and board (including food) is right at $3,000 a year.  We have provided $500 of that as a downpayment and this has allowed her to begin school.  The school has asked that we pay $1100 this month and the rest within the next month.   We are taking donations for this cause.  If you wish to give please indicate “Lucy” on your contribution. 


Nazareth House again paid the yearly rent for Marianna Barrie, the wife of the late sufi saint, Pa Barrie.  

We promised Pa Barrie that  we would take care of his widow and we have kept our promise.   







Thanks be to God. 





Back at St. Simeon Skete, we are preparing for Winter.   The skies have been as colorful as the changing leaves.  Finally, the grass mowing is over until Spring.





   There is over 17 acres of grass to cut on the property and Seraphim has been keeping up with it.





   When time came for Louisville Tractor to come and take away the lawn mower for Winterizing,



 Seraphim was like a boy having his toy taken away.  



He explained to me that the Cheetah (Scags Zero Turn) was the best working tool he’s had in a long time.  “Its a fine machine”  He is very thankful for it, especially with this much grass to cut. 


And as they drove off with it, Seraphim watched it to the very end of the road.   Men and their tools.   …smile…




We cannot stress enough that Nazareth House Apostolate relies totally on God as he expresses Himself through our supporters’ prayers, compassion and generosity.  Through this assistance we are able to reach hundreds (families and individuals, doctors and hospitals,  teachers and students).   Join us, today.

donations should be made through the Paypal button on our website 
or 
mailed to
NHA
185 Captains Cove Drive
Taylorsville,  KY 40071

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