|
We'd like to express our best wishes to you and your family as you
plan your child’s Baptism. At this time we thought it would be helpful
to inform you of the obligatory fees to the Community.
Baptismal fees:
$200 for the service fee and both the family and the Koumbari each
pay a membership fee of $75 to a maximium of $350 and be a baptized
member in good standing with the Orthodox Church.
The Sacrament of Baptism
Baptism is the gateway into the Christian Church; the saving action
of God who through water and the Spirit recreates his creation;
the initial sacrament through which he who is immersed in water
three times in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the
Holy Spirit is cleansed from all sin and regenerated spiritually.
As our Lord himself stated: "..no one can enter the kingdom of God
unless he is born of water and the Spirit." John 3,5
The baptism today contains many components. This guide to help you
follow along.
The Renunciation and the Acceptance
Tthe child will be held by Godparent or Godparents (Nuno and Nuna
in Greek) as he stands in the narthex of the church facing east
(towards the altar). The priest, standing in front of them, blows
three times into the child's face in the form of the cross to drive
away any evil spirits and adverse power and blesses him each time
saying "In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy
Spirit. Amen". He then places his hands on the child's head, which
symbolized the taking of possession of the candidate in the name
of the Holy Trinity and recites a prayer addressed to the Triune
God: "In your name, O God of truth..I lay my hand on your servant
who has been found worthy to seek salvation in your Holy Name and
protection under the shelter of your wings. Banish from him the
old error, fill him with faith and hope in you..so that he might
know that you are the only true God..Grant him the ability to live
in accordance with your commandments."
The Exorcisms
The prayer is followed by three exorcisms and yet another prayer,
the prayer of acceptance, at the end of which the priest, in summary
of all that was said before, asks God to drive out and banish from
the child any and every evil and impure spirit which may be hiding
and lurking in his heart and make him a reason-endowed sheep in
the holy flock of Christ, an honorable member of the Church, child
and heir of the kingdom. The child and Godparent will then be asked
to face west and renounce Satan and all his works, and all his worship
and all his angels, and all his pride in a question and answer form
three times and then asked to breath (instead of the old tradition
of spitting) down on Satan. Facing west signifies the west, a place
of natural darkness, where the Devil, who is darkness himself, makes
his abode.
The Confession of Faith
Then the child and Godparent will face east again and affirmatively
answer The Priest who will ask them (three times) if they have pledged
their allegiance to Christ.
The Service of Baptism
The Blessing of the Water
Now that the child is ready, they will enter the Church and the
Priest will ask the Holy Spirit to come down and bless and consecrate
the water in the font and make it an instrument of salvation.
The Blessing of the Oil and Anointing
Once the blessing of the water is complete, the Godparent will offer
a small bottle of olive oil over which a prayer for the banishment
of evil is read to make it "an anointing of incorruption, a weapon
of justice, a renewal of soul and body, a defense against every
influence of the Devil and a release from evil to all those who
are anointed with it, or partake of it." Some of this oil is then
poured crosswise three times on the water in the font in order to
render the consecration of the water complete. The child (now naked)
will be anointed with the blessed oil on the forehead, nose, ears,
mouth, chest, legs, feet, hands and back. The Godparent will then
anoint the child, to prepare him, just as an athlete prepares, to
battle the demon whom he has just renounced and to slip away from
the grip of sin.
The Baptism
Now the child will be immersed in the font three times with prayers,
and then handed to the Godparent who is waiting for him with a white
sheet.
The Sacrament of Chrism (Confirmation)
Now newly baptized, the child will be chrismated with Holy Myrrh
on the same parts of the body where he was earlier anointed with
oil. Holy Chrism is the seal of the gift of the Holy Sprit, which
brands all baptized persons with a seal which sets them apart as
inalienable possessions of Christ. That is, the Holy Spirit embraces
them and envelopes them like a shield and an armor of faith to enable
them to live the faith into which they have just been baptized.
This is why Chrismation is also known as the Sacrament of the Holy
Spirit.
The Tonsure
Following the Baptism and Chrism, the Priest will tonsure the child
by cutting some of his hair crosswise to signify: that Christ will
be the head of the child from now on, that he will reject other
allegiances, the first sacrifice from his body to God.
The Vesting
The Priest now blesses the child and places a white garment of righteousness
on him. The child will leave to be dressed and the Priest will read
additional prayers at this time. The child will return fully dressed
and undergoes the ablution or symbolic washing away of the Myrrh
and then receives the blessing of Christ. The Godparent will then
take the child's baptismal candle and will then be lead three times
around the font. This is an act of rejoicing with the angles in
heaven at the return of a lost sheep, and with the other Christians
present at the addition of one more member to the flock of Christ.
The Readings
The readings follow from the Epistle of Paul to the Romans (6, 3-11)
where Paul makes the comparison between the immersion and emersion
with the burial and resurrection of Christ and from the Gospel according
to St. Matthew (28, 16-20) where the Divine Institution of Baptism
was established by our Lord.
Holy Communion
The whole ceremony ends with the partaking of Holy Communion by
the child, his first taste of the Body and Blood of the Lord, so
that just as nature nourishes the newborn infant physically with
milk, likewise the Grace offers to it Holy Communion as spiritual
food as so as he is born through baptism. Finally the Priest places
a blessed gold cross around the neck of the child. The child will
then be presented to the parents and the celebration can begin
|