ST. NAZIANZ, Wis. (CNS) — A Divine Liturgy brought together four jurisdictions of Eastern-rite Catholic communities, as well as the local Latin-rite Catholic community, at St. Gregory Roman Catholic Church in St. Nazianz.
The Feb. 16 Divine Liturgy celebrated the life tonsure of Father Paiisi Firman into the monastic brotherhood of the Holy Resurrection Monastery, which belongs canonically to the Romanian Catholic jurisdiction.
Father Paiisi, whose birth name is Patrick, is a member of the Ukrainian Catholic Church. In honor of his faith background, Bishop Benedict Aleksiychuk of St. Nicholas Ukrainian Catholic Eparchy in Chicago joined Abbot Nicholas Zachariadis of Holy Resurrection Monastery, for the tonsure.
Abbot Nicholas said Holy Resurrection Monastery, now the largest among the Greek Catholic monasteries in the United States, “has always seen its mission as extending to all jurisdictions.”
The tonsure ceremony was a prime example of this collaboration.
The abbot explained that in the Byzantine Catholic Church, there are “basically two vocations or charisms of the Christian life: marriage and monastic life. Even priests and deacons are either married or monks.”
With married Eastern-rite clergy becoming more common, even in the United States, “the witness of monastic life will be even more important than ever to emphasize the two charisms in the church,” Abbot Nicholas said. “This tonsure celebrates the witness of monastic life in the Greek Catholic churches in the USA and the co-operation between all the Greek Catholic churches in order to make this happen.”
The tonsure — from the Latin word “tondeo,” meaning to shear or shave — is rich with historical symbolism. It consists of cutting the hair of the candidate, a gesture that is found in Scripture.
For example, Chapter 18, Verse 18, of the Acts of the Apostles, describes Paul being “at Cenchreae, where he had his hair cut because he had taken a vow.”
Before the tonsure rite, Abbot Nicholas addressed the assembly that numbered over 100 people.
“We hope that this will be the beginning of many more associations with the Ukrainian community of Chicago,” he said, in his welcome to Bishop Aleksiychuk, who brought with him from Chicago a choir that led the congregation in song.
The abbot said the gathering of so many communities bodes well for their future. “This shows a very, very important direction of our monastery and, hopefully, of our Greek Catholic churches in the USA,” he said.
He also acknowledged the presence of six nuns from the Byzantine Catholic Christ the Bridegroom Monastery in Burton, Ohio, in the Eparchy of Parma.
In its 25-year history, the monastery in St. Nazianz has been unique, Abbot Nicholas said.
“We were traditional, we were in America and we were a monastery especially for all Greek Catholics,” he said. “Not just for Romanians, not just for Ruthenians, not just for Ukrainians, not just for Melkites, but for all Greek Catholics. ... I appeal to all the Greek Catholic jurisdictions in the U.S. to be inspired by this vision, to promote monastic life.”
He said that, unlike the Latin-rite Catholic churches, the Eastern-rite Catholic churches are small and need each other to succeed.
“Each of our jurisdictions is too small, too lacking in resources, too uninformed about the richness of monastic life for each jurisdiction to recreate the wheel of monastic life,” he said.
Father Paiisi’s tonsure is a positive sign for the future, added the abbot, showing that Eastern- and Latin-rite Catholics “are in this together.”
“I’m very proud this morning to be kind of cementing this reality,” he said, by receiving Father Paiisi, a deacon of the Ukrainian Catholic Church, into the monastery. He hoped it would be the beginning of many such monastic vocations to the monastery.
“May Father Paiisi, as I will be tonsuring him for life, be a witness, and an important witness, to that reality,” Abbot Nicholas added.
With the tonsure of Father Paiisi, he said, the monastery now has 10 members. Two novice monks are scheduled for life tonsure this year.
“We are growing, but the size of a monastic community is not as important as the quality,” the abbot said. “I am very impressed by the quality of our monastic candidates.”
Caption: Abbot Nicholas Zachariadis of Holy Resurrection Monastery in St. Nazianz, Wis., cuts the hair of Deacon Paiisi during his tonsure ceremony Feb. 16 at St. Gregory Roman Catholic Church in St. Nazianz. (CNS photo/Sam Lucero, The Compass)