St. Nektarios Parish

St. Nektarios ParishSt. Nektarios ParishSt. Nektarios Parish

St. Nektarios Parish

St. Nektarios ParishSt. Nektarios ParishSt. Nektarios Parish

“Do not think that you have a right to complain when your prayers are not answered. God fulfills your desires in a manner that you do not know.”


St. Nektarios of Aegina

About St. Nektarios Parish

Our Mission

Our Priest Fr. Kostadinos Kaltsidis

Our Patron Saint

We are a diverse community united by our Orthodox faith, welcoming all through the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God the Father, and the communion of the Holy Spirit. As a member parish of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia (ROCOR), within the Canadian Diocese under the omophorion of His Eminence Gabriel, Archbish

We are a diverse community united by our Orthodox faith, welcoming all through the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God the Father, and the communion of the Holy Spirit. As a member parish of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia (ROCOR), within the Canadian Diocese under the omophorion of His Eminence Gabriel, Archbishop of Montreal, we at St. Nektarios Parish seek to cultivate a warm and inclusive environment for all. Our mission is to share the love of Christ and strengthen the bonds of fellowship within our richly varied congregation. 

Our Patron Saint

Our Priest Fr. Kostadinos Kaltsidis

Our Patron Saint

 

When we think of saints, we often think of people who lived centuries ago. St. Nektarios, on the contrary, lived and died in the earlier part of the twentieth century. Born in Selyvria, Thrace (part of present-day Turkey), in October of 1846 as Anastasios Kephalas, Nektarios (his ordained name) began working and studying in Constantinopl

 

When we think of saints, we often think of people who lived centuries ago. St. Nektarios, on the contrary, lived and died in the earlier part of the twentieth century. Born in Selyvria, Thrace (part of present-day Turkey), in October of 1846 as Anastasios Kephalas, Nektarios (his ordained name) began working and studying in Constantinople at age 14. Six years later he traveled to the island of Chios and entered a monastery. From there, he went to serve under Patriarch Sophronios, of Alexandria, Egypt.

Patriarch Sophronios liked Nektarios very much and sent him to study theology at the University of Athens, Greece. 


After he finished his studies, the patriarch appointed him priest and preacher in Cairo, Egypt. Soon thereafter, Nektarios was ordained Bishop and assigned in Cairo. It seemed as though Bishop Nektarios had one success after another, but people do not become Saints without difficulty and many thorns. So it was with Bishop Nektarios. Some people who disliked him and were jealous of his success made up lies about the good bishop. Patriarch Sophronios was swayed and took everything away from Nektarios. Nektarios returned to Athens where he was invited to preach at different churches. In Athens his great wisdom was realized and he became Dean of a theological school there in 1894.


Bishop Nektarios’ spiritual callings were perhaps more fulfilled when he started a convent for nuns on a small island not too far from the seaport of Piraeus, Greece. On Aegina, Bishop Nektarios founded the Convent of the Holy Trinity. It was here at his convent that Nektarios would make his greatest contributions to the Orthodox Church. In 1910 Nektarios retired to the Convent of the Holy Trinity to spend his last years. People flocked to Aegina to worship with the bishop, to listen to his sermons, and to be healed from different illnesses.


St. Nektarios died on November 9, 1920 and was buried in a special chapel which he had built. People continued to flock to the Convent of the Holy Trinity, to pay their respects at the Shrine of St. Nektarios. Miracles continue to take place at his grave site year after year. Eventually, the Patriarchate of Constantinople proclaimed Nektarios a Saint in 1961. St. Nektarios is considered the Patron Saint for people who have cancer, heart trouble, arthritis, epilepsy and other sicknesses. Visitors to this shrine leave filled with the love and peace that St. Nektarios gave to all when he lived.


St. Nektarios is a true icon of Christian love and patience. We are all called to love all people and to encourage them. As people of faith, we offer prayers as a means of help for all. St. Nektarios encouraged others by being with them at difficult times. He prayed to God to give them peace and courage to face their problems. We take him as our example. 

St. Nektarios is honored and remembered annually on November 9.

Our Priest Fr. Kostadinos Kaltsidis

Our Priest Fr. Kostadinos Kaltsidis

Our Priest Fr. Kostadinos Kaltsidis

 

Fr. Kostadinos was born in Vancouver and began his journey in the Church as a young acolyte at Saints Constantine and Helen in Surrey. After earning his Bachelor’s degree in Theology from the Toronto Orthodox Theological Academy in 2002, he returned to Vancouver to serve at St. George Cathedral as a cantor, youth director, lay assistant,

 

Fr. Kostadinos was born in Vancouver and began his journey in the Church as a young acolyte at Saints Constantine and Helen in Surrey. After earning his Bachelor’s degree in Theology from the Toronto Orthodox Theological Academy in 2002, he returned to Vancouver to serve at St. George Cathedral as a cantor, youth director, lay assistant, and deacon.


Ordained to the priesthood in 2006, he became the pastor at the Presentation of Our Lord Church in Victoria, and later served for nearly a decade at Saints Constantine and Helen Greek Orthodox Church in Surrey.


Since 2022, Fr. Kostadinos has joyfully served at St. Nektarios Orthodox Mission Parish, sharing his love for Christ, his faith, and his community with warmth and devotion.

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