One of the lovely things about my parish is the dedication our priest, Fr. David, has to prayer. We are blessed to have Vespers on Wednesday, Great Vespers on Saturday night, and during the week, from Monday to Friday, we pray the 3rd and 6th hours online.
Would you like to start your day with prayers of the 3rd and 6th hours. Here is the link for our stream of the hours:
Subscribe to St. Mary Orthodox Church
St Mary Orthodox Church
and you will get notification every morning before we begin.
The time for the hours is 7:30 AM EST.
Oh you go to
that church? That’s amazing! I
love that parish! I’ve literally been subscribed to them since 2022 (I try to surround myself with the divine services at all times, and your church has a good choir and good quality recordings, which is rare among Romanian Orthodox parishes in the US).
I also
love that you bother to put effort into the Third and Sixth Hours rather than reading through them in the rushed manner that one sees in some parishes where they exist mainly to pass the time while the priest hears confessions of people who were unable to attend vigils.
I had actually been listening to these reader services without realizing it was you, and I had your Presanctified liturgy from yesterday on my agenda to listen to today (the Presanctified Liturgies are one of my favorite parts of Lent, because I believe they are a powerful confession of the Eucharistic change in the Epiclesis.
Your parish is one of my three favorite predominantly English language parishes to listen to, along with Holy Trinity OCA in San Francisco and St. John Chrysostom Albanian Orthodox. St. Nicholas Serbian Orthodox was on the list but lately they’ve been having microphone problems, and also the mic at St. John Chrysostom is failing.
My favorite streaming parishes overall are Holy Virgin Cathedral in San Francisco, the Synodal Cathedral of the Sign in New York (despite technical problems, also, lately they have been frustratingly irregular about streaming, but they started in 2019 before the pandemic), Holy Resurrection OCA (Russian Orthodox in a mix of Slavonic and English on the Julian Calendar) in Vancouver, Holy Trinity Russian Orthodox Church (MP) on the East Coast, also a mix of Slavonic and English, of course one also hears English at the first two but its mostly Slavonic, and St. Alexander Nevsky Cathedral in Paris, which is a mix of French and Russian, and St. Nicholas Russian Orthodox Church in Vienna, which does some services in German but most in Russian with a bit of German, and has, as befits a church in Vienna, exceptionally high musical standards, and finally the Lavra in St. Petersburg, which is the only really good quality stream from Russia I have found that is consistent with my liturgical preferences, although I am always looking for more, but the problem is that most Russian churches can’t afford the best recording equipment.
As should be evident, I really like Slavonic music, but I also really like Greek, Romanian and Antiochian four-part harmony and Georgian three-part harmony, but unfortunately as far as I can tell there are no streaming Georgian parishes online (if anyone is aware of one please let me know; I have looked, and looked, as much as I could stand)
I also love Byzantine Chant but I prefer to hear it in person, with the exception of some recordings of Capella Romana and a recording from a monastery in Meteora (I think the one from which the monks who revitalized Simonpetra came from, to escape the tourists), which had an elderly cantor with a beautiful voice of the kind some elderly men have.