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    You are at:Home»Governance & Unity News»Election of Metropolitan of Chicago Canceled

    Election of Metropolitan of Chicago Canceled

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    By Webmaster on July 13, 2017 Governance & Unity News, Governance Top Stories, Uncategorized
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    His Grace Bishop Sebastianos o Zela, Chief Secretary of the Holy Eparchial Synod of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America

    Source: The National Herald

    Theodoros Kalmoukos 

    NEW YORK – The election of Bishop Sevastianos of Zela as the new Metropolitan of Chicago was canceled by the Holy Synod of the Ecumenical Patriarchate. The election was scheduled to take place on Thursday, July 13 at the Phanar.

    The National Herald has learned that the unexpected turn of events is due to the List of Candidates which was considered problematic and incomplete.

    The List, however, had been approved by the Ecumenical Patriarchate last March. Bishop Sevastianos of Zela had gathered 7 votes out of 8 who voted for the triprosopon during the selection on July 6 by the Holy Eparchial Synod of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America.

    The Ecumenical Patriarchate has the right and privilege to cancel the selection of the three person ballot that is instituted by the Holy Eparchial Synod of America. The practice thus far was that the Synod of the Patriarchate presided by His All Holiness Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew was to elect the candidates who receives the majority of the votes during the selection process of the triprosopon (three person ballot).

    This development may create a crisis between the Ecumenical Patriarchate and the Archbishop Demetrios of America because this is a direct rejection of such an important recommendation of the Church of America expressed by its Holy Eparchial Synod.

    TNH was unable to contact His Eminence Archbishop Demetrios at press time despite multiple calls to the Archdiocese.

    TNH has learned that Bishop Sevastianos is in Cyprus visiting family members.

    His Grace Bishop Sevastianos of Zela came first during the process of the selection of the three person ballot (trirprosopon) on July 6 by the Holy Eparchial Synod of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America, presided by His Eminence Archbishop Demetrios.

    The triprosopon was composed of Bishop Sevastianos of Zela, who received votes from  seven of the Synod hierarchs (voters); Archimandrite George Nikas presiding priest at the Holy Trinity parish of Salt Lake City, UT, who received three votes; and Archimandrite Gerasimos Makris presiding priest of the Holy Cross parish in Brooklyn, who also received three votes.

    The Synod was comprised of Archbishop Demetrios of America, presiding, and Metropolitans Methodios of Boston, Isaiah of Denver, Alexios of Atlanta, Nicholas of Detroit, Savas of Pittsburgh, Gerasimos of San Francisco, and Evangelos of New Jersey.

    All voted for Sevastianos except for Gerasimos, who made clear to Demetrios and the other Synod members his preference for a candidacy of Metropolitan Nikitas of Dardaneles.

    Sevastianos is the Chief Secretary of the Holy Eparchial Synod and the Spiritual Advisor to the National Philoptochos Society. He was ordained a bishop and given the honorary title of the city of Zela on December 17, 2011.

    The result of the selection process was sent to the Ecumenical Patriarchate for the official election by its Holy Synod,

    Sevastianos was Demetrios’ choice. Metropolitan Nicholas will preside in the interim until a new metropolitan of Chicago is officially elected.

    The Synod decided that the List of Candidates was incomplete because not all the names of those eligible for election were included. The Patriarchate is going to ask from Archbishop Demetrios to add to the List all those eligible candidates including those hierarchs who have served at the Archdiocese of America and now serving in Metropolises abroad such as Metropolitan Athenagoras of Mexico, Cleopas of Sweden, Tarasios of Buenos Aires, Nikitas of Dardanelles. Also, the current Metropolitans of the Archdiocese could be place on the List if they desire to be transferred to the Metropolis of Chicago.

    ABOUT BISHOP SEVASTIANOS

    Bishop Sevastianos was born in Ano-Zodia, Cyprus, he is the first of three children born to Panayiota and Frixos Skordallos. He is a graduate of the Theological School of the University of Athens, Greece (1978). He received a scholarship through the World Council of Churches to study in the United States at Columbia Theological Seminary, Decatur Georgia (1982) where he received a ThM in Pastoral Psychology. He has worked and received advanced certification in Clinical Pastoral Education at Caraway Methodist Medical Center, Birmingham, Alabama (1980-1982), and furthered his studies in Pastoral Psychology at Vanderbilt University, Nashville Tennessee and Middle Tennessee State University (1982-1984).

    He was ordained Deacon on January 17, 1974, by the late Metropolitan of Morphou Chrysanthos and Priest on March 4, 1978 in England by the Bishop of Tropaiou Gregorios who is currently the Archbishop of Thyateira and Great Britain. He received the offikion of Archimandrite by the late Archbishop of Thyateira Athenagoras. He has served several parishes both as a deacon and a priest in Cyprus, Greece and the United States.

    As a Deacon, he served the late Metropolitan Chyrsanthos of Morphou (1974), St. George Church, in Akadimia Platonos, in Athens (1975), St. Nicholas Church in Kato Patisia, Athens (1976-78), and as a priest in Nottingham England (1978-79), Holy Trinity-Holy Cross in Birmingham, Alabama, U.S. (1980-82), Sts. Constantine and Helen – Holy Cross, Huntsville, Alabama (1982-84, 1989-93), the Cathedral of Panayia Catholike, Limassol Cyprus (1984-88), Holy Transfiguration, Marietta, Georgia (1993-2004), and St. Nicholas Cathedral, Tarpon Springs, Florida (2004-06). He was appointed Chief Secretary of the Synod by Archbishop Demetrios of America on June 1, 2006.

    Bishop Sevastianos has been actively involved in the Administration Committees of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America serving as a Council member on the Metropolis and Archdiocesan levels; in the Administration Committee of the Archdiocesan Council where he assisted in developing resources for the training of Parish Councils and in the Legal Committee of the Archdiocese. He has served as President of the Clergy Syndesmos of the Metropolis of Atlanta for several years and the Archdiocesan Presbyters Council.

    Related Article
    Bishop Sevastianos of Zela New Metropolitan of Chicago [OVERRULED – see article above]

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    4 Comments

    1. Peter on July 14, 2017 12:15 pm

      I believe it’s time for the Greek Orthodox Church in America to declare itself Autocephalous and to begin the process of uniting the diverse jurisdictions in the U.S. into one. This is proper, canonical and very long overdue.

      Reply
    2. Yianni Pappas on July 14, 2017 2:20 pm

      See my comments under the title “Another Act of Betrayal” at: https://ocl.org/another-act-betrayal/.

      Reply
    3. Bruce Wm. Trakas on July 15, 2017 2:50 pm

      We must reactivate such as we had to in 1997-’99. This action of the Ecumenical Patriarchate is unprecedented. The unofficially suggested candidate(s) are not in the best interest of the Metropolis of Chicago and the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America. We must stand behind the preference of our Holy Eparchial Synod and not submit to the Byzantine Intrigue, indeed confusion of the Ecumenical Throne. As in August, 1996, the venerable Ecumenical Patriarchate is wrong in its overriding of the “Three Person Ballot” and in the EP’s choice for election to fill the widowed See of Chicago. Archbishop Demetrios of America has traveled these muddy waters before and is likely to devise an appropriate strategy to overcome the Ecumenical Throne. Hopefully, as a united Church of America, we can subvert the wrong headed efforts of the Throne to again impose the wrong candidate upon us. It’s also long past time we demand the semi-autonomous Constitutional Charter our Holy Synod had approved and proposed to the Ecumenical Patriarchate in 2000.

      Reply
    4. Harry Coin on July 17, 2017 9:21 pm

      If the next person to manage the Chicago region is well known to be a very capable ‘pastor of the pastors’ we have reason to expect growth. If not so much, then, well, not so much.

      Reply
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