Weekly Update


Saturday, April 4

Lazarus Saturday


Sunday, April 5

 Palm Sunday

Lazarus Saturday


Lazarus and his sisters Martha and Mary, the friends of the Lord Jesus, had given Him hospitality and served Him many times (Luke 10:38-4z; John 12:2-3). They were from Bethany, a village of Judea. This village is situated in the eastern parts by the foothills of the Mount of Olives, about two Roman miles from Jerusalem. When Lazarus - whose name is a Hellenized form of "Eleazar," which means "God has helped," became ill some days before the saving Passion, his sisters had this report taken to our Saviour, Who was then in Galilee. Nonetheless, He tarried yet two more days until Lazarus died; then He said to His disciples, "Let us go into Judea that I might awake My friend who sleepeth." By this, of course, He meant the deep sleep of death. On arriving at Bethany, He consoled the sisters of Lazarus, who was already four days dead. Jesus groaned in spirit and was troubled at the death of His beloved friend. He asked, "Where have ye laid his body?" and He wept over him. When He drew nigh to the tomb, He commanded that they remove the stone, and He lifted up His eyes, and giving thanks to God the Father, He cried out with a loud voice, "Lazarus, come forth." And he that had been dead four days came forth immediately, bound hand and foot with the grave clothes, and Jesus said to those standing there, "Loose him, and let him go." This is the supernatural wonder wrought by the Saviour that we celebrate on this day.

Palm Sunday


On Sunday, five days before the Passover of the Law, the Lord came from Bethany to Jerusalem. Sending two of His disciples to bring Him a foal of an ass, He sat thereon and entered into the city. When the multitude there heard that Jesus was coming, they straightway took up the branches of palm trees in their hands, and went forth to meet Him. Others spread their garments on the ground, and yet others cut branches from the trees and strewed them in the way that Jesus was to pass; and all of them together, especially the children, went before and after Him, crying out: "Hosanna: Blessed is He that cometh in the Name of the Lord, the King of Israel" (John 12:13). This is the radiant and glorious festival of our Lord's entry into Jerusalem that we celebrate today.




The branches of the palm trees symbolize Christ's victory over the devil and death. The word Hosanna means "Save, I pray," or "Save, now." The foal of an ass, and Jesus' sitting thereon, and the fact that this animal was untamed and considered unclean according to the Law, signified the former uncleanness and wildness of the nations, and their subjection thereafter to the holy Law of the Gospel.




WEEKLY CALENDAR:




Saturday, April 4

Saturday of Lazarus

Wine & Oil Permitted

8:30am Orthros 9:30am Divine Liturgy Presided by Bishop Dionysios of Zenopolis

Sunday School Retreat, Palm Weaving, and Decorating the Church to follow Divine Liturgy



Sunday, April 5

Palm Sunday

Fish, Wine & Oil Permitted

8:15am Orthros 9:30am Divine Liturgy

Prosphoro: Nancy Griparis

Fellowship: Palm Sunday Fish Luncheon, in memory of Frank Argoudelis

6:30pm Nymphios Matins



Monday, April 6

Great and Holy Monday

Strict Fast

6:30pm Nymphios Matins



Tuesday, April 7

Great and Holy Tuesday

Strict Fast

6:30pm Nymphios Matins

(Hymn of Kassiani)


Wednesday, April 8

Great and Holy Wednesday

Strict Fast

3:30pm Holy Unction

6:30pm Nyptira Matins


Thursday, April 9

Great and Holy Thrusday

Wine & Oil Permitted

9:00am Vesperal Divine Liturgy

10:30am Egg Dyeing

6:30pm 12 Passion Gospels


Friday, April 10

Great and Holy Friday

Strict Fast

8:30am Great Hours

10:30am Decoration Kouvouklion

3:00pm Apokathilosis Service

6:30pm Lamentations Service


Saturday, April 11

Great and Holy Saturday

Strict Fast

9:00am Vesperal Divine Liturgy (Proti Anastasis)

11:00pm Canon followed by resurrection service






UPCOMING

SERVICES & EVENTS:



Sunday, April 12

Great and Holy Pascha

12:00am Ressurection Service

12:30am Orthros & Divine Liturgy followed by Agape Meal

10:30am Agape Vespers


Wednesday, April 15

Renewal Wednesday

St. Leontios of Arcadia

Fast Free

Orthros (8:30am) & Divine Liturgy (9:30am) @ St. Nicholas, Oak Lawn


Friday, April 17

Theotokos, Lifegiving Font

Fast Free

8:30am Orthros 9:30am Divine Liturgy


Sunday, April 19

Thomas Sunday

8:15am Orthros 9:30am Divine Liturgy

Prosphoro:

Fellowship: Open


Thursday, April 23

St. George the Trophybearer

8:30am Orthros 9:30am Divine Liturgy


Sunday, April 26

Myrrh Bearers Sunday

8:15am Orthros 9:30am Divine Liturgy

Prosphoro:

Memorial: Vange Policandriotes

Fellowship: Schmidt Family















Events


HELP WANTED

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Help Wanted!


Our wonderful Church Secretary / Bookkeeper Helena is graduating college and working towards pursuing her goal of being a teacher. As she plans on teaching in the fall, we are opening a search for her position, which will start in the summer to train and learn the role.


Approximately 15 hours a week

Some responsibilities include:
+Tracking income/expenses with Quickbooks, in coordination with parish council treasurer

+Preparing & Distributing mailings, Sunday Bulletins, and other communications.

+Managing appointments, deliveries, and orders

+Managing parish calendar

+Parish Communications via phone/email


Please contact Fr. Anastasios or PC president Al Roechener if you would like to be considered.

After more than 50 wonderful years of faithful and dedicated service in leading our All Saints Choir, it was announced that Rena Meintanis will be retiring from her role as Choir Director. All Saints Day, Sunday, June 7 will be her final Sunday of leading us in prayer from the Choir Loft. We are grateful to her many years of dedicated service.


We have already begun seeking out someone to fill this role, and we invite all those who would like to be considered to reach out to Fr. Anastasios or PC president Al Roechener.

GREEK FEST 2026

SAVE THE DATE: JULY 18-19

110 Stories

Episode 1 of our 100 Stories Podcast is now live!


If you weren't here fore the live taping, you can watch online. Listen to Parish Council President Al Roechener interview Pete Mihalopoulos about his work adorning our beatiful sanctuary with icons.


Watch Now on YouTube


vol. 006

vol. 006 - Argoudelis Farms


The Argoudelis journey to America and All Saints Greek Orthodox Church is an

interesting one, filled with many anecdotal facts. Grandfather Dimitrios Z. Argoudelis

served in the Greek navy during the Balkan Wars and by 1914 was working on a Greek

merchant ship. He allegedly went on leave in Bridgeport, Connecticut and thereafter,

made his way to Joliet to join his fellow Mykonians. He is present in early photos of All

Saints events. Work varied in his early years, selling fish for a time and then owning a

bakery with his cousins Nick and Dimitrios Argoudelis (appropriately called the French

Bakery located where the present day City Hall is). Eventually, Pappou found a Greek

woman, Alexandria Diakakis from Chicago, started farming in the 1920s and together

two boys were born: John Zane and my father Frank J. Argoudelis.


Yiayia Alexandria had quite a story of her own, being of Karpathian heritage but having

been born and raised in the great Greek city of Smyrni, Asia Minor. Having grown up in

relative wealth, the Greco-Turkish war turned her into a refugee and she made her way

to America with her family in 1923. She experienced a ‘soft landing’ as her uncle

George Yamas owned a ballroom in Chicago and she was gifted a baby grand piano at

the age of 16 by her beloved Uncle George. Large social events and dances were held

for Greek immigrants in those days in Chicago and it was at one of these events that

Pappou and Yiayia met. Family legend maintains he impressed her with a rented suit

and car. Her feelings when she found out he was a farmer in Joliet were not recorded.

Hard working and ever resourceful, according to Yiayia Argoudelis, it was her idea to

grow tomatoes commercially for sale to Campbell Soup, thus putting the family on the

road to prosperity. She once surprised Pappou one March by buying 500 baby chicks

and explaining how egg and eventually meat sales would also turn a profit. Pappou

reminded her that baby chicks could not survive the March cold in the barn and for the

next two months the chicks enjoyed the warmth of the second floor of the farmhouse.

My father never ate chicken thereafter.


Like all of the early Greek families, their social life revolved around the Church –

holidays, Philoptochos, Ahepa and for the men – the Greek Kafeneion in Joliet.

My mom, Anna (Georgiadis) immigrated from Karpathos in 1955 with her family and

lived for a time in East Chicago, Indiana. Coincidently her family was neighbors with

Yiayia Alexandria’s sister Maria and a meeting was arranged between Frank and Anna

leading to their marriage and life together raising we three kids on the Farm in Plainfield.

Anna was innocent and naïve to farming one time commenting to dad that she thought

we were going to have a large soybean crop due to the numerous flowers she saw in

the field. Dad chuckled and informed her that those were weeds! She learned and

adapted, gardening, canning and raising us to be proper well-mannered Greek

Americans. Life was simple for we Greek Americans and we were close to one another

attending Church, dances, Greek and Sunday school, GOYA and more. Adults knew whose child you were, knew your name and felt quite at ease reprimanding you if you

were out of line. 110 years of All Saints Greek Orthodox Church and I can say the

Argoudelis family has spanned 4 generations during that time – my father, siblings and

my own children having been baptized here.


110 Stories History Series: all are invited to submit photos with a short (or not so short) story from the life and history of this parish, or its parishioners. We want this to be an open expression to celebrate everyone from the first Greek immigrants who settled in Joliet to to those who are just now joining this community. We will be sharing at least one story a week here in the bulletin and on social media.


CELEBRATIONS

Congratulations George Andretich and Grace Kennedy on their engagement!

Happy Birthday Konstantina and Kristina Manios who celebrate their 12th Birthday on April 5!

Happy Birthday to Mike and Char Contos who celebrate

on April 3 and April 5!

Happy Birthday to John and Sonja Dactelides who celebrate on April 10th and April 11th!


Click the link to the right in order to submit you special occasions to share with the community via our online form.

OR contact the church office to share your birthday, engagement, wedding, anniversary, retirement, birth, baptism or any other celebration or accomplishment with our community!




IN MEMORIAM

April 26

Vange Policandriotes - 1 year


May 3

Frank Argoudelis - 10 years


____________


No Memorials Permitted: April 5, 12, 19

FELLOWSHIP HOUR HOSTS

April

5: Palm Sunday Luncheon

11/12: Pascha Agape Meal (following midnight service)

19:

26: Schmidt Family


May

3:

10: Fr. Anastasios

17: AHEPA Breakfast

24:

31:


Please, pray for the health and protection of our beloved parishioners:


Thelma Theodore, Esther Anthos,

Elaine Koliopoulos, Mary Tucci, Joann and Sam Edenburn, Margie Walsh.



*contact the church office to be added to our prayer list*

Encyclicals


All Saints Greek

Orthodox Church

102 N. Broadway St.

Joliet, IL 60435

Office: 815-722-1727

Fr. Anastasios: 847-414-4874

Email: tasso.theo@gmail.com

allsaintsjoliet.com