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Sunday Morning Services
Orthros 8:15 a.m.
Divine Liturgy 9:45 a.m.
Week Day Services: Orthros 8:30 a.m. followed by the Divine Liturgy.
Watch on Live Stream on Facebook at Assumption Greek Orthodox of Homer Glen
For the latest news and events within our Metropolis, please visit
http://chicago.goarch.org/
Orthros 8:15 a.m.
Divine Liturgy 9:45 a.m.
Week Day Services: Orthros 8:30 a.m. followed by the Divine Liturgy.
Watch on Live Stream on Facebook at Assumption Greek Orthodox of Homer Glen
For the latest news and events within our Metropolis, please visit
http://chicago.goarch.org/
The Miracle of the Weeping Icon in Illinois My encounter with an Eastern Orthodox icon that, since 2015, has wept holy oil purported to have healing properties
By Patti Maguire Armstrong, of Our Sunday Visitor Newsletter
8/9/2017
The simple beige exterior of Assumption Greek Orthodox Church in Homer Glen, Illinois, was not what I expected as the home of a miraculous icon weeping oil since July 2015.
My friend and I checked the address carefully, because we had driven past it and were doubling back. “Is that it?” she wondered, pointing to the lowly brick building. “It doesn’t look like a church.”
We were attending the Catholic Marketing Network in Chicago and made the 40-minute drive to witness oil reported to be flowing from an icon of St. John the Baptist. The phenomenon was first noticed on July 19, 2015. Although word of mouth attracted people to the church, not until word spread to the Chicago Tribune last spring did crowds appear.
More than a year later, however, on this July afternoon, only a handful of people were present. Visitation is limited to three hours on Thursdays and Saturdays.
Sacred space
Inside the church — furnished with chairs rather than pews — the surrounding gilded icons create a sacred space. Keeping with Eastern Orthodox tradition, there is an iconostasis — a wall between the body of the church and the sanctuary — filled with icons, eight in all. The door cut into the center of the wall leads to the altar. As is also customary, an icon of Jesus is to the right of the door, and next to him is St. John the Baptist. To the left of the door is the Theotokos — the Blessed Mother — always shown holding Christ, and to her left is an icon of the saint or event to which the church is dedicated.
We approached the icon of St. John the Baptist and saw oil streaming from wings, halo, hands, beard and feet into a reservoir at the bottom lined with a long swath of cotton. A short, stocky man, Louis Klioris, walked over and introduced himself as a friend of the pastor, Father Sotirios Dimitriou. He offered to bless us with the oil. Using a thin paintbrush dipped into a glass of oil, Klioris made the sign of the cross on our foreheads, cheeks, chins and hands. A sweet, gentle fragrance emanated from the oil, believed to be myrrh. It would stay with us throughout the day until we reluctantly washed our hands and faces before bed that night.
As we gazed upon the icon, Klioris pointed to the one of Jesus. “Oil started coming from this one, too, about six weeks ago,” he said. We stepped in front of it and saw three trails of oil descending from the right hand.
Why this church?
Father Dimitriou warmly welcomed us into his office at the back of the church to ask questions. He has been a priest for 25 years and is the father of two, ages 19 and 4 (Orthodox priests are allowed to marry).
The parish of 200 families formed in 1916 and has been at its current location for four years. When the oil first began, Father Dimitriou immediately called his bishop, who came to witness the weeping icon. “I’ve approached it as a blessing,” he said. “It’s not for myself or just the church or community, but it’s for everybody.”
Why his church? “You would expect this to happen at a big cathedral, not at a little church on Bell Road,” Father Dimitriou said. He does not claim to know the mind of God but said he sees similarities in the humility of St. John the Baptist and his simple church. “When you come in, it gives you a sense of a prayer and a warm feeling of solitude,” he said.
Father Dimitriou said there have been many reports of healings. He himself was healed from a nerve problem. Although he spoke freely, Father Dimitriou noted that he sees his role as welcoming people and sharing the blessing of the icon, not advertising its presence to the world.
A moving experience
John Ackerman, spokesman for the Greek Orthodox Metropolis of Chicago, acknowledged that, in fact, two icons were weeping oil. “They are not random pictures,” he said, “they are a vital part of every parish.” Another aspect, Ackerman pointed out, is that the entire iconostas of eight icons are made from the same materials but only two of them are weeping. “If there was a natural explanation, the same thing should happen on all the icons,” he said.
Weeping icons are unusual but not unheard of in the Orthodox Church, Ackerman explained. For instance, there are two icons of the Blessed Mother at St. George’s Orthodox Church in Taylor, Pennsylvania, reported to weep oil, and in the 1980s and ’90s, there were other reported weeping icons in the Chicago area.
“No one is trying to drive an interest in the weeping icons, and we don’t put a stamp of approval or disapproval on it,” Ackerman said. “We acknowledge what is happening and just let people witness it for themselves. It’s been a moving experience.”
The artist
The artist of the entire screen of icons, Peter Mihalopoulos, is a deacon and chanter at the parish. He has written icons for 45 years. Years ago, he made one of the Blessed Mother that dripped liquid from her hands.
“I feel very blessed that this is happening,” he said in a phone interview. “I can’t express the feeling; it’s overwhelming.” Prayer and fasting are his life, Mihalopoulos said, because they are an important part of creating icons as well as studying the saints. “I’m glad God approves of my work, and I don’t care to have attention from people,” he said. “I only care that my name is written in heaven.” Mihalopoulos expressed concern that Roman Catholics don’t understand that Eastern Orthodox icons are “the art of art” that offer a glimpse into heaven.
The two churches split in 1054 over the primacy of the pope and other issues, reconciled periodically, then permanently split in 1450. The East kept the icons. Both share apostolic succession and valid sacraments. Since the 1960s, divisions have begun to heal, first evidenced by the meeting between Pope Blessed Paul VI and Ecumenical Patriarch Athenagoras in Jerusalem in 1964 and the mutual lifting of excommunication the following year.
Upon leaving Assumption Church, visitors are given cotton balls soaked in the oil and placed in a plastic bag to take home. No one asks for donations, although there is a small box for anyone who wishes to give. “What I ask for is prayers for our church,” Father Dimitriou told us. “It’s all about prayer.”
By Patti Maguire Armstrong, of Our Sunday Visitor Newsletter
8/9/2017
The simple beige exterior of Assumption Greek Orthodox Church in Homer Glen, Illinois, was not what I expected as the home of a miraculous icon weeping oil since July 2015.
My friend and I checked the address carefully, because we had driven past it and were doubling back. “Is that it?” she wondered, pointing to the lowly brick building. “It doesn’t look like a church.”
We were attending the Catholic Marketing Network in Chicago and made the 40-minute drive to witness oil reported to be flowing from an icon of St. John the Baptist. The phenomenon was first noticed on July 19, 2015. Although word of mouth attracted people to the church, not until word spread to the Chicago Tribune last spring did crowds appear.
More than a year later, however, on this July afternoon, only a handful of people were present. Visitation is limited to three hours on Thursdays and Saturdays.
Sacred space
Inside the church — furnished with chairs rather than pews — the surrounding gilded icons create a sacred space. Keeping with Eastern Orthodox tradition, there is an iconostasis — a wall between the body of the church and the sanctuary — filled with icons, eight in all. The door cut into the center of the wall leads to the altar. As is also customary, an icon of Jesus is to the right of the door, and next to him is St. John the Baptist. To the left of the door is the Theotokos — the Blessed Mother — always shown holding Christ, and to her left is an icon of the saint or event to which the church is dedicated.
We approached the icon of St. John the Baptist and saw oil streaming from wings, halo, hands, beard and feet into a reservoir at the bottom lined with a long swath of cotton. A short, stocky man, Louis Klioris, walked over and introduced himself as a friend of the pastor, Father Sotirios Dimitriou. He offered to bless us with the oil. Using a thin paintbrush dipped into a glass of oil, Klioris made the sign of the cross on our foreheads, cheeks, chins and hands. A sweet, gentle fragrance emanated from the oil, believed to be myrrh. It would stay with us throughout the day until we reluctantly washed our hands and faces before bed that night.
As we gazed upon the icon, Klioris pointed to the one of Jesus. “Oil started coming from this one, too, about six weeks ago,” he said. We stepped in front of it and saw three trails of oil descending from the right hand.
Why this church?
Father Dimitriou warmly welcomed us into his office at the back of the church to ask questions. He has been a priest for 25 years and is the father of two, ages 19 and 4 (Orthodox priests are allowed to marry).
The parish of 200 families formed in 1916 and has been at its current location for four years. When the oil first began, Father Dimitriou immediately called his bishop, who came to witness the weeping icon. “I’ve approached it as a blessing,” he said. “It’s not for myself or just the church or community, but it’s for everybody.”
Why his church? “You would expect this to happen at a big cathedral, not at a little church on Bell Road,” Father Dimitriou said. He does not claim to know the mind of God but said he sees similarities in the humility of St. John the Baptist and his simple church. “When you come in, it gives you a sense of a prayer and a warm feeling of solitude,” he said.
Father Dimitriou said there have been many reports of healings. He himself was healed from a nerve problem. Although he spoke freely, Father Dimitriou noted that he sees his role as welcoming people and sharing the blessing of the icon, not advertising its presence to the world.
A moving experience
John Ackerman, spokesman for the Greek Orthodox Metropolis of Chicago, acknowledged that, in fact, two icons were weeping oil. “They are not random pictures,” he said, “they are a vital part of every parish.” Another aspect, Ackerman pointed out, is that the entire iconostas of eight icons are made from the same materials but only two of them are weeping. “If there was a natural explanation, the same thing should happen on all the icons,” he said.
Weeping icons are unusual but not unheard of in the Orthodox Church, Ackerman explained. For instance, there are two icons of the Blessed Mother at St. George’s Orthodox Church in Taylor, Pennsylvania, reported to weep oil, and in the 1980s and ’90s, there were other reported weeping icons in the Chicago area.
“No one is trying to drive an interest in the weeping icons, and we don’t put a stamp of approval or disapproval on it,” Ackerman said. “We acknowledge what is happening and just let people witness it for themselves. It’s been a moving experience.”
The artist
The artist of the entire screen of icons, Peter Mihalopoulos, is a deacon and chanter at the parish. He has written icons for 45 years. Years ago, he made one of the Blessed Mother that dripped liquid from her hands.
“I feel very blessed that this is happening,” he said in a phone interview. “I can’t express the feeling; it’s overwhelming.” Prayer and fasting are his life, Mihalopoulos said, because they are an important part of creating icons as well as studying the saints. “I’m glad God approves of my work, and I don’t care to have attention from people,” he said. “I only care that my name is written in heaven.” Mihalopoulos expressed concern that Roman Catholics don’t understand that Eastern Orthodox icons are “the art of art” that offer a glimpse into heaven.
The two churches split in 1054 over the primacy of the pope and other issues, reconciled periodically, then permanently split in 1450. The East kept the icons. Both share apostolic succession and valid sacraments. Since the 1960s, divisions have begun to heal, first evidenced by the meeting between Pope Blessed Paul VI and Ecumenical Patriarch Athenagoras in Jerusalem in 1964 and the mutual lifting of excommunication the following year.
Upon leaving Assumption Church, visitors are given cotton balls soaked in the oil and placed in a plastic bag to take home. No one asks for donations, although there is a small box for anyone who wishes to give. “What I ask for is prayers for our church,” Father Dimitriou told us. “It’s all about prayer.”
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For those of you who do not have email, we will continue to mail you information.
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