The community of Transfiguration Greek Orthodox Church in Corona, New York, welcomed Archbishop Elpidophoros of America on Sunday, April 5, for Orthros and the Hierarchical Divine Liturgy of Palm Sunday. Celebrating alongside Archbishop Elpidophoros was Proistamenos Arch. Chrysostom Panos.
For the Transfiguration community, the occasion carried special significance, as this year marks the 100th anniversary of the parish’s founding. Archbishop Elpidophoros noted the particular joy of celebrating a feast of triumph and victory alongside a community that has itself overcome great trials, including a fire nearly nine years ago that caused extensive damage to the church, and which the community met with resilience and renewal befitting their parish’s name.
In his homily, the Archbishop reflected on the difference between the crowds who lined the road from Bethany to Jerusalem and the faithful gathered in Corona on this Palm Sunday. Those who welcomed the Lord with palms and shouts of praise were expecting a political deliverance from Roman occupation, and when it did not come, their fervor quickly turned. The Orthodox faithful, Archbishop Elpidophoros said, cry out with a deeper understanding.
“We see today—Palm Sunday—as the foretaste of the glory to come,” Archbishop Elpidophoros said, “Not only by the Lord’s Triumphant Entry into the Holy City of Jerusalem, but because of the miracle of the raising of Lazaros, which promises τὴν κοινὴν Ἀνάστασιν–the shared, or common, Resurrection to all humanity.”
The Archbishop reminded the faithful that the Lord does not come to free humanity from one political power only to see another take its place. “He is Coming to liberate us from sin, from hatred, and above all else, from death,” Archbishop Elpidophoros said. “His Victory will not be from a weapon of war, but from the Ὅπλον Εἰρήνης – the Weapon of Peace, His Most Precious and Life-Giving Cross.”
Read His Eminence’s full homily here
Photos by Orthodox Observer/Dimitrios Panagos















