Archbishop Elpidophoros of America presided over the funeral of Father George Poulos. Public visitation was held at Archangels Greek Orthodox Church, on Wednesday, with a Trisagion.
Divine Liturgy was held at the Archangels Greek Orthodox Church on Thursday, February 17, 2022, followed by the funeral with Interment immediately after at Woodland Cemetery.
The Archbishop of America described Father George Poulos as a man that “his dynamism, his energy, and his sheer commitment to the Church that he served his whole life long, was as effervescent and youthful as any Child of God could ever be.” The Archbishop wholeheartedly admits that “it is a great challenge to even attempt to recount the achievements of Father George.”
But who was the clergyman who reposed to the Lord?
On Sunday, February 13th, the Reverend Father George Poulos fell asleep in the Lord at the blessed age of 100.
Ordained in 1948, Fr. George began his 61 years of distinguished ministry at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Church in Norwich, CT. Seven years later, he was assigned to the Church of the Archangels in Stamford, CT, where he served until his retirement in 2009. During his tenure as parish priest, he accepted appointments to national institutions of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese, including Saint Basil’s Academy and Ionian Village—a program he played an instrumental role in founding. He also served as Executive Director of the Byzantine Fellowship in America for over 30 years, as well as trustee of Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology, from which he was awarded a Doctorate Causa Honoris in 2017.
Fr. George was active in his local community as a member of the Council of Churches and Synagogues, chaplain of the Stamford Fire Department, and Board of Directors of the Woodland Cemetery. Moreover, he was a major in the United States Air Force Civil Patrol for 30 years and a president of the Federation of Greek Orthodox Churches in the State of Connecticut.
He authored of a variety of books and articles on Orthodox Christianity, including: Lives of the Saints (5 Volumes); A Breath of God: A Biography of Archbishop Iakovos; Footsteps in the Sea: A Biography of Bishop Athenagoras Cavadas; Pomfret, The Golden Decade: A History of The Greek Orthodox Seminary; and Major Feast Days in the Orthodox Church (2 Volumes).
The child of Greek immigrants, Father George was born on September 30, 1921 in Greenfield, Massachusetts. He entered Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology in 1943, and had the unique distinction to study at both its original location in Pomfret, CT, as well as its present location in Brookline, MA, where it moved by the time of his graduation in 1948.
Fr. George is survived by his devoted wife of 73 years, Presvytera Christine, his five beloved sons, six cherished grandchildren, and many nieces and nephews.
Read below the speech of the Archbishop Elpidophoros of America
Dear Presvytera Christine,
Beloved Sons of Father George: Peter, Dean, Michael, John, and Paul – and your dear families and children,
Your Grace,
Reverend Fathers and Beloved Flock of this Archangels Church,
We come together on this day, in order to honor and indeed to celebrate a legendary priest, father, grandfather, friend, and visionary of our Church. To say it simply: Father George Poulos lived a life, longer than the life – thus far – of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America.
One hundred years! But I shall not say old. Father George was one hundred years new, as it says in the Prophecy of Isaiah:
Ἔσται γὰρ ὀ νέος ἐκατὸν ἐτῶν…
For the young man shall be one hundred years old…[*]
There can be no doubt in the mind of anyone who knew Father George Poulos — even those who only knew him peripherally — that his dynamism, his energy, and his sheer commitment to the Church that he served his whole life long, was as effervescent and youthful as any Child of God could ever be.
His long life, matched by his beloved and incomparable Presvytera Christine, is both a cause of rejoicing, and a cause of sadness today, as we mourn his passing. We have had Father George with us so long, that for many here and around the country, life without him seems impossible, indeed, illogical. But there is also joy and gladness, for his life was so packed with meaning and accomplishment, that it will take us more decades to share the stories of such a life well-lived, than the ten decades in which our beloved Father George lived it.
Joy and mourning. Joy-making mourning. A coda that Father George has gifted to us in his repose, for we are approaching the season of Χαρμολύπη,[†] the Fast of the Holy Forty Days that takes us to Holy Week and Pascha. A final statement of faith from a faith-filled preacher and teacher. That in our mourning his loss, we rejoice in the promise of the Resurrection. That in missing his presence, we remember all the ways he showed us how to be better people, better Christians, better Orthodox.
I have to say, it is a great challenge to even attempt to recount the achievements of Father George. To eulogize means to speak a blessing. But his whole life was a blessing, a life of over one hundred years. Sixty-one years of active pastoral ministry – with fifty-six of them right here at Archangels. Whole lives have been spent under the gentle shadow of his wing; as he shepherded the flock entrusted to his care with wisdom, foresight, and unparalleled responsibility.
Even following his retirement, he was always engaged and engaging. He was such a mentoring presence to the younger clergy, and always willing to give of himself. With his passing, the bright sun of his beloved Pomfret is setting, but it will never be extinguished. The legacy of the Holy Cross that first emerged, right here in Connecticut, lives on in Brookline. Father George remains part of the generation of pioneer priests – the first graduates of our Theological School. And I am very pleased that in 2017, Holy Cross bestowed upon him the degree of Doctor of Divinity, honoris causa, for his exemplary life of ministry, and his contributions in liturgy, history, hagiography, and his memorable biographies of Archbishop Iakovos and Archbishop Athenagoras Cavadas. These are just a few of the bright stars in the galaxy of accomplishments of Father George.
As I reflect on him as a priest, I marvel at his incredible service on both the local and the national level. What he built here in Stamford speaks for itself: a magnificent Temple and Community, secured by his providential planning. But on a national level, Ionian Village alone stands out as the triumph of a lifetime. And he always served under his Archbishops with the fidelity and allegiance that comes from humility and from strength.
His beloved family, with whom we humbly gather today to pray for their strength and their peace in this time of grieving, knows another side of Father George. A true pater familias, Father George found a way to be all things to all people. [‡]
In this Centennial Year of the Greek Orthodox Church of America, there is something profoundly moving in the departure of Father George for the eternal glory of life everlasting. I feel as if he is saying to us, in the language of Saint Paul:
“I have fought the good fight; I have finished the race; I have kept the faith.” [§]
But he would add something more … something like this:
‘Yes, I fought the good fight, and raced the course of life, and kept the faith for one hundred years. Now, you must carry on for the next one hundred.’
Truly, my friends…
Father George’s life and ministry is a perfect mirror of the first century of our Church in America. I ask each and every one of you to make an aspect of his legacy your personal model for this next century. He gave us so many gifts – too many to count. Each of us can find in his extraordinary life something to emulate, a gift that we can imitate and pass on in our own legacies. All of us are better Christians, better people, better human beings because of Father George. We can repay his years of dedication and devotion by paying it forward, by living lives of service and ministry.
May his family and all of you be comforted through these days of grieving. May you discover anew the happy and fulfilling memories of his loving presence in your lives.
And may the Lord our God — Who is the Resurrection and the Life — grant unto our brother and co-celebrant, George, the Protopresbyter, eternal rest among the Saints, a joyful dwelling in the mansions of our Heavenly Father, and the peace that passes all understanding, in the tabernacle of the Kingdom of Heaven.
May his memory be eternal.
Αἰωνία ἡ μνήμη αὐτοῦ.
[*] Isaiah 65:20.
[†] St. John of the Ladder, The Ladder of Divine Ascent, Step 7.
[‡] Cf. I Corinthians 9:22.
[§] II Timothy 4:7.