“An inconvenience is only an adventure wrongly considered; an adventure is an inconvenience rightly considered.” -(G.K. Chesterton



Our Patron Saints


This truth was disputed in the early church, especially in the Heresy of Nestorianism. This Heresy understood Christ to be two persons, one human, and one divine. It also held that Mary was not the Mother of God (“Theotokos”), but only the mother of the human Christ (“Christotokos”). Nestorianism was condemned by the Council of Chalcedon in 451 A.D. This Council solidified the doctrine of the Hypostatic Union of Christ, which defined it as Christ’s humanity and divinity in one personhood. 

St. John of Damascus


St. Athanasius of Alexandria


St. Athanasius of Alexandria (296-373 A.D) was a Bishop and Doctor of the Church and the chief defender of Christian Orthodoxy in the 4th century battle against the Arian Heresy. The premise of this Heresy was the denial of the full divinity of Christ, and deemed that Jesus was a creature. This Heresy later led to the calling forth of the first ecumenical council: The 1st Council of Nicaea. The outcome of this council was the condemnation of the Arian Heresy, with Athanasius playing a vital role in the council as a whole. This council also brought forth an official creed for the church: “The Nicene Creed”, which is still used to this day in the Church’s Liturgy. This creed defined Jesus as “true God from true God”, “Begotten, not made”, & “of the same substance” (homoousios) of the Father. 

We chose St. Athanasius as a key patron because of his vigor and relentless pursuit of defending the truth of the identity of Christ. Christian Tradition holds that he was exiled from his See in Alexandria 5 different times in his life for his defense of the Christian Faith. We rejoice in his work in defending and protecting the truth of the incarnation, especially his emphasis on the teaching of theosis, the Christian theological concept that means “being made God”. 

He is famously quoted saying: “The Son of God became man, so that man might become God”.

“The greatest danger for most of us is not that our aim is too high and we miss it, but that we aim to low and we reach it” Michelangelo