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Monastery of St. John of Shanghai and San Francisco
Manton, CA
Church Address:
21770 Ponderosa Way,
Manton, CA 96059

Office: 530-474-5964
Web: http://www.monasteryofstjohn.org



Founded in 1996

Parish Contacts

Rev. Hieromonk  Steven G (Strikis), Attached
Archimandrite  Gabriel (Cooke), Attached
V. Rev.  Alexander Lisenko, Attached


Lay Leadership




Directions


From the South

Coming up I-5, take Highway 36 East in Red Bluff 14 miles to Manton Rd. (CR A-6). Turn Left on Manton Rd (sign says to Manton) and go about 14 miles. Turn right at the Manton store onto Forward Rd. and go 3.8 miles. Then take a left onto Ponderosa Way. We are on the right at 21770 Ponderosa Way.

From the North

Coming down I-5, take Highway 44 East in Redding to Shingletown. Turn right at the library at Wilson Hill Rd. Follow the signs to Manton (about 8.1 miles). Go straight onto Forward Rd. about 3.8 miles. Then take a left onto Ponderosa Way. We are on the right at 21770 Ponderosa Way.

From Chico

Take Highway 99 north 38 miles to Highway 36. Go east on 36 11.3 miles to Manton Rd. (CR A-6). Turn Left and go about 14 miles. Turn right at the Manton store onto Forward Rd. and go 3.8 miles. Then take a left onto Ponderosa Way. We are on the right at 21770 Ponderosa Way.

NOTE

NOTE: Mapquest and Googlemaps are incorrect regarding the final LEFT turn onto Ponderosa Way



Schedule of Services


All services are in English. Service times are subject to change. Call ahead at 530-474-5964. Weekly schedules are posted on our web site: www.monasteryofstjohn.org

Daily -- Morning
Tuesday-Thursday, 6:00 AM Matins. On Tuesday and Thursday, Divine Liturgy follows. No services on Monday or Friday mornings.

Daily -- Evening
Vespers every day at 5:00 pm. Compline every night at 8:30 PM. On Friday, a Litiya for the Departed follows Vespers.

Sunday Morning
8:00 AM Matins followed by Divine Liturgy.

Monday Morning
Monday Mornings: Silent retreat for monks

Friday Morning
Friday Mornings: Silent retreat for monks

Saturday Morning
8:00 AM Matins followed by Divine Liturgy.



Ministry Groups


No Information at this time



Upcoming Events


No Information at this time



Parish Background


The Monastery of St John of San Francisco was founded in 1996 in Point Reyes Station, Marin County, California, in the Diocese of the West of the Orthodox Church in America, under Bishop Tikhon of San Francisco. The initial location of the Monastery was at St Eugene's Hermitage, which had been established by Archimandrite Dimitry (Egoroff) in the early 1950's.

The Point Reyes property was in deep forest, on the ridge between the San Andreas Rift Valley with Tomales Bay, and the Pacific Ocean. Fr. Dimitry built two small cottages on the property, one with a chapel in the traditional Athonite monastic form of a "kellion," for one monk; and a second building for guests, with a kitchen and reception area. The elder lived there as a hesychast for almost twenty years. His holy prayers permeate the place. In 1988, a beautiful but tiny church was built on the property. Due to local politics, it has been virtually impossible to expand the facilities there.

There were several interim occupants after Fr. Dimitry. In 1983 Abbess Barbara and her nuns from Calistoga took refuge there, and remained until they could no longer care for the property. The Brotherhood of St John's Monastery was established to provide a monastery for men in the Diocese of the West at the end of October 1996, and continued there until it completely outgrew the facilities, acquiring a retreat house in Manton in July 2006.

St John (Maximovitch) of Shanghai and San Francisco
The patronage of St John of Shanghai and San Francisco was chosen by Bishop Tikhon for the Brotherhood. St John is a contemporary saint, and is a great wonderworker and healer, whose relics repose in San Francisco. He was an ascetic like those of old, who cared tirelessly for the poor, orphans and the ill and afflicted. Canonized by the Russian Church Abroad, St John's sanctity has been recognized throughout the whole Orthodox community. His designation as Patron of our Brotherhood is an offering and sign of unity of the Orthodox overcoming all jurisdictional and ethnic divisions, and reflecting a fundamental vocation of our Monastery.

The Spiritual Foundation: The Blessing from Valaam and Elder Ephraim
The Monastery was founded by Hieromonk Jonah (Paffhausen) as its spiritual father and confessor, in obedience to his spiritual father Abbot (now Bishop) Pankratiy of the Valaam Monastery of the Transfiguration, in Russia. This direction was given following a meeting between Abbot Pankratiy and Elder Ephraim of Philotheou, where they blessed Fr. Jonah with the obedience to establish a monastery in California. Fr. Jonah then requested the Diocese to establish a monastery. At this same time, Elder Ephraim was beginning the establishment of St Anthony Monastery in Arizona, and the many other communities under his guidance throughout the Greek Archdioceses of America and Canada. The first brother at Pt. Reyes was sent from Arizona, by Hieromonk Gregory who was then at St Anthony, to help Fr. Jonah.

Our new home: Manton
As the Brotherhood grew, the Point Reyes property became completely inadequate for its needs, having been designed to be a hermitage for one or two monks. In addition, the buildings had deteriorated to a state beyond repair due to poor construction and an adverse climate, and an infestation of black mold.

Following years of searching for an adequate site for the Brotherhood, up and down the Pacific Coast from Monterey to Washington State, we were able to acquire a retreat house in Manton, California, near Red Bluff and Redding on the slopes of Mount Lassen.

The new facility was built in 1999 as a healing retreat, with 18 bedrooms and 12,000 square feet; plus a 4-bedroom guesthouse and freestanding workshop/garage, on 42 acres. It has all the space necessary for our community to grow and prosper, both in terms of living space as well as work space, and appropriate room for hospitality. Very little modification was necessary to make the building immediately usable, albeit with a temporary chapel and kitchen-dining facilities. Tehama County was very helpful in expediting the Use Permit.

The property was purchased at the end of June, 2006, and we began to move in immediately. Through the generosity of our friends, we were able to raise $500,000 in cash for the downpayment. This leaves $750,000 in a mortgage yet to be paid off.

The first service was held on our Patronal Feast of St John of San Francisco, with the Vigil on July 1, and the Liturgy the following day. We have since had our regular cycle of services, daily matins and vespers, and the Divine Liturgy several times per week.

On the Feast of the Protection of the Mother of God, October 1/14, 2006, His Grace Bishop Benjamin tonsured two brothers, one to the Small Schema, the other as Rasophore. With the sacrament of Monastic Profession, and the vows of poverty, chastity, obedience and stability, our new home has already been fulfilled as a monastery by the grace of that Mystery.

The Brotherhood
The brotherhood of the monastery currently consists of 17 men: The superior, two priests, a hierodeacon, 6 tonsured monks, 3 riasophor monks and 4 novices. The brothers range in age from 19 to 71, and come from many different backgrounds in both religion and education. Most of the brothers are converts to the faith.

The brothers have also come from the whole spectrum of Orthodox communities in America: the OCA, Greek Archdiocese, Antiochian Archdiocese, and the Russian Church Abroad. This pan-jurisdictional character of our Brotherhood reflects our vision to be a point of unity for all Orthodox Christians.

Our vision as a monastic brotherhood is to incarnate the Gospel in our lives through our work and prayer and outreach. We struggle to be faithful to holy tradition while adapting to the realities of contemporary America. The aim of our life is simple obedience to the commands of Christ in the Scriptures. We strive to earn our living by candle-making, publishing, woodworking and operating a bookstore. We also grow some of our own food. As God works in us His miracle of deification, our hope is that our light will so shine forth that others may see our good works and glorify our God in heaven.

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