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Alexander Warnecke

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After receiving an honorable discharge from the U.S. Air Force in 1946, he enrolled at St. Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary and Columbia University in New York City. In addition to his studies, he was instrumental in organizing an [[Orthodox Christian Fellowship]] chapter at Columbia and served as the campus group's first president. In September of 1948, he married the former Pauline Stepanovna Shafran of Olyphant, PA.
A 1950 graduate of St. Vladimir's Seminary, he was [[ordination|ordained]] to the [[deacon|diaconate]] by His Eminence, [[Metropolitan]] [[Ireney (Bekish) of New York|Ireney (Bekish)]], on [[July 7]], 1950, and to the [[priest]]hood by His Grace, [[Bishop]] [[John (Shahovskoy) of San Francisco|John (Shahovskoy) of Brooklyn]] on [[July 28]] of the same year. After his ordination, he continued his ministry at the [[seminary ]] where, among other duties, he served as assistant [[chaplain]]. He also helped to initiate the first English-language community at Holy Virgin Protection Cathedral, New York, NY.
== Work outside parish life ==
In July 1951, Fr. Warnecke was assigned as the [[rector]] of Ss. Peter and Paul Church, Syracuse, NY, which was to be his only [[parish]] assignment. Through his leadership, the parish prospered and grew, and the church was restored and redecorated by noted [[iconographer]], [[Pimen Sofronov]]. He also served Saint Michael's Church, Syracuse. Through his efforts, property on Lake Oneida was acquired and developed as the home of St. Andrew's Camp, which has offered summer programs for children and teens for four decades. He helped serve or establish other parishes in Syracuse, Cortland, and Rochester, NY.
In addition to his parish duties, Fr. Warnecke served on the diocesan and metropolitan councils and as group leader for the Orthodox Church in the America Pension Plan and Group Term Life Insurance Program, president of the Alumni Federation of the Orthodox Catholic Seminaries, dean of the New York State Deanery, and bookstore manager and member of the board of trustees of the [[Orthodox Christian Education Commission]], a pan-Orthodox agency under the auspices of the [[Standing Conference of the Canonical Orthodox Bishops in the Americas]]. In 1961 he was appointed [[chancellor ]] of the [[Diocese of New York and New Jersey (OCA)|Diocese of New York and New Jersey]].
In 1961, Fr. Warnecke saw the need to provide St. Vladimir's Seminary, which had rented space in New York City for over two decades, with its own campus. He was impressed by a property in Crestwood, NY, which featured several buildings. Believing the property to be ideal, he urged [[seminary]] and Church officials to purchase it immediately, but they hesitated. Fearing a lost opportunity, he purchased the property himself, planning to turn it over to the seminary or to use it as the site of an Orthodox adult home. Subsequently, the property became—and remains—the site of St. Vladimir's Seminary. For many years, he served as a member of the seminary's financial committee, chairman of its building and grounds committee, and corporate secretary of the school's board of trustees. In the 1970s, Fr. Warnecke's dream to establish an adult home became a reality with the establishment of [[Ss. Cosmas and Damian Adult Home (Staten Island, New York)|Ss. Cosmas and Damian Adult Home, Staten Island, NY]], which he continued to serve as president and executive director.
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