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Joseph P. Kreta

730 bytes added, 14:41, July 7, 2016
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==Life==
Father Joseph was born on [[May 15]], 1927 in Clifton, New Jersey, the son of Mitred [[Archpriest]] Peter and Anna Kreta. He grew up in McKeesport, Pennsylvania where he actively took part in the [[parish]] life of the parish to which his father was assigned. At the age of seventeen, Joseph joined the United States Navy during the latter part of World War II after his graduated from high school in1944in 1944. While serving in the Navy, Joseph experienced his call to serve [[Christ]] and His Church in [[Alaska ]] as he experienced the wonder of the land while on his ship in the Aleutian Islands.
Completing his Naval tour of duty, Joseph enrolled in [[St. Tikhon's Orthodox Monastery (South Canaan, Pennsylvania)|St. Tikhon's Seminary]] in South Canaan, Pennsylvania in September 1948. After graduating in 1951, Joseph married Marie Gambal on [[August 5]], 1951, then petitioned to enter the [[Holy Orders]] and to be assigned to the parish in [[St. Nicholas Church (Juneau, Alaska)|Juneau, Alaska]]. However, after his [[ordination]] as [[deacon]] on [[May 30]], 1952, followed on the next day to [[priest]], at [[Holy Virgin Protection Cathedral (New York, New York)|Holy Virgin Protection Cathedral in New York City]], Father Joseph was assign assigned to the [[cathedral]] to serve the English language community in the cathedral's St. Innocent [[Chapel]]. During the period of his service with St. Innocent Chapel, Fr. Joseph and his wife Marie became parents, first, of a son Peter and, four years later, twin sons John and Stephen.
On [[September 14]], 1958, Fr. Joseph concluded a [[Divine Liturgy]] under a tent in Queens, New York, which was the beginning of the Mission of St. [[John Chrysostom]]. After several years of worshipping in rented storefront facilities, the mission was able to build the church that became the first all-English language [[parish]] on the east coast of the United States. This parish was followed over the next decade by other similar all English parishes in the New York City area that were led by contemporaries of Fr. Joseph, including Frs. [[John Nehrebecki]] and John Sochka. It was during these years that Fr. John and Matushka Marie became parents of a daughter Maria.
In 1971, Fr. John Joseph was commissioned to conduct a fact-finding trip to the Diocese of Alaska that had been experiencing serious financial difficulties. It was during this trip that Fr. Joseph experienced life on Spruce Island as St. [[Herman of Alaska|Herman]] had. Following his report concerning the situation in Alaska, the Synod of Bishops assigned Fr. Joseph, with his family, as temporary administrator of the [[diocese]] and rector of the [[Cathedral of St. Michael the Archangel (Sitka, Alaska)|Cathedral of St. Michael the Archangel ]] in 1972. Initially, assigned for one year, Fr. John and his family would spend the rnext next three decades in Alaska.
Finding some 100 parishes in 1972 spread over all of Alaska that were served by about a dozen priests, Fr. Joseph found a great task before him. Thus, he found the need for [[clergy]] to serve the far-flung parishes was an early need that needed to be remedied. In 1973, Fr. Joseph moved with his family to Kenai where he was instrumental in establishing a pastoral school that was dedicated to St. [[Herman of Alaska[[]]. Also, in 1973, His Grace, Bishop [[Gregory (Afonsky) of Sitka|Gregory (Afonsky)]] was assigned as the ruling bishop for the diocese. Bp. Gregory quickly appointed Fr. Joseph as the diocesan [[chancellor]] and rector of Holy Resurrection Church on Kodiak Island. One of the results of Fr. Joseph's travels throughout Alaska was a report called the [[Russian Orthodox Church Sites in Alaska Survey]] which documented nearly 150 churches in Alaska. This report contains detailed information about the history of the Russian Orthodox Church in Alaska, as well as information about individual churches. This report was submitted to the National Park Service's National Register of Historic Places, resulting in 29 of Alaska's Orthodox Churches being listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.
In 1973, the first home for St. Herman's Pastoral school, with Fr. Joseph as its dean, was established at a former American Air Force facility at Wildwood Station at Kenai that had been transferred to the Kenaitze Indians of Cook Inlet. During the summer of 1974 the school was moved to permanent facilities in Kodiak on Kodiak Island near Holy Resurrection Church. In 1976, the [[Holy Synod]] of the Orthodox Church in America designated the school as a Theological [[Seminary]] which subsequently was authorized by the State of Alaska to grant degrees in Sacred Theology and Theological Studies.
*[http://oca.org/in-memoriam/archpriest-joseph-p.-kreta OCA: Protopresbyter Joseph P. Kreta]
[[Category: Priests|Kreta]][[Category: Clergy|Kreta]]
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