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| Volume 7 Number 44 - Saturday, November 5, 2005 |
A Publication of the ORTHODOX CHRISTIAN LAITY |
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The Orthodox Christian Laity
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The Orthodox Christian News Service |
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The Rev. Peter Telencio will lead
the congregation at Holy Resurrection Greek
Orthodox Church on Hilton Head Island. The retired
Army colonel and chaplain commutes from Columbia
each Sunday to fulfill his responsibilities. Erin
Painter/The Island Packet When
asked what it's like to jump out of a plane, the
Rev. Peter Telencio scrunches his eyes shut tight.
Then
he opens them and smiles. "Every
jump I did I was scared," says Telencio, an
Orthodox priest and retired U.S. Army chaplain.
"Every time I jumped, I got closer to
God." That's
about 50 times closer to God than when he left his
first parish assignment and joined the military
back in 1975. Telencio, who retired from the Army
in 1999 as a colonel -- the first Orthodox
chaplain to attain that rank -- is a veteran of
more than 50 jumps with the 82nd and 101st
Airborne divisions. Now
he's taking another leap of faith, this one back
into parish leadership at Holy Resurrection Greek
Orthodox Church on Hilton Head Island. To
Telencio's delight, it's a far cry from the steel
mill town in Pennsylvania where he started his
religious career. "There
was nothing there for me. I was too young,"
he says of the depressed area to which he was
assigned at age 23. "The parish was dead. I
was burying more people than I was bringing
in." Telencio
knew that area well, having grown up in an
Orthodox children's home in eastern Pennsylvania.
He and his seven older siblings were sent there
after his mother had a nervous breakdown. He was
18 months old and remembers nothing about his
mother, who died some time later. His father,
though unable to care for the children, saw them
occasionally over the years. The
siblings were reared by a Russian Orthodox priest
and his wife, whose home was next to a monastery,
a place Telencio loved. His sole ambition was to
become a priest. "It
was in the stars," he says. But
once married, ordained and assigned to a church,
Telencio couldn't help but think there was even
more he wanted to do. Restless,
he thought of his four older brothers, serving in
three separate branches of the military. Something
inside Telencio clicked, and at age 25, he joined
the Army, melding his calling into the ministry
with his love of the military to shape one
impressive career. "The
(military) ministry was fantastic," Telencio
says. "I wouldn't trade it for the
world." The
energetic young chaplain was eager for action
right from the get-go. "I
wanted to serve in Vietnam, but they were all
pulling out right after I joined," he says. Action
would come soon enough though. In 1983, he served
as a Russian interpreter in Grenada for the 82nd
Airborne and the Justice Department. He was
awarded the Bronze Star for his work there, a
mission he says is still too secretive to discuss. Telencio
says his favorite assignment was the three years
he served as a chaplain and Russian interpreter in
Berlin during the reunification of Germany. "That
was history in the making," he says. "We
were responsible for defending Berlin." Telencio
was the first Orthodox chaplain to become director
of combat development for the U.S. Chaplain School
in Fort Jackson, S.C., in 1994, a title he held
for five years. He determined doctrine, training
and logistical requirements for the school, and
was responsible for long-range planning for the
utilization of the military's chaplains. The
priest says he accomplished a lot while serving on
the administrative end of the chaplaincy program.
But he remembers with fondness the years he spent
in the field, counseling soldiers. "You
get to appreciate the value of religion on the
battlefield," he says. With more than 200
faith groups represented in the Armed Forces,
chaplains and soldiers alike also "learn to
respect each other's denominations," he says.
"(Soldiers)
look at that cross ... and they don't care what
denomination you are. They're just glad you're
there with them," he says. Success
as an Army chaplain comes only when you believe in
the military and the soldiers as much as you
believe in God. "You
need to be totally dedicated to the mission of the
military," he says. "You've got to be
with the soldiers." An
example of that dedication is parachuting with the
troops -- which isn't required of chaplains. "You've
got to volunteer for it," says Telencio, who
did just that, partly because he was "young
and dumb," and partly because he knew it
would instill trust and respect from his troops. "I
wouldn't jump anymore," he says, smiling.
"I'm smarter now." After
moving 13 times in 23 years, Telencio's wife,
Martha, and two sons were ready for some
permanence. So at his family's urging, he retired
from the Army in 1999. "Sad
to say, I didn't want to retire," he says.
"I would go (back in) tomorrow if I was
re-called." But
he adjusted to civilian life fairly easily,
becoming administrator at Holy Trinity Greek
Orthodox Church in Columbia. In
November 2004, he started leading services twice a
month at Holy Resurrection Greek Orthodox Church.
But in July he was temporarily assigned to another
parish. When
there's no priest to lead the liturgy, the members
still gather for prayers and readings, says
founding church member Rick Haight. But it's not
the same. "Some
drop off, some go to other denominations,"
Haight says. But
now Telencio's back, driving from Columbia each
Sunday to preside over worship services for the
congregation, which has about 20 families. He sees
great things for the tiny church, which rents a
few rooms in Heritage Plaza on the south end of
the island. "I
think it's got a lot of potential. This church was
never given a consistency of services," he
says. The church's last "full-time"
priest, the Rev. Nick Trivelas, traveled from
Charleston. Telencio
wants to start an outreach ministry, but for now
his focus is marketing the church. He and Haight
are sure potential parishioners are out there. "We're
the only (Orthodox church) right in this
area," says Haight, who's been trying to
build the membership and maintain cohesiveness
since the church was founded in 1990. The
congregation includes followers of several
Orthodox denominations, including Greek, Antioch,
Russian and Bulgarian. "Our
key thing is finding people," Telencio says. If
anyone can find followers, it's Telencio, whose
made a career of it. He
remembers all those times he stood with the 82nd
and 101st Airborne troops in those nerve-wracking
moments before parachuting into danger. It's too
noisy to pray aloud in the plane, so he'd huddle
the soldiers while still on the ground to ask God
for protection. Then
he'd voluntarily load up with the others, take
off, and fall from the sky.
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