St. Andrew Stratelates Orthodox Cathedral
St. Andrew Stratelates Orthodox Cathedral
AI Summary
St. Andrew Stratelates is a stavropegial parish under the direct oversight of the Chairman of the Synod of Bishops of ROCOR and presents parish life bilingually in Russian and English, with separate contact lines and website content in both languages. It maintains an active online presence—YouTube livestreams and archived services and sermons, plus Facebook and Instagram accounts—and posts downloadable schedules and parish documents. Visitors will find a vibrant musical life led for decades by professional conductor Vladislav Markov (with published recordings), a dedicated Sisterhood, an active Parish Council, and a Saturday parish school teaching Russian language, Orthodox doctrine and literature. The community, founded by émigré families in 1948, rebuilt after a damaging 1980s fire and moved into its new church building (consecrated with the altar transfer in January 2010) largely thanks to the patronage of Alexander V. Alexandrov; typical Sunday attendance is about one hundred worshipers.
Worship Style
Traditional/Hymns
⛪Church Details
🙏Ministries
📜Version History
Changes:
- Name:St. Andrew Stratelates Orthodox Cathedral
- Street Address:6465 54th Ave N.
- Address Line 2:(removed)
- +7 more changes
Added location: St. Andrew Stratelates Orthodox Cathedral
Changes:
- Name:St. Andrew Stratelates Orthodox Cathedral
- Website URL:https://standrewsroch.com
- Summary:St. Andrew Stratelates is a stavropegial parish under the direct oversight of the Chairman of the Synod of Bishops of ROCOR and presents parish life bilingually in Russian and English, with separate contact lines and website content in both languages. It maintains an active online presence—YouTube livestreams and archived services and sermons, plus Facebook and Instagram accounts—and posts downloadable schedules and parish documents. Visitors will find a vibrant musical life led for decades by professional conductor Vladislav Markov (with published recordings), a dedicated Sisterhood, an active Parish Council, and a Saturday parish school teaching Russian language, Orthodox doctrine and literature. The community, founded by émigré families in 1948, rebuilt after a damaging 1980s fire and moved into its new church building (consecrated with the altar transfer in January 2010) largely thanks to the patronage of Alexander V. Alexandrov; typical Sunday attendance is about one hundred worshipers.
- +10 more changes
Initial church data
Last updated: 2/11/2026