The monastery was founded in 1999 by Metropolitan Pavlos.
Life
The monastery follows a cenobitictypikon. The divine liturgy is celebrated four times per week as well as on major feast days. Each day that liturgy is celebrated, except Sunday, begins with the Midnight office at 4:15 followed by Matins and Divine liturgy. On days no liturgy is celebrated midnight office begins at 4:45 followed by Matins and the Typica service. The music used is Traditional Byzantine chant and the services are approximately two-thirds English and one-third Greek. Occasionally church Slavonic and znameny chant are used as well. At noon the paraclesis to the Mother of God is read each day with optional attendance for the monastics due to the necessity of certain obediences. Each day at 6:30 there is the service of Vespers and compline with the Akathist to the mother of God. At the end of each day all the monks ask forgiveness from the abbot and retire to their cells. From the end of Compline until breakfast the following day there is a strict observance of quiet hours. No talking is permitted without a blessing of the abbot. There are two meals each day at the Monastery. The meals provided follow the tradition of the Orthodox church regarding fasting. At 9:00 a.m. there is a light breakfast and at 3:00 p.m. there is the main meal of the day. Snacking is not permitted without a blessing of the Abbot. A wide variety of obediences are done each day at the monastery; Candle-making, construction work, kitchen work, iconography, prayer-rope making, music practice etc... Although the monastery gladly accepts donations for its construction work, the monks live by the work of their hands and the monastery is primarily supported through beeswax candles, which are hand-dipped and sold to churches. The monks begins their obediences after the morning meal and work up until 5:30. On feast days a vigil is held from approximately 8:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. and there is no work during the day without a blessing. On days of vigils and on Sundays the trapeza is in the late morning and the evening meal is at 5:00 p.m. Most importantly, the monastery is a spiritual hospital and the spiritual fathers are always available for confession and revelation of thoughts.
During the Feast of the Ascension on June 2, 2011, five bishops and four priests blessed the foundations for a new church on a hill at the monastery. The church will be a 1/5 scale replica of the original Hagia Sophia in Constantinople. The fabric of the church will be of autoclaved aerated concrete block units. The exterior will be faced with limestone and Byzantine brick, while the interior will have marble revetment as well as marble columns with capitals copied from the original designs. The church will be illuminated by over 60 custom-made windows. Beginning in late fall of 2011 and continuing in the spiring of 2012 the foundation was completed and in the summer of 2013 the walls began to go up and now are at 7 feet. The church is being designed by William Hall of Hall III Design and built by Mark Arrow, a stonemason who also built St. Maximus Orthodox Church in Owego, New York. The fathers of the monastery have also taken an active part in the designing and building of the church.