The service of catechumen enrollment is a brief liturgical rite that marks your formal commitment to prepare for baptism or chrismation. It’s the moment you stop being an inquirer and become a catechumen, someone officially under the Church’s care and instruction.
Think of it like an engagement. You’ve been dating the Church, so to speak, attending services and learning. Now you’re making a public promise that you intend to marry her.
What Actually Happens
The service usually takes place on a Sunday morning before the Divine Liturgy starts. You stand at the church threshold, literally in the doorway, barefoot. No shoes, no jewelry. This isn’t about humiliation. It’s about humility, about coming to God stripped of pretense and worldly adornment.
The priest positions you facing east, toward the rising sun that symbolizes Christ. Your hands hang down at your sides in a posture of submission. Then come the prayers of exorcism. Yes, exorcism. The priest prays over you to break any demonic influence and prepare you for illumination. This isn’t Hollywood drama, it’s the Church’s recognition that we all live in a world where Satan has real power, and entering the Church means leaving his territory.
You’ll publicly renounce Satan. Out loud. The priest asks if you renounce him and all his works, and you say you do. In some parishes you’ll blow and spit toward the west (where the sun sets, symbolizing darkness) as a sign of contempt for the devil. If that sounds strange, good. It should. We’re too comfortable with evil in our culture, and this moment makes the spiritual battle concrete.
Then you turn and unite yourself to Christ. You confess your commitment to Him and His Church through prayers and responses. After this, you’re a catechumen. You’ll attend the Liturgy each week until the Catechumen Litany, when the deacon or priest will say “Catechumens, depart.” That’s your cue to leave with your catechist for instruction while the faithful continue to the Eucharist.
Why It Matters
Becoming a catechumen means you’re no longer just exploring. You’re under the Church’s spiritual protection now, even though you can’t yet receive communion. You’re in the household but not yet at the family table. The Church prays for you by name. You have a godparent or sponsor walking with you. You’re accountable to a process that’ll likely take a year or more.
At St. Michael, like most Antiochian parishes, you’ll attend mandatory catechism classes. You’ll establish a prayer rule. You’ll read assigned books, Fr. Josiah Trenham’s work gets recommended often. You’ll go to confession monthly. You’ll start tithing or pledging financially, because joining the Church isn’t just intellectual assent. It’s your whole life.
The catechumenate isn’t easy. You’re learning to fast. You’re attending weeknight services during Lent when you’d rather be home after a long shift at the plant. You’re explaining to your Baptist mama why you’re doing all this. You’re discovering that Orthodoxy asks more of you than any church you’ve known.
But you’re also discovering that it gives more. The prayers of exorcism at your enrollment weren’t symbolic, they were real. You’re being freed from things you didn’t even know held you. The instruction isn’t just information. It’s formation. You’re not just learning about Orthodoxy. You’re becoming Orthodox.
What Comes Next
After your enrollment, the path leads through the catechumenate to baptism or chrismation, usually at Pascha after you’ve walked through Great Lent. Your priest will decide when you’re ready. That’s not arbitrary, he’s watching to see if the faith is taking root, if you’re showing up, if your life is changing.
If you were baptized in another church with the Trinitarian formula, you’ll likely be received by chrismation rather than baptism. Either way, you’ll make a life confession beforehand, bringing every sin you can remember to the mystery of repentance. Then you’ll be sealed with the Holy Spirit and receive the Eucharist for the first time.
Standing barefoot at that threshold as a catechumen-to-be, you can’t imagine what that first communion will feel like. But the enrollment is where it starts, where you stop visiting and start coming home.
