Services

Home Altar

Home Altar helps families build a living Orthodox prayer corner and a rhythm of spiritual life at home.

The Home Altar project helps every family set aside a place and rhythm for prayer at home. A home altar is not meant to replace prayer anywhere else; it gives the family a visible, peaceful place where distractions are reduced and the home is dedicated again to Christ.

What Is a Home Altar?

A home altar is a dedicated prayer corner or wall in the home. It may be simple or elaborate, depending on the family’s space and needs. The essential idea is to reserve a place where the family offers prayer to God, remembers His presence, and builds the habit of daily spiritual life.

Common items include an icon of our Lord Jesus Christ, a cross, a Bible or Agpeya, icons of patron saints or favorite saints, a prayer scarf for women, a candle, and a journal. The altar should be arranged in a way that helps the family love prayer and return to it regularly.

Why It Matters

Families already set aside places for eating, sleeping, studying, and gathering. A home altar sets aside a place for prayer. It teaches children that Christ belongs in the daily life of the home, not only at church on Sunday. It also helps children and parents build consistency because the space itself becomes a reminder to stop, stand before God, and pray.

  • It gives the family a quiet place to pray together.
  • It helps children connect church worship with daily life at home.
  • It reminds the family that the saints and angels worship with us before God.
  • It supports a regular rhythm of thanksgiving, repentance, intercession, and spiritual reading.

How to Pray There

  • Begin with one minute of silence, remembering that you are standing before God.
  • Make a prostration and pray, “Come, let us worship and bow down; let us kneel before the Lord our Maker.”
  • Use both structured prayers, such as the Agpeya, and simple personal prayers.
  • Choose a realistic amount of time and keep it consistent.
  • Ask your father of confession for guidance as your prayer life grows.

For younger children, prayer can begin very simply: thank God for something from the day, tell Him about something difficult, ask forgiveness, pray for someone else, and ask for help to love Him. The prayer cube resource gives prompts such as “Lord, thank You for…,” “Lord, I am sorry about…,” and “God, please help me with…”.

Icons and the Saints

Icons are not decorations and they are not idols. They remind us that the Church includes the faithful on earth and the saints alive in Christ. We ask the saints to pray for us as members of the one Body of Christ, while confessing that our only Mediator with the Father is Jesus Christ. Icons help children see that prayer joins us to heaven, where the angels and saints worship God.

Youth Academy Roadmap

Age / GradeSpiritual FocusSuggested Items
Preschool 3Learning what prayer is and recognizing Christ and St. Mary.Spiritual notebook, icon of Christ, icon of St. Mary, prayer book, prayer cube.
Preschool 4Learning about the saints’ intercessions and the guardian angel.Spiritual notebook, icon of Archangel Raphael.
Preschool 5Learning about St. Paul, the patron of the parish.Spiritual notebook, icon of St. Paul.
KindergartenLearning about candles in church and memorizing the Nicene Creed.Spiritual notebook, icon of St. Sophia, candle.
1st GradeLearning the beginning and conclusion of each Agpeya hour and the meaning of confession.Spiritual notebook, icon of St. Timothy, illustrated Agpeya.
2nd GradeLearning about the Cross and the 12th Hour of the Agpeya.Spiritual notebook, wall cross, hand cross.
3rd GradeLearning about the blessing and protection of the saints.Spiritual notebook, icon of St. Stephen, holy oil.
4th GradePracticing the 1st and 12th Hours of the Agpeya.Spiritual notebook, regular Agpeya.
5th GradeUsing a journal to reflect on Bible reading and spiritual life.Spiritual notebook, icon of St. Thomas, first journal.
6th GradeLearning Midnight Praises and the psalmody.Spiritual notebook, journal, psalmody, praises or hymns recording.
7th GradeLearning cymbals for chanting midnight hymns.Spiritual notebook, journal, cymbals, podium or lectern.
8th GradeLearning triangle for chanting midnight hymns.Spiritual notebook, journal, icon of St. Moses the Strong, triangle.
9th GradePracticing the Jesus Prayer.Spiritual notebook, journal, prayer rope, sermons audio.
10th GradeContinuing to practice the Jesus Prayer.Spiritual notebook, journal, spiritual songs.
11th GradeContinuing prayer through spiritual reading.Spiritual notebook, journal, The Way of a Pilgrim.
12th GradeDeepening prayer through the writings of the spiritual fathers.Spiritual notebook, journal, The Philokalia.

Resource PDFs