Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Eastern Prelacy: Crossroads E-Newsletter 05/20/04

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Eastern Prelacy: Crossroads E-Newsletter 05/20/04

    PRESS RELEASE
    Eastern Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America
    138 East 39th Street
    New York, NY 10016
    Tel: 212-689-7810
    Fax: 212-689-7168
    e-mail: [email protected]
    Website: http://www.armenianprelacy.org
    Contact: Iris Papazian

    CROSSROAD E-NEWSLETTER: May 20, 2004

    NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVE ASSEMBLY
    CONVENES IN PHILADELPHIA

    OPENING ADDRESS BY PRELATE FOCUSES
    ON THE ARMENIAN FAMILY
    Delegates from the parishes under the jurisdiction of the Eastern
    Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America, arrived in Philadelphia
    yesterday to begin the deliberations of the National Representative Assembly
    (NRA). The host parish, St. Gregory the Illuminator Church, welcomed the
    delegates as they arrived to participate in the formal opening of the annual
    meeting at 2 p.m. Welcoming words were offered by Jack Papazian, chairman of
    St. Gregory Board of Trustees, and Rev. Fr. Nerses Manoogian, the Pastor. A
    message from His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia,
    offering congratulations and encouragement was read.
    Reports were presented by the Religious and Executive Councils, the
    Armenian Religious Education Council (AREC) and the Armenian National
    Education Committee (ANEC).
    The keynote address was delivered by Professor Vigen Guroian who
    captivated the delegates and guests with his timely and provocative analysis
    on the institution of marriage. Professor Guroian said:
    For reasons that on this occasion I can review in only the smallest
    detail, it may no longer be possible or permissible for the Armenian Church
    in the state of Massachusetts and no doubt soon in many other states to
    cooperate or collaborate with government in marrying persons, as has been
    carried on in one form or another within Christendom since the fifth and
    sixth centuries. It may be time for our bishop to instruct priests that in
    states that adopt gay marriage laws the Armenian Church must withdraw from
    the standard process and not deliver marriage consecration on behalf of the
    state, in simple terms not to sign marriage certificates. It may be, that in
    fact, Armenian Church faithful must for a time live defacto under a two-tier
    arrangement in which they obtain a civil marriage to meet legal requirements
    and qualify for married status in the eyes of the state and come to the
    church to receive true, sacramental marriage. ...Today in our land this
    profound Christian truth about the divine and salving nature of marriage is
    being contradicted in the most destructive and hateway way. We have seen the
    celebration of this rejection of Christian truth spilling over into the
    streets of San Francisco and Boston. There is little doubt what is coming.
    We must fight to prevent this explosion of the meaning of marriage, not for
    the sake of, at best, a Pyrrhic victory, but as testimony of our faith in
    the love of God and his holiness.
    An extended and lively question and answer period followed.
    Later that morning Archbishop Oshagan Choloyan, the Prelate, delivered
    his message, which focused on the Armenian Family. He spoke about the
    Armenian Family as a Church and the Armenian Family as a Nation. The Prelate
    said:
    We are all aware that His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of the Great House
    of Cilicia, proclaimed 2004 the Year of the Armenian Family. The family with
    its narrow and wide meaning comprises all of us individually and
    collectively with a national and universal understanding.
    . The Armenian Church turned the Gospe's message and salvific mission
    into the sustenance that strengthened and spread the faith transmitted by
    the apostles, giving Armenian nuances to our peoples distinct character. Our
    language and literature were born and advanced within Christianity; stones
    were given form and quality and became God's Churches-Hripsime and
    Zvartnotz. Sound was given the modulation of songs and became angelic
    prayers, hymns, and melodies. For the simplicity and purity of the Armenian
    soul, our church fathers defined our theology, ecclesiology and liturgy. All
    of this formed the identity of the Armenian Church. She had her special
    place in God's family, praying in her style and tongue, singing with her own
    mode and spirit, and a theology with her own philosophy and understanding.
    These qualities imprinted such a deep and defining stamp on our nation's
    spiritual and intellectual bedrock, which became our image, our uniqueness.
    In the words of our historian Yeghishe, it became the color of our skin.
    Because of this, during our peaceful and prosperous times, but especially
    during the times of destructions, massacres, and invasions by our enemies
    and during the time we were deprived of our government, the Armenian Church
    spread her protection over her faithful with total dedication, keeping them
    members of the Christian and Armenian Church family. And it is a fact that
    those who distanced themselves from the Mother Church lost a part of their
    identity, to say the least. For centuries we lived safely with our own
    identity thanks to the Armenian Church and her spiritual, cultural,
    philanthropic, and Christ- and nation-loving mission. Today our confident
    expectation is that the Armenian Church will continue her centuries old
    mission to her children with the same understanding and dedication.
    The theme of the family continued with the keynote address delivered by
    Dr. Vigen Guroian, Professor of Religion and Ethics at Loyola College in
    Baltimore. Professor Guroian spoke about the Armenian Christian Family Under
    Fire.

    ASCENSION DAY WILL BE CELEBRATED TONIGHT
    Today is Ascension Day (Hampartzoum) and it will be celebrated tonight
    in Philadelphia by the Prelate, the Prelacy clergy, NRA delegates, and the
    faithful of the Philadelphia community. The Divine Liturgy will start at
    7:30 pm, officiated by V. Rev. Fr. Anoushavan Tanielian, Vicar of the
    Prelacy.

    MIDWEST JEOPARDY TOURNAMENT WINNER
    IS ARS ZAVARIAN SCHOOL
    The Armenian Jeopardy Tournaments, organized by the Armenian National
    Education Committee (ANEC), have become even more popular than expected.
    Last Sunday, May 15, the Midwest Tournament took place in Chicago and the
    first place winner was the Armenian Relief Society Zavarian School of
    Detroit. Second place winner was the Taniel Varoujan School.
    The championship game will take place this Sunday, May 23, at St.
    Gregory Church, Philadelphia. The regional champions will compete for the
    grand championship. Competing will be: ARS Zavarian School (Detroit);
    Armenian Sisters Academy (Philadelphia); and St. Stephen Saturday School
    (Watertown).
    Good luck to all!

    AKHTAMAR CHURCH ENDANGERED
    The Assembly of Armenians of Europe issued an appeal following an
    article that appeared in the Turkish Zaman newspaper about the Church of the
    Holy Cross on the island of Akhtamar. The church is not protected by UNESCO
    and the Assembly of Armenians of Europe is asking that letters be sent to
    Mr. Laurent Levi-Strauss (Deputy Director for the Division of Cultural
    Heritage, Chief of Section for Tangible Heritage, UNESCO, e mail:
    [email protected] and to Mr. Francis Childe (Senior Programme
    Specialist, Europe, Asia, Pacific, UNESCO, e-mail: [email protected] and
    to the AAE Brussels Head Office, e-mail: [email protected]
    The Church of the Holy Cross is situated on an island in Lake Van. The
    church was built during the reign of King Gagik I and is one of the finest
    examples of Armenian architecture.

    U.S. CHURCH LEADERS PRESS PRESIDENT BUSH
    ON PROBLEMS FACING HOLY LAND CHRISTIANS
    Fifty leaders of evangelical and mainline Protestant, Catholic, and
    Orthodox churches and church-related organizations in the United States
    delivered a letter to President Bush on May 7, asking for a full
    understanding of the crisis in the Holy Land confronting Christian
    Palestinians, Christian institutions, and those who wish to visit the
    birthplace of Christianity.
    Stating that the churches have directed their concerns to the Israeli
    government but to little avail, the church leaders appealed for the
    President's intervention to help restore the normal function of Christian
    institutions in Israel and the occupied territories.
    The letter addressed the concerns specifically regarding the effects of
    the separation being constructed by Israel, taxation issues that may force
    many church institutions to close due to the rescinding of their
    longstanding tax-exempt status, and the denial and delay of visas by Israel
    for clergy and church personnel resulting in understaffed seminaries,
    churches, hospitals, education and other institutions.
    The signers stated clearly that they do not mean to minimize the
    suffering of Muslims and Jews, and asked the President to assist all
    Muslims, Jews, and Christians in the Holy Land for peacemaking that builds
    bridges to a new and hopeful future.
    Source: National Council of Churches

    THE VOICE OF GOD
    I sought to hear the voice of God,
    And climbed the topmost steeple.;
    But God declared: Go down again,
    I dwell among the people.
    (Louis I. Newman)

    Visit our website at http://www.armenianprelacy.org

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X