Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Anglican Primate to join a Canadian ecumenical delegation to Armenia

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

  • Anglican Primate to join a Canadian ecumenical delegation to Armenia

    Anglican Primate to join a Canadian ecumenical delegation to Armenia
    BY DIANA MAVUNDUSE

    Anglican Church of Canada (press release), Canada
    Aug 15 2005

    AUGUST 15, 2005 -- The Primate of the Anglican Church of Canada,
    Archbishop Andrew Hutchison, is part of a five-member ecumenical
    delegation set to visit Armenia from Aug. 24 to Sep.1, 2005.

    The visit organised by the Canadian Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic
    Orthodox Church, is in response to an invitation by His Holiness
    Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians, to
    visit the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin. It is the first ever visit by
    such a delegation from Canada to Armenia. Led by the Primate of the
    Canadian Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Orthodox Church, Bishop
    Bagrat Galstanian, the delegation will discuss future prospects for
    the role and mission of Christian churches and cooperation between
    the Eastern and Western churches. The delegation will also meet with
    Armenian government officials.

    Other members of the delegation are: Archbishop Sotirios, Metropolitan
    of the Greek Orthodox Metropolis of Canada, Archbishop Brendan
    O~RBrien, President of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops
    and Professor Richard Schneider, President of the Canadian Council
    of Churches.

    The dates for this visit were chosen to coincide with celebrations
    commemorating the 1600th anniversary of the invention of the Armenian
    alphabet, which take place between Aug. 24 and Sept.1st. The delegation
    will have an opportunity to participate in the celebrations.

    The Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin is the pre-eminent centre of
    authority in the worldwide Armenian Apostolic Orthodox Church.
    Located near Yerevan, the capital city of the Republic of Armenia,
    it includes The Mother Cathedral of the entire Armenian Church, the
    residence of the Catholicos, a monastery, the Gevorgian Theological
    Seminary and a museum that houses the religious artefacts and
    treasures of the Armenian Church. The Cathedral dates to the 4th
    century, and is considered to be the oldest Christian cathedral in
    the world. Holy Etchmiadzin became the seat of the Catholicate of the
    entire Armenian nation in the 4th century, following the conversion
    of King Tiridates III to Christianity by St. Gregory the Illuminator
    in AD 301. Christianity became a powerful force in preserving the
    identity of the Armenians who have lived under foreign rule for much
    of their history.

    The Armenian Orthodox church is a member of the Oriental Orthodox
    family of churches that includes Coptic, Syrian, Armenian, Ethiopian,
    Eritrean and the (Indian) Malankara. There is an on-going theological
    dialogue between Anglicans and the Oriental family. In November 2002,
    the Anglican-Oriental Orthodox International Commission reached an
    Agreed Statement on Christology.

    The Rev. Canon Harold Nahabedian of St. Mary Magdalene, Toronto,
    (the only Armenian Anglican priest in Canada), is a member of the
    Commission.

    Formal dialogue between the Anglicans and the Eastern Orthodox
    churches stemmed from recommendations of the Lambeth Conferences of
    1988 and 1998 and the decisions of the Oriental Orthodox Churches that
    the Anglican-Orthodox dialogue be upgraded from a forum (1985-1993)
    to a commission.

    Armenians dispersed throughout the world after the Armenian Genocide
    of 1915 when 1.5 million Armenians perished and millions more fled.
    Today there are more Armenians living outside the country than inside
    Armenia. It is estimated that over 80,000 Armenians live in Canada.

    In 2002, the Federal Government of Canada designated 24 April as a
    day of remembrance of the 1915 genocide, the first genocide of the
    20th century.

    The relationship between the Anglican Church of Canada and the Canadian
    Diocese of the Armenian Orthodox Church, dates back 125 years, when
    in the absence of Armenian sanctuaries, the Anglicans offered the
    Armenians liturgical space and hospitality in Anglican churches.

    Through the Scholarship of St. Basil the Great, administered by the
    Anglican Foundation, the relationship between the Armenian Orthodox
    Church and the Canadian Anglicans has been strengthened and become
    better known.

    The scholarship, established by Bishop Henry Gordon Hill, retired
    bishop of the Diocese of Ontario, is meant to facilitate exchanges
    between members of the Anglican Church of Canada and members of the
    Oriental Orthodox Churches and the Assyrian Church of the East.

    In 1997, Rev. Sargis Boyajyan of the Armenian Orthodox church was the
    second recipient of the scholarship. He studied theology and English
    and is now serving in the diocese of Montreal.

    Another recipient, the Rev. Canon Philip Hobson, travelled to Armenia
    and Jerusalem where he spent four months sharing in the life of the
    Armenian Apostolic Church and lecturing on the Anglican Church.

    For further information on the visit please contact: Deacon
    Hagop Arslanian, assistant to the Primate Armenian Holy
    Apostolic Church Canadian Diocese 615 Stuart Avenue, Outremont
    Quebec H2V 3H2 Tel: 514~V276-9479 Email:[email protected]
    Website:http://www.armenianchurch.ca

    http://www.anglican.ca/news/news.php?newsItem=2005-08-15_Armeniavisit.news
Working...
X