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Eastern Prelacy: Press Release - 110th & 50th Anniversaries

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  • Eastern Prelacy: Press Release - 110th & 50th Anniversaries

    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
    Email: [email protected]
    Website: http://www.armenianprelacy.org
    Contact: Iris Papazian

    October 6, 2008

    110th ANNIVERSARY OF ESTABLISHMENT OF ARMENIAN CHURCH IN AMERICA AND
    50th ANNIVERSARY OF PRELACY UNDER CILICIAN SEE
    TO BE MARKED ON OCTOBER 25

    BY FLORENCE AVAKIAN


    NEW YORK, NY-----Extensive preparations are underway for the 50th
    anniversary celebration of the establishment of the Prelacy of the Armenian
    Apostolic Church in America, under the Catholicosate of Cilicia. This year
    also marks the 110th anniversary of the establishment of the Armenian Church
    in America, named the Prelacy by Catholicos of all Armenians Khrimian
    Hairig.

    The gala event will take place on Saturday evening, October 25, at the
    Marriott at Glenpointe in Teaneck, NJ, with the reception starting at 7
    P.M., and the dinner at 8 P.M. Accompanying the reception will be an
    exhibit, and DVD presentation of the Prelacy's history during the past half
    century.

    "We are celebrating 50 years of spiritual growth and service, not the
    split," states Prelate Archbishop Oshagan Choloyan. "We are celebrating
    the spirit of bringing people around the church, and the strengthening of
    the family. We are an axel around which revolve all of our sister
    organizations working together.

    In addition, the Prelacy has sponsored concerts, commemorative events,
    publications, and symposiums. These have all been constructed with the
    goal of "keeping the Christian faith alive, promoting Armenian identity, and
    passing onto the next generation the knowledge of their future, and keeping
    the Armenian cause alive," Archbishop Choloyan relates.

    Part of the celebration will feature a book, detailing the history of the
    Prelacy from its beginnings. "This will be like an art catalog, leaving a
    legacy for the future.
    We want to relay an inspirational message with the wording." Already
    prepared is a traveling exhibition which depicts the Prelacy's 50-year
    history, with two huge panels accompanied by a DVD. In addition to the
    national event, parishes will have their own local celebrations, the Prelate
    notes.

    FOCUS ON THE FUTURE

    Archbishop Choloyan is currently in his third term as Prelate of the Eastern
    Prelacy. In a previous interview, he declared, "Our past, of course, is
    important. We must know it, study it, learn from it. But the past is not
    our capital. We must always focus on the future, with emphasis on the
    education of our children, encouraging them to reach their greatest
    potential, but never forgetting their roots."

    He credits the former Prelate, Archbishop Mesrob Ashjian who served as
    Prelate for 20 years, with the enormous progress that the Prelacy has made.
    But he is concerned about the absence of previously active people within the
    church. The top priorities for Archbishop Choloyan have been clergy
    recruitment and education, parish development, and Christian education. In
    this regard, he is ever mindful of using modern technology to reach the
    faithful.

    When first elected Prelate in May 1998, Archbishop Choloyan's first visited
    each one of the parishes, and parish development became a priority. He
    saw that strong and creative leadership was a necessity. "A religious
    community is only as strong as the clerical leaders ministering to it. A
    strong pastor makes a strong parish," and thereby the recruitment and
    education of young men for the clergy was crucial.

    Always looking forward, he acknowledges that reforms are needed. "We need
    to embark on a study of self-evaluation and begin a process of renewal. We
    need to explore liturgical issues as well as ethical and moral issues that
    are so much a part of modern life."

    The 50-year history of the Prelacy is "an impressive story of keeping and
    transmitting our faith, safeguarding our traditions, keeping the youth
    attached to the church, and keeping our community strong and active. Unity
    is a noble and lofty goal, even imperative. However, unity is a process
    which must be followed if unity is to become a reality. Imposing unity
    will not work. We have to prepare the groundwork, and learn to love,
    understand, and respect one another. If this is done, then unity will surely
    follow."

    STRONG FAMILY FOUNDATION

    Born in Aleppo, Syria in 1947, young Manoog Choloyan received a strong
    ethical and faith-filled foundation from his grandmother, parents, godfather
    and uncle. Receiving his primary education at Aleppo's Haikazian School, he
    entered the Seminary at age 13, though he had been singing in the local
    church since he was five years old. "The Church was such a constant and
    strong part of our early family life," he has said, and recalls that he and
    his brothers would "play church".

    Accepted into the Cilician See's Seminary in Antelias in 1960, he was
    ordained a deacon in 1964, a celibate priest in 1967, Bishop in 1994, and
    Archbishop in 1998. He recalls fondly that during his time in the Seminary,
    he never felt homesick. "I was at home in the Seminary."

    The Prelate's illustrious career includes teaching in the Mardigian School,
    the Karen Jeppe Jemaran in Aleppo, attending the American University of
    Beirut, and the Princeton Theological Seminary where he earned two Master's
    degrees. As a Princeton student, then-Prelate Archbishop Karekin Sarkissian
    used his talents throughout the many churches in the Prelacy. He became
    locum tenens of the Eastern Prelacy in 1977, returned to Lebanon to teach at
    the Seminary in 1979, and was appointed pontifical legate to Kuwait and the
    Arab Emirates in 1980. For the 1700th anniversary of Christian Armenia, he
    was assigned as co-chairman of the central committee.

    One of his most ambitious programs became the translation of the Bible into
    western Armenian which he worked on with his closest friend Archbishop Zareh
    Aznavourian of blessed memory. With the completion of the New Testament,
    regarded by the Bible Society as one of the best translations, they embarked
    on the Old Testament, left incomplete due to the illness and death of
    Archbishop Aznavourian. As a fitting memorial to the Archbishop, he is
    committed to completing the project with the aid of the Bible Society and a
    group of new translators.

    He regards as his greatest contribution the preparation, with Archbishop
    Aznavourian, of five volumes of Armenian sharagans, most not available on
    paper, and only passed through from one generation to the next through oral
    tradition.

    On the 50th anniversary of the Prelacy, Archbishop Choloyan's eloquent
    message to every Armenian is, "Do not just stand on the sidelines. Come
    into the arena, be active, be a participant, always with the goal of
    building the Church and making it stronger for the glory of God."
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