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  • SVS Press Author Abraham Terian Honored

    SVS PRESS AUTHOR ABRAHAM TERIAN HONORED

    St. Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary
    http://www.svots.edu/
    October 10, 2008
    NY

    Fr. Haigazoun Najarian, Chancellor, (far left) and Abp. Khajag
    Barsamian, (middle) both of the Eastern Diocese of the Armenian Church
    in North America, honor Dr. Abraham Terian, Emeritus Professor of
    Armenian Theology and Patristics at St. Nersess Armenian Seminary,
    (far right) on the occasion of his retirement. Coincident with the
    retirement celebration was the launch of two of Dr. Terian's new books,
    one by SVS Press, Macarius of Jerusalem: Letter to the Armenians,
    AD 335. Professor Abraham Terian was honored at a reception in New
    York on Friday, October 10, 2008, on the occasion of his retirement
    from St. Nersess Armenian Seminary, and in recognition of his manifold
    contributions to the Armenian Church and scholarly studies. Coincident
    with the retirement celebration was the launch of two of his new
    books, one by St. Vladimir's Seminary Press (SVS Press), Macarius
    of Jerusalem: Letter to the Armenians, AD 335, and the other by
    Oxford University Press (OUP), The Armenian Gospel of the Infancy:
    With Three Early Versions of the Protoevangelion of James.

    Macarius of Jerusalem: Letter to the Armenians, AD 335, released by
    SVS Press this month, already attracted international attention a
    year before its publication. Dr. Terian identifies the author of the
    brief letter as the early fourth-century Bishop Macarius of Jerusalem,
    making this the oldest surviving writing pertaining to the Armenian
    Church, and one of a handful of surviving documents that illuminate
    baptismal and eucharistic liturgical practices in the early centuries
    of the Christian church.

    "There is no doubt in my mind that this work will be Professor Terian's
    most important contribution to Christian scholarship to date," said The
    V. Rev. Dr. Daniel Findikyan, Dean and Professor of Liturgical Studies
    at St. Nersess Seminary, and a friend and colleague of Dr. Terian. "The
    importance of this work not only for Armenian Studies, but for the
    early history of the Eucharist and other sacraments of the Church can
    hardly be overestimated. It has shaken the foundations of assumptions
    about the early church, since it describes liturgical practices in the
    fourth century, within a generation of St. Gregory the Illuminator,"
    Fr. Daniel added.

    The new volume is the fourth book in the AVANT: Treasures of the
    Armenian Christian Tradition series, a joint venture of St. Nersess
    Armenian Seminary and St. Vladimir's Seminary Press, begun in
    2005. Terian is also the author of the second book in the series,
    Patriotism and Piety in Armenian Christianity: The Early Panegyrics
    on Saint Gregory. All of the books in the AVANT series are available
    for purchase from St. Vladimir's Seminary Press.

    The reception was hosted by Archbishop Khajag Barsamian in his
    dual roles as Primate of the Eastern Diocese of the Armenian Church
    of America and President of the Board of Directors of St. Nersess
    Seminary. The reception took in the Haig and Alice Kavookjian Hall
    of the Armenian Diocese.

    St. Vladimir's Seminary Dean, The Rev. Dr. John Behr, delivered
    a congratulatory address at the reception. Calling Dr. Terian "a
    scholar, churchman, and friend," and noting his prolific and careful
    scholarly work in such fields as early church and Intertestamental
    studies, and his translation of works by Philo, Fr. John agreed
    that Dr. Terian's translation and commentary on the Letter to the
    Armenians had the potential to "radically change our understanding of
    this time period, which itself was a crucial turning point" in the
    life of the Church. Summing up Dr. Terian's scholarly life's work,
    Fr. John commented, "He has saved the best wine for last."

    Moreover, Dean Behr thanked Dr. Terian for his "stable and experienced
    hand as Academic Dean of St. Nersess," which, he said, had immensely
    enhanced the cooperative efforts between St. Vladimir's and St. Nersess
    in integrating the curriculum between the two sister schools.

    Currently, there are six students studying concurrently on the campuses
    of St. Vladimir's and St. Nersess. One of them, Ryan Tellalian,
    honored Dr. Terian by reflecting on his "humility that knows no equal
    in academia," and calling him a "living witness and exemplar of the
    faith, in word and speech, in action and truth." Seminarian Tellalian
    told the gathering that Dr. Terian had taught his class a vital lesson
    about theological study: "Our faith informs our intellect."

    A highlight of the evening was the honor bestowed upon Dr. Terian by
    Catholicos Karekin II, current head of the Holy Armenian Apostolic
    Church and Catholicos of All Armenians at the Mother See of Holy
    Etchmiadzin, through an encyclical greeting, read by the Chancellor
    of the Eastern Diocese of the Armenian Church in North America,
    Fr. Haigazoun Najarian. Dr. Terian also was given the "Ss. Sahak and
    Mesrop" award, in recognition of his outstanding academic and literary
    contributions and service to the Armenian Church, by His Holiness,
    Karekin II.

    Reflecting on the "evening of surprises," Dr. Terian expressed his
    gratitude to his friends and colleagues, and attributed his church
    and scholarly achievements to "the two most important women in my
    life": his mother, who had persuaded him to invest his talents in the
    Armenian Church, and his wife, Dr. Sara Karkkainen Terian, a retired
    Professor of Sociology, who supported him in his academic career.

    Thanking the three deans under whose headship he served, he urged
    the seminarians present to continually serve the Armenian people and
    the Armenian Church. He ended by noting the lasting historical impact
    of well-researched books by Christian scholars, which keep alive the
    memory and tradition of the earliest Christian communities.

    Dr. Terian had served as Academic Dean and Professor of Armenian
    Patristics at St. Nersess for eleven years. He grew up in the Armenian
    compound of St. James in Jerusalem, where he received his early
    education. For six years he was a professional tour guide throughout
    the Holy Land. In addition to a Bachelor's degree in history and
    ancient languages and a Master's degree in archaeology and history
    of antiquity, he holds a Doctorate in Theology from the University
    of Basel, Switzerland, specializing in Early Christianity and its
    Jewish and Hellenistic backgrounds.

    Before coming to St. Nersess in 1997, he was Professor of
    Intertestamental and Early Christian Literatures for twenty years
    at various universities in the U.S. and abroad, and for four years
    a recurring Visiting Professor for both Classical Armenian and
    Hellenistic Judaism at the University of Chicago. He has published
    six books and more than fifty articles in historical, philological,
    and literary periodicals and monographs.

    On the occasion of his retirement from full-time teaching, Terian
    was granted the title, "Emeritus Professor of Armenian Theology and
    Patristics" by the St. Nersess Board of Directors.

    http://www.svots.edu/News/Recent/2008- 1010-drterianhonored/

    **

    SVS Press author Abraham Terian honored

    Professor Abraham Terian was honored at a reception in New York on
    Friday, October 10, 2008, on the occasion of his retirement from
    St. Nersess Armenian Seminary, and in recognition of his manifold
    contributions to the Armenian Church and scholarly studies. Coincident
    with the retirement celebration was the launch of two of his new
    books, one by St. Vladimir's Seminary Press (SVS Press), Macarius
    of Jerusalem: Letter to the Armenians, AD 335, and the other by
    Oxford University Press (OUP), The Armenian Gospel of the Infancy:
    With Three Early Versions of the Protoevangelion of James.

    Macarius of Jerusalem: Letter to the Armenians, AD 335, released by
    SVS Press this month, already attracted international attention a
    year before its publication. Dr. Terian identifies the author of the
    brief letter as the early fourth-century Bishop Macarius of Jerusalem,
    making this the oldest surviving writing pertaining to the Armenian
    Church, and one of a handful of surviving documents that illuminate
    baptismal and eucharistic liturgical practices in the early centuries
    of the Christian church.

    "There is no doubt in my mind that this work will be Professor Terian's
    most important contribution to Christian scholarship to date," said The
    V. Rev. Dr. Daniel Findikyan, Dean and Professor of Liturgical Studies
    at St. Nersess Seminary, and a friend and colleague of Dr. Terian. "The
    importance of this work not only for Armenian Studies, but for the
    early history of the Eucharist and other sacraments of the Church can
    hardly be overestimated. It has shaken the foundations of assumptions
    about the early church, since it describes liturgical practices in the
    fourth century, within a generation of St. Gregory the Illuminator,"
    Fr. Daniel added.
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