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Commemoration of Patriarchs St.Athanasius and Cyril of Alexandria

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  • Commemoration of Patriarchs St.Athanasius and Cyril of Alexandria

    Aysor, Armenia
    Jan 23 2010


    Commemoration of Patriarchs St.Athanasius and Cyril of Alexandria


    Today the Armenian Apostolic Church is celebrating the Commemoration
    day of Patriarchs St. Athanasius and St. Cyril of Alexandria.
    Patriarchs St. Athanasius and St. Cyril are among the most prominent
    figures of the Universal Church, who devoted their lives to the
    promulgation of the orthodoxy of Christianity, and the struggle
    against false conceptions and erroneous teachings, informs the
    information service of Araratyan Diocese.

    St. Athanasius (295-373 A.D.) was born in Alexandria, to a Greek
    Christian family. He received his higher education in the famous
    Theological School of Alexandria. He was ordained to the diaconate by
    Patriarch Alexander of Alexandria, and participated in the Ecumenical
    Council of Nicea in 325, as the Patriarch's personal secretary. During
    the council he decisively defeated Arius and his followers who denied
    the Divine nature of Christ and purported that He was a created being.
    In his argument St. Athanasius stated the reality of Christ being God
    and explained the salvation in combining the human nature of Jesus
    with God, which is possible only through His incarnation. According to
    the formulation of St. Athanasius, salvation is nothing else but
    theosis ` being adopted by God. Athanasius stated that God became
    incarnate, `so that sons of mortal men should become sons of God.' In
    328, St. Athanasius became Bishop of Alexandria. He continued to
    struggle against Arianism and forcefully defended the Nicene Orthodox
    teaching. Having been subjected to repeated persecutions, he spent 15
    of his 47-year episcopal service in exile. His heroic efforts bore
    fruit, and eight years following his death his teachings were adopted
    by the Ecumenical Council of Constantinople, in 381. St. Athanasius
    made very significant contributions to the development of monastic
    life as well.

    Patriarch St. Cyril of Alexandria is one of the brilliant
    representatives of the Alexandrian Theological School. He was born in
    380, and was the nephew of Patriarch Theophilus, whom he succeeded in
    412. He struggled against Nestorius, the Patriarch of Constantinople,
    for the preservation of orthodox teaching. It was for this purpose
    that Emperor Theodoros II convened the Third Ecumenical Council in
    Ephesus, in 431. During the Council, Nestorius and his teachings were
    criticized and condemned, and the formulation of `Theotokos'
    (Birthgiver to God) was adopted by the Church as it related to St.
    Mary. The famous formulation of St. Cyril: `The one incarnate nature
    of God the Word', has become the cornerstone of the Armenian Church
    regarding the nature of Christ.
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