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  • Armenian Connections

    ARMENIAN CONNECTIONS
    By Gary Payton

    The River Journal
    http://riverjournal.com/vivvo/lifestyles/faithwalk/2200-garyfaith_armenia_payton_072011.html
    July 7 2011
    Idaho

    on Gary's Faith Walk

    As I gaze on the long winter snow receding on Baldy Mountain above
    Sandpoint, I am taken back to another mountain and another place just
    weeks ago. On that spring day, I looked out across the just waking
    city of Yerevan, Armenia upon the snow-covered slopes of Mount Ararat,
    the biblical mountain rising across the border in Turkey to 16,854
    feet. In the book of Genesis, it is written, "in the seventh month,
    on the seventeenth day of the month, the ark came to rest on the
    mountains of Ararat." (Genesis 8:4)

    Armenia is far distant from our daily consciousness here in the North
    Country. Armenia today is a land locked nation of 3 million in the
    southern Caucasus, a former republic of the Soviet Union, and the
    first nation to adopt Christianity in the year 301. Armenians are an
    ancient people who over the millennia have survived the onslaughts of
    invasion, conquest, natural disasters, and genocide at the hands of an
    imperial power. Their faith sustained them in the most desperate times.

    My purpose was twofold: to explore new ways of connection with the
    Armenian Apostolic Church, the Armenian Catholic Church, and the
    Armenian Evangelical Church and to visit clinics, schools, cultural
    centers and farm cooperatives supported by an NGO associated with
    the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)

    In multiple visits over the past decade, I've traveled extensively in
    former communist countries in Central and Eastern Europe. Yet, twenty
    years after the breakup of the USSR, the legacy of the era stills holds
    a grip on many parts of society. The gap between the richest and the
    poor is immense, former party officials having snapped up pieces of
    industry as a rough and tumble version of capitalism returned.

    Authoritarian governance based on centuries of autocratic leadership
    continues to dominate the political culture. And the spirit of
    volunteerism on which so much good work happens in the West is
    virtually unknown. Nurtured by the state for decades, it is many's
    view that if tasks and caring are to happen, the state should do it.

    In sharp contrast to this legacy stands the heritage of the 1,700 year
    old Christian tradition in Armenia. Traveling through villages and
    cities, one is rarely out of sight of a stone church, the remains of
    a monastery, or intricately carved stone crosses, called "khatchkars"
    which mark the landscape and tell the story of faith across centuries.

    And, all have ongoing programs to assist "the least of these."

    In my faith walk, I regularly encounter followers of Jesus renewing
    their churches after the nearly 70 years of "militant atheism" imposed
    by communist leaders. Working with, talking to, and observing these
    church leaders I reflect on the role of organized religion in the
    United States. European settlers brought their expressions of faith to
    this land over 400 years ago. Some were puritanical and exclusionary.

    Some were proponents of religious freedom. Some were extensions of
    European-based church structures.

    So in this month when we celebrate our 235th birthday as a nation,
    what role will our church traditions play in shaping the century
    ahead? Will they serve as guardians of culture as in the case of
    Armenia? If so, whose culture? Will they welcome other expressions
    of faith or condemn them? And, will the institutional structures
    which were built in the 19th and 20th centuries survive into the 21st
    century in an era of "flattened" organizations, distributed leadership,
    and intense individualism?

    Travels in Armenia or elsewhere in the world always place a mirror
    before my face as I examine my relationship with God and the
    institutions of which I am a part.


    From: Baghdasarian
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