Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Old faith, new challenges: Armenian Church looks to heal internal Ri

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

  • Old faith, new challenges: Armenian Church looks to heal internal Ri

    The International Herald Tribune, France
    October 5, 2013 Saturday


    Old faith, new challenges;
    Armenian Church looks to heal internal rift in attempt to stay relevant

    DAVID M. HERSZENHORN
    ECHMIADZIN, Armenia


    ABSTRACT
    The Armenian Apostolic Church is trying to overcome centuries-old
    divisions in an attempt to win back followers, at home and abroad, in
    an age of increasing secularism.

    FULL TEXT
    In this ancient city, tucked in a valley that has witnessed the rise
    and fall of empires, King Tiridates III converted to Christianity and
    declared Armenia to be the world's first Christian state. The year was
    301, more than a decade before Emperor Constantine put Rome on a
    similar path.

    Since then, the Armenian Apostolic Church, which still has its main
    cathedral here, has survived conquest and dispersion, genocide and
    government-imposed atheism during the years Armenia was part of the
    Soviet Union. It also endured centuries of internal rancor, including
    a split in 1441 that led to the establishment of a rival leadership
    now based in Lebanon.

    As church leaders gathered here a little over a week ago for a rare
    bishops' conference, they seemed to be ready to put at least some of
    those differences aside as they confronted a new set of challenges:
    entrenched secularism at home, assimilation of followers in the large
    Armenian diaspora abroad and general disaffection with organized
    religion.

    ''The church is in dire need of renewal,'' Catholicos Aram I, the
    leader of the Lebanon-based faction of the church, said in an
    interview as he strolled across the campus here of the Mother See.
    ''And by renewal, I mean the church has to be responsive to the needs
    and expectations of the people.''

    He added, ''The church has to respond to the challenges of the
    present-day world.''

    Exactly how the church plans to do that remains elusive, however, and
    some skeptics said the split within the church leadership remained as
    deep as ever, while the number of people regularly attending church
    has dwindled.

    The church has more than nine million adherents worldwide, most
    outside Armenia. Statistics show that more than 98 percent of
    Armenians consider themselves Christians, but only 8 percent say they
    attend services at least once a week - data that suggest the church is
    still struggling to overcome the legacy of forced atheism 23 years
    after Armenian independence.

    There have also been a number of recent controversies, including the
    resignation of the head of the church in France, Archbishop Norvan
    Zakarian, in a dispute over demands by the church leadership to
    reinstate a priest facing criminal assault charges.

    ''The whole situation of the division of the Armenian church is not
    resolved,'' said one Western-based archbishop who asked not to be
    identified to avoid exacerbating tensions. ''Yes, this is a conclave,
    but the church is not unified.''

    Catholicos Aram acknowledged that he claimed the same basic title as
    Catholicos Karekin II, the church leader based in Echmiadzin, who also
    has the added designation of supreme patriarch of all Armenians.
    Still, Aram denied any fissure.

    ''We don't have any division in the Armenian church,'' he said. ''We
    are one church. We are one people. We are one nation. We are one
    mission. We have two Catholicoi, and we are rich - this is an
    expression of the richness of the church.''

    For his part, Catholicos Karekin told his audience of 62 bishops in
    black hoods and robes with purple accents, who had come from as far
    away as Australia and Latin America, that it was time to come
    together.

    ''All these controversies and administrative divisions did not allow
    carrying out unified reforms,'' Karekin said. ''We are an entire
    century behind the opportunity to modernize the church.''

    He added, ''The time has come to consolidate all forces.''

    To minimize the prospect of sharp disagreements at the conference, a
    tight agenda was adopted: creating universal practices for baptisms
    and confirmations, discussing the canonization of victims of the 1915
    Armenian genocide in recognition of the 100th anniversary, and
    planning another conference next year.

    In an apparent bid to generate positive publicity around the bishops'
    conference, church officials billed it as the first synod of its kind
    in nearly 600 years - a bit of snappy marketing that was widely
    repeated by the Armenian news media and in a speech by President Serzh
    Sargsyan during the opening ceremony.

    ''Now, we are witnessing the epoch-making event indeed,'' Mr. Sargsyan
    said. ''For centuries, due to different circumstances, and
    particularly in the last six centuries, it was not possible to invite
    a bishops' synod of the Armenian Church.''

    Experts, however, said that was not quite true.

    At the event nearly 600 years ago, a conclave in Echmiadzin in 1441,
    church leaders decided to move the headquarters back here from Sis, in
    what is now Turkey, where the Armenian kingdom of Cilicia had been
    conquered by Egyptian Mamluks.

    A new leader, Kirako Virapetsy, was elected to replace Catholicos
    Gregory IX, who was ill and remained in Sis. But when Gregory died,
    officials in Sis elected their own replacement.

    ''The year 1441 is being mentioned here and there as if to give it
    more importance and significance,'' said Hratch Tchilingirian, an
    expert on the church who teaches at Oxford University's Oriental
    Institute.

    Mr. Tchilingirian said a bishops' synod was held here in 1969.
    Armenian clerics from the United States attended, even though it was
    during the Cold War, while those from Lebanon refused to attend.

    He said that the agenda of the conference last month seemed to ignore
    tough issues in favor of safe topics. For example, before the 75th
    anniversary of the genocide, both branches of the church issued
    statements about canonizing victims.

    Archbishop Aris Shirvanian, the director of ecumenical and foreign
    relations at the Armenian Apostolic Patriarchate of Jerusalem, said
    that reaching an agreement to canonize victims - the first saints
    designated by the church since the 1500s - was a top priority.

    ''We, the bishops and archbishops living today, are descendants of
    Armenian genocide,'' Archbishop Shirvanian said. ''All of us are
    survivors. That's the driving spirit behind this meeting.''

    Whatever the agenda, Echmiadzin, which is also called by its original
    name, Vagharshapat, remains at the center of Armenian spiritual life.

    It is about 20 kilometers, or 12 miles, west of the capital, Yerevan,
    between the biblical mountains of Ararat and Aragats. Priests in black
    robes can often be seen strolling through the city center.

    The conversion of Tiridates III in 301 is credited to St. Gregory the
    Illuminator, the patriarch of the Armenian Apostolic Church.

    Living in Vagharshapat, the capital of Armenia at the time, Gregory
    reportedly had a vision. As the faithful tell it, the skies parted and
    a ray of light blazed down, surrounding a group of angels and a man -
    Jesus - who struck the ground with a golden hammer and made an
    altar-shaped structure appear amid a column of fire with a cross
    shining above it.

    It was on that spot that Gregory oversaw construction of the Cathedral
    of Echmiadzin - meaning, ''Jesus Christ, the only begotten,
    descended.''

Working...
X