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  • Goodell Among The Armenians

    GOODELL AMONG THE ARMENIANS

    By Vahe H. Apelian, OH, USA, 11 October 2013

    During family discussions in my formative years, I would hear the
    elders of the family say that the American missionaries, failing
    to evangelize a single Turk, resorted to evangelizing the Christian
    Armenians.

    Recently I came across the memoirs of Rev. William Goodell who played
    a prominent role in establishing the Protestant community in the
    Ottoman Empire. The book, titled "Forty Years in the Turkish Empire
    or Memoirs of Rev. William Goodell D.D, Late Missionary of A.B.C.F.M
    at Constantinople", was edited by his son-in-law, E. D. G. Prime. It
    was published by Robert Carter and Brothers (New York). Its fifth
    edition, posted on line by Google, is dated 1878. The below quotes
    are from the on-line book.

    Rev. William Goodell left the United States and embarked on his
    overseas mission in 1822. After a long sojourn in Malta, Lebanon,
    and Syria, he arrived to Constantinople, as Istanbul was known
    then. He had embarked on his mission on behalf of the American Board
    of Commissioners for Foreign Missions (A.B.C.F.M.), which was the
    first U.S. missionary organization.

    I was surprised to read that Rev. Goodell's primary, if not sole,
    mission was evangelizing the Armenians. I quote "When Mr. Goodell went
    to Constantinople, his mission was to the Armenians". Mr. Goodell was
    entrusted with the mission to Turkey proper because of his knowledge
    of Armenian and Turkish he had mastered while in Malta, Syria and
    Lebanon. He was also fluent in Arabic, Greek and Italian. He translated
    the Bible into "Armeno-Turkish", that is to say a Bible that reads
    Turkish but is in Armenian characters. It was a twenty-year endeavor.

    This assertion was a revelation to me but it made sense. Sultan's
    Sublime Porte would have never allowed American missionaries free rein
    to evangelize Turks. It caved in to the Western powers and allowed
    Americans to do missionary work in the Ottoman Empire as long as their
    evangelism was carried among the Christian subjects of the empire. In
    all probability, the missionaries and their organizations, if not also
    their governments, were warmed of dire consequences should they attempt
    evangelize the Turks. No wonder then not a single Turk was evangelized.

    Why would A.B.C.F.M embark on its mission, I wondered, singling
    Armenians when there were other Christian communities in the empire?

    Reading the memoirs presented an interesting picture of a way of life
    that did not have a natural evolution for reasons we all know too well.

    Rev. William Goodell arrived in Constantinople on June 9, 1831. In
    a letter to a friend in the United States, he noted: "My family is
    said to be the first who has ever visited this place." There were
    other American ladies with the Goodells.

    Constantinople, where the Goodells established their residency,
    presented the following demographics. I quote: "The city of
    Constantinople contained, including the suburbs, a population of about
    1,000,000 of various nationalities and religions. The Turks and other
    Mohammedans comprised more than half; the Greeks and Armenians each
    numbered 150,000, the former being the more numerous, there were about
    50,000 Jews; the remainder was made of Franks and people from almost
    every part of the world". Istanbul's demography was much different
    than it is now and the difference did not come about through natural
    evolution.

    These distinct ethnic communities naturally intermingled but "for
    the most part occupied different quarters of the city with the Turks
    having almost exclusive possession of the city proper."

    The 'Millet' system that constituted the core of the Ottoman Empire
    appeared odd to this western visitor who found it to be an "anomalous
    form of government, the Sublime Porte, as the Sultan's government is
    called, being supreme, while each separate nation has its own head."

    In the case of the Armenians, it was the Patriarch of Constantinople
    who was also the civil head of the Armenian community (Millet).

    The A.B.C.F.M. board and Rev. Goodell knew well that the Armenians
    "were descendents of the ancient inhabitants of Armenia. The nation
    embraced Christianity about the commencement of the fourth century".

    The zealous missionary and the organization that supported his mission
    apparently had already determined, even before the missionary arrived
    into the fold of the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire, that the Armenian
    Church needed to embrace the "truth". According to Rev.

    Goodell, the Armenian Church "has almost wholly given up to
    superstition and to idolatrous worship of saints, including Virgin
    Mary, pictures, etc."

    There appears to be a more pragmatic and practical, if not a strategic
    reason, for A.B.C;F.M and Rev. Goodell to single out the Armenians for
    their mission. I quote: " The Armenians were an enterprising people,
    and the great wealth of the bankers, who were nearly all Armenians,
    made them very influential throughout the empire, even with the
    Turkish officials, who were largely dependent upon them for pecuniary
    advances and assistance. The various connections of this people with
    different parts of the country, and the influence which they were in
    a position to exert, in promoting the spread of the Gospel in Turkey,
    made it exceedingly desirable that they should embrace the truth."

    Mr. Goodell's arrival in Constantinople coincided with a reformation
    movement within the Armenian Church. Fifteen years later, and after
    much agony and ecstasy, on July 1, 1846, "Forty persons, of whom
    three were women, voluntarily entered onto covenant with God and with
    each other, and we, in the name of all the evangelical churches of
    Christendom, rose and formally recognized and acknowledged them as a
    true church of Christ." The assembly on that day became the foundation
    of The Evangelical Church of Armenia--"Hayasdaniatz Avedaranagan
    Yegeghetsi". In time, its adherents would continue to render much
    service to the Armenian nation, enriching it way more than one would
    have expected from the meager demographic constituency of its faithful.

    On November 15, 1847, "the grand vizier issued a firman, declaring
    that the Christian subjects of the Ottoman government professing
    Protestantism should constitutes a separate community...This firman
    was so worded that converts form among the Greeks and Jews who joined
    the Protestants might enjoy the same immunities". On Nov. 27, 1850,
    Sultan Abdul Mejid ratified the edict that became the "Magna Carta" of
    the Protestant community that stands, to this day, in the Middle East.

    The Armenian Evangelicals are part and parcel of the Protestant
    community.

    Having lived through this turbulent period for over 30 years, Rev.

    Goodell left Constantinople on June 27, 1865, some 40 years after
    leaving his homeland. Through those over four decades, he had visited
    his country only once. Before taking leave for good, he addressed
    his brethren in the Evangelical Churches in Turkey and said, "When
    we first came among you, your were not a distinct people, nor did we
    expect you ever would be; for we had not sectarian object in view, it
    being no part of our plan to meddle with ecclesiastical affairs. Our
    sole desire was to preach Christ and Him crucified." By then the
    Armenian Evangelical Church was firmly entrenched among the Armenians.

    After his return to the United States, Rev. Goodell visited friends
    and gave sermons. He lived with son and namesake in Philadelphia
    where he passed away on Feb. 16, 1867.

    http://www.keghart.com/Apelian-Goodell

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