The Armenian Orthodox Church
Christianity first entered Armenia with St. Thaddeus and
St. Bartholomew, both disciples of Christ. They
started a small but devoted following of Armenians who were persecuted by their
countrymen for almost 300 years. But in the early 4th century AD, a certain man
named Gregory came to Armenia to free them.
Gregory was born in Cappadocia of noble
birth and was raised a Christian. He entered Armenia during an extremely
volatile time for Christians, as the current king, Tiridate,
was very much opposed to the religion. For his preaching, he was thrown into a
deep dark pit in the middle of the barren countryside and left to waste away.
Luckily for him (and the future of Armenian Orthodoxy) a kind pagan woman
brought him food every day, never much, but enough to keep him alive for
several months.
During this time, King Tiridate took very ill. When his doctors could not help
him, he took the advice of one of his Christian slaves who told him that
Gregory was a great visionary who could cure him. He journeyed to the barren
countryside and looked down into the deep dark pit to ask Gregory for his help.
Gregory replied that God would help him if only he released him from the deep
dark pit and allowed him to spread the faith. So King Tiridate
did as he was told, and with the healing power of Jesus, his health was
restored. Thus was King Tiridate converted in 301 AD,
and soon afterward the entire kingdom of Armenia. And so Armenia became the
first Christian nation.
In 303 St. Gregory experienced a
vision of God in which he was told to build a mother church in the city of Vagharshapat. He built it and called it Holy Echmiadzin -meaning "the only begotten
descended." And to this day it is the seat of the Catholicos,
the highest councilor of the Armenian Church.
For centuries, the Armenians did not
have their own written language. They spoke Armenian but wrote in either Greek
or Syriac, which presented a problem with the
readings during Mass for those who did not speak those languages. So in 406 St.
Mezrob Mashdotz created the
Armenian alphabet. And with St. Sahag, the leader of
the church at the time, and several other "Holy Translators," he
translated the Bible from Greek into Armenian. This period is known as the
"Golden Age of Armenian History."
In 430 Persia took over Armenia and
the Persian king, Yazdegert, issued an edict in 451
forcing all Armenians to abandon their faith and convert to Zoroastrianism. So
the devout Armenians waged war upon Persia. But due to the comparatively small
size of their army they were physically beaten. But not
spiritually. They held on to their faith through persecution and massacres,
and in 484 a new Persian king, King Peroz, made the
Treaty of Nuarsak which enforced toleration of
Christianity and all other religions within his empire.
The Armenians didn't get much of a
break in the domination cycle once they finally threw off the shackles of the
Persian Empire in 634, as they were again taken over in 654 by Arab rule.
Fortunately, the Arabs were also relatively tolerant of their faith, and Arab
rule in Armenia ended in 851. Armenians set up their own independent kingdom between
the 9th and 11th centuries - the Kingdom of the Bagratids
- and then another between 1150 and 1375 known as Cilicia or Lesser Armenia.
But basically Armenia's history has been one of oppression as one group after
another came in to take over their land. At the end of the Kingdom of Cilicia,
Armenia was divided between Russia and the Ottoman Empire. The Ottomans held
their reign of terror until the early 20th century and the Russians continued
to haggle the Armenians until the 1980's.
Armenian Orthodoxy has had a rough
way to go historically. But its adherents have held on tightly to their faith,
perhaps even more strongly than if they hadn't been persecuted by so many
foreigners.
Christianity is divided into two
parts, Eastern and Western Christianity. The Eastern churches are known as
orthodox - of which the Armenian Church is a part. This split occurred over a
thousand years ago as the two major centers of Christianity, Rome and Byzantium
slowly drifted apart. In 1054, church officials from the East and West declared
their problems with each other, leading to a constant turmoil within the
Church's hierarchy. The schism between the churches was finalized in 1204 when
crusaders captured Constantinople.
Some of the differences between the
East and West are as follows. The first is the issue of Papal supremacy. While
the Roman Church sees the Pope as the infallible prince of God's earthly
kingdom, the Eastern Church sees him only as the first in the order of a giant
hierarchy. Where the West follows the Pope, the East follows councils, with
many leaders making major decisions.
Some less important important differences are the East's rules about fasting.
Leavened bread is used in Eastern masses. Clergy of the East are allowed to
marry, and lay people are allowed to divorce. The Eastern Church does not teach
about purgatory. While the Western Church takes a scholastic approach to its
faith, the East relies more on mysticism.
There are also divisions within the
Eastern Church. Armenian Orthodoxy, along with the Coptic, Syrian, Ethiopian
and Indian Malabar Orthodoxies, is part of the Oriental Orthodoxy, or the non-Chalcedonian Orthodoxy. This group split off after the
Council of Chalcedon, which ruled on some major points of the nature of God.
Orientals place more credence in the belief that God is one, rather than three
parts. At the same time, they do believe in the three personed
God, just not exactly in the way the Catholic Church does. However, in 1990, a
council brought the sects of Eastern Orthodoxy closer together. And on a
similar note, the East and West were reconciled (although not quite united ) in 1965 with the Vatican II Council.
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