Patriarch Kirill’s Speech At Echmiadzin Cathedral

PATRIARCH KIRILL’S SPEECH AT ECHMIADZIN CATHEDRAL

Interfax
March 23 2010
Russia

Your Holiness, Honorable Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos Karekin II
of All Armenians,

Your Eminances and Graces,

Dear Fathers, Brothers and Sisters,

Dear Representatives of the Armenian state and public!

With great joy and warm feelings I have set foot today on the blessed
and much-suffered Armenian soil sanctified by the toil of St. Gregory
the Enlightener of Great Armenia and stained with the blood of martyrs
for the faith of Christ cultivated by many generations of the fraternal
Armenian people.

As primate of the Russian Orthodox Church, I would like to testify
on behalf of all its faithful our deep respect for the spiritual
tradition and culture of your people. Your historical roots throw
back thousands of years and your culture has given the world immortal
works of literature and art, architectural monuments and a distinctive
religious written language.

Whoever comes to Armenia receives an indelible impression, looking at
its main symbol, holy Mount Ararat, on which the forefather Noah’s Arc
had stopped. And today I can feel with awe that literary every stone in
this land is a silent witness to great and glorious accomplishments,
feats and works which have had a direct influence on the course of
history of the entire humanity.

Christianity, which took root in Armenia thanks to the efforts of
Sts Bartholomew and Thaddaeus, opened up a new page in the history
of the Armenian people. Supported by a highly developed culture,
scholarship and stable statehood, it was declared as the faith of
all Armenians by King Tiridates III as far back the year of the
Lord 301. The Christian faith was asserted among the people by the
missionary efforts of Christ’s great saint Gregory the Enlightener. The
Armenian soil was washed at that time by the blood of martyrs, which,
according to Tertullian, is the seed of Christianity’. The feat
of martyrdom performed by the holy virgins Rhipsimia and Gaiania,
called Hripsime and Gaiane in Armenia, contributed to the miraculous
Christian conversion of King Tiridates, a former persecutor of the
Church. In this way these saint testified by their feat to the divine
truth of the Gospel’s words: Unless a kernel of wheat falls to the
ground and dies, it remains only a single seed. But if it dies,
it produces many seeds (Jn. 12:24).

Throughout its 1770 year-long history, the Armenian Apostolic Church
has acquired the right to name itself truly the soul of the Armenian
people. The faith, traditions and customs of the Armenian people have
rallied around the Church the entire millions-strong diaspora dispersed
throughout the world. A considerable part of this diaspora lives in
Russia, Ukraine and Belarus – the countries nourished spiritually by
the Russian Orthodox Church.

Your Holiness, the first quarter of the 19th century saw the beginning
of Armenia’s joining the Russian Empire. At that time, it made it
possible for the Armenian people to be defended against external
enemies and to have an opportunity for a free national development.

Since then there have been good and friendly relations between us,
which are maintained to this day.

In spite of the fact that our Churches, for historical reasons, do not
share the Eucharistic communion, we clearly realize our closeness. We
see a reason for this in the commitment of both the Russian Orthodox
and the Armenian Apostolic Churches to the early church Tradition. It
is on its basis that the traditional values characteristic equally
of the Eastern Slavic and Armenian cultures have been formed. It is
the faithfulness to Christian tradition and its ethical ideals that
links us and guarantees our co-work and friendship.

Together we have participated in the work of international Christian
organizations and various religious forums and conducted a fruitful
bilateral dialogue. We are gratified by the fact that Armenian students
study in the Russian Orthodox Church’s theological academies, which
enables them to familiarize themselves with the faith, history, culture
and tradition of peoples inhabiting the space of historical Rus’.

Today, in this Cathedral of the Holy First-Throne Echmiadzin founded by
St. Gregory, where his holy right hand is kept, I again feel the need
to develop and deepen our relations, so that we could bear an effective
common witness before the world suffering at it is from divisions,
enmity and injustice. St. Paul, instructing his disciple Timothy,
says, Fight the good fight of the faith. Take hold of the eternal
life to which you were called when you made your good confession
in the presence of many witnesses (1 Tim. 6:12). Our duty also lies
in a common witness to the Tradition of the early Church before the
Christian communities which have embarked on the path of liberalizing
the moral teaching through a review of basic norms of Christian life.

We have no right to reduce the history of our friendship to past
achievements, and our goal is to hand down to our posterity the
experience and fruits of this cooperation thus laying a foundation
for future relations based on the principles of Christian love,
brotherhood and mutual understanding. I trust in this way we not only
create the right model of international and inter-church relations
but also serve the cause of unity commanded by our Lord Jesus Christ.

In conclusion, I would like once again to thank Your Holiness and all
the people of the Armenian Apostolic Church for the invitation to come
to the Armenian land, for the opportunity to venerate its old shrines
and to see the life of your Church and your great and glorious people.

May the Lord bless our stay in the Armenian land through the
intercession of St. Gregory the Enlightener.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Emil Lazarian

“I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS