The supreme head of the Armenian Apostolic Church, Catholicos Garegin (Karekin) II, urged Armenians to stick to their traditional family values in the face of “pseudo-liberalism” as he celebrated a Christmas mass on Sunday.
“In the miracle-laden scene of the Holy Nativity, dearly beloved, we see that the path of salvation began with the family. It is from the family that the illumined road … was borne out of,” he said in a homily read out at Saint Gregory the Illuminator’s Cathedral in Yerevan.
During the liturgy attended by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and other senior state officials, Garegin also prayed for “our faithful brothers and sisters of the great world family who mark this sacred day in affliction and suffering.” He referred to victims of armed conflicts, human rights abuses and “unquenchable desire for unmitigated power” around the world.
“Ungodly paths of pseudo-liberalism -- which divert people from the life which the Lord commanded us to live, from spiritual life -- likewise lead to dead ends, undermining the foundations of a healthy society and strong family,” Garegin went on.
“The very first platform for bringing up worthy sons and daughters for the homeland and for educating a citizen for the country is the family,” he said. “It is in the family that the future of a nation is shaped, that the foundations of a powerful country are laid. It is under the family’s nurturing roofs that the sown seeds of God’s word bear fruit in children's souls, that the spiritual-moral values, the fearless spirit of choosing the good, are being nurtured. It is by the examples shown in the family that mutual love, trust and care are instilled.”
“Let us remain dedicated to the sanctity and the strengthening of the family. Let us preserve unblemished the idea of the God-ordained family, its sanctity, the national traditions,” he added.
Accordingly, Garegin declared 2019 a “year of the family,” saying that Armenian church bodies and clergymen should launch “family-centered assistance projects and events.” He also encouraged them to organize more pilgrimages to Armenian holy sites “in order to warmly kindle the flame of love toward the homeland.”
Garegin expressed concern at “the crisis of the family” in many Christian nations in a joint declaration with Pope Francis issued during the latter’s June 2016 visit to Armenia. The two religious leaders also reaffirmed their opposition to same-sex marriage.
Francis repeatedly paid tribute to Armenia’s Christian heritage during the landmark trip. “For Armenia, faith in Christ has not been like a garment to be donned or doffed as circumstances or convenience dictate, but an essential part of its identity,” the pontiff declared at the Armenian Apostolic Church’s main cathedral in Echmiadzin.
Pashinian likewise praised the ancient church and acknowledged its “special significance” for many Armenians when he met with Garegin in November. It was apparently their first one-on-one meeting since Pashinian swept to power in May on a wave of mass protests organized by him. The 43-year-old prime minister had been very critical of the Catholicos in the past.
Shortly after the success of the “velvet revolution” Garegin came under strong pressure from an obscure group accusing him of corruption and close ties with the country’s former government and demanding his resignation. Dozens of its members partly occupied his Echmiadzin headquarters in July. Police waited for several days before forcing them out of the premises.
The slow police reaction prompted strong criticism from representatives of the former ruling Republican Party (HHK) and other conservative critics of Pashinian’s government. They portrayed it as further proof of what they see as the government’s contempt for “traditional Armenian values.”
In his Christmas message, Garegin made no explicit mention of the Pashinian-led revolution. He only cited “the new changes of our life” that have increased “hope and optimism for new achievements, success, and victories.”
The Apostolic Church, to which the vast majority of Armenians nominally belong, has traditionally marked Christmas on January 6. Celebrations of the holiday start late on January 5 with Christmas Eve candlelight services held in churches in and outside Armenia. Christmas became a public holiday in the South Caucasus country after the break-up of the Soviet Union.
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