Armenian Catholic Church



























































Armenian Catholic Church
Armenian: Հայ Կաթողիկէ Եկեղեցի

Emblem of the Armenian Catholic Church.svg
Emblem of the Armenian Catholic Church

Classification Eastern Catholic
Orientation Armenian
Polity Episcopal
Pope Francis
Primate
Armenian Patriarch of Cilicia Krikor Bedros XX Gabroyan
Region Armenian diaspora
Language Armenian
Liturgy Armenian Rite
Headquarters
Cathedral of St Elias and St Gregory the Illuminator, Beirut, Lebanon
Founder Apostles Bartholomew and Thaddeus, by Armenian Catholic tradition
Members 757,726 (2017 Annuario Pontificio)[1]
Official website www.armeniancatholic.org


































The Armenian Catholic Church (Armenian: Հայ Կաթողիկէ Եկեղեցի, translit. Hay Kat’ołikē Ekełec’i; Latin: Ecclesia armeno-catholica), improperly referred to as the Armenian Uniate Church,[2][3] is one of the Eastern particular churches sui iuris of the Catholic Church. They accept the leadership of the Bishop of Rome, known as the papal primacy, and therefore are in full communion with the Catholic Church, including both the Latin Church and the 22 other Eastern Catholic Churches. The Armenian Catholic Church is regulated by Eastern canon law, namely the Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches.


The head of the sui iuris Armenian Catholic Church is the Armenian Catholic Patriarch of Cilicia, whose main cathedral and de facto archiepiscopal see is the Cathedral of Saint Elias and Saint Gregory the Illuminator, in Beirut, Lebanon.




Contents






  • 1 History


  • 2 Liturgy and practices


  • 3 Armenian Catholic communities


    • 3.1 Armenia, Georgia and Eastern Europe


    • 3.2 United States and Canada


    • 3.3 France




  • 4 Demographics


  • 5 Structure


    • 5.1 Current hierarchy


    • 5.2 Titular sees


      • 5.2.1 Titular Metropolitan Archeparchies


      • 5.2.2 Titular Non-metropolitan Archeparchies


      • 5.2.3 Titular Eparchies






  • 6 Publications


  • 7 Gallery


  • 8 See also


  • 9 References


  • 10 Sources


  • 11 External links





History


The 451 Council of Chalcedon caused problems for the Armenian Church which formally broke off communion with the Chalcedonian Churches at the 3rd Synod of Dvin, some Armenian bishops and congregations especially the Church of Caucasian Albania made attempts to restore communion with the Chalcedonian Churches. During the Crusades, the Church of the Armenian kingdom of Cilicia entered into a union with the Catholic Church, an attempt that did not last. The union was later re-established during the Council of Florence in 1439, but did not have any real effects for centuries.


Some Armenians converted to Catholicism, and in the absence of any specific Armenian Catholic Church in effect became Latins. In Medieval China, Armenians in China were converted to Catholicism by John of Montecorvino in Beijing and there was also an Armenian Franciscan Catholic community in Quanzhou.


In 1740, Abraham-Pierre I Ardzivian, who had earlier become a Catholic, was elected as the patriarch of Sis. Two years later Pope Benedict XIV formally established the Armenian Catholic Church. In 1749, the Armenian Catholic Church built a convent in Bzoummar, Lebanon. During the Armenian Genocide in 1915–1918 the Church scattered among neighboring countries, mainly Lebanon and Syria.


An Armenian Catholic community was also previously formed by Armenians living in Poland in 1630s the Armenian bishop of Leopolis (see Armenian Catholic Archeparchy of Lviv), Nicholas (Polish: Mikołaj) Torosowicz had entered into union with the Catholic Church. The community which had been historically centered in Galicia as well as in the pre-1939 Polish borderlands in the east, was after World War II expelled to present-day Poland and now has three parishes: in Gdańsk, in Gliwice and in Warsaw.



Liturgy and practices



The church belongs to the group of Eastern Rite Catholic churches and uses the Armenian Rite and the Armenian language in its liturgy. The Armenian Rite is also used by both the Armenian Apostolic Church and by a significant number of Eastern Catholic Christians in the Republic of Georgia. It is patterned after the directives of Saint Gregory the Illuminator, founder and patron saint of the Armenian Church. Unlike the Byzantine Church, churches of the Armenian rite are usually devoid of icons and have a curtain concealing the priest and the altar from the people during parts of the liturgy. The use of bishop's mitre and of unleavened bread is reminiscent of the influence Western missionaries once had upon both the miaphysite Orthodox Armenians as well as upon the Armenian Rite Catholics.[citation needed]



Armenian Catholic communities


Apart from Armenia, Georgia and Russia, Armenian Catholic Church is found widely in the Armenian diaspora, notably in Lebanon (where the Armenian Catholic Church is headquartered), Syria, Egypt, Turkey, Iran, France, U.S.A., Canada, Argentina, Uruguay, Australia.



Armenia, Georgia and Eastern Europe





Armenian Rite Catholic Church of the Holy Trinity in Gliwice, Poland, built in 1836-38.


Armenian Catholics originated in what is today Armenia, Georgia and Eastern Europe. Beginning in the late 1920s, persecution caused many Armenian Catholics to emigrate. In 1991, after the fall of the Soviet Union, the Bishop of Rome, Pope John Paul II merged the communities in Georgia and Russia with those in Armenia, creating a new ordinariate of Armenia and Eastern Europe, with its residence in Gyumri. The city was not chosen by chance: Most Catholic Armenians live in the northern parts of Armenia. This has become a kind of basis for fence-mending with the coreligionists on the other side of the border.


Today Catholic Armenians of Samtskhe-Javakhq live together in Akhaltsikhe and in the nearby villages, as well as in the regions of Akhalkalak and Ninotsminda. The communities in the last two regions, which are mainly rural, are in rather distant areas, but the most important link is the historical memory of Catholicism.


A small seminary was established in Gyumri, Armenia, in 1994; there candidates for the priesthood engage in basic studies before moving to the Pontifical College of the Armenians (established 1885) in Rome, where they pursue philosophy and theology.


There are also tens of thousands of Armenian Catholics in Russia, due to the large amount of migration from Armenia to Russia that has occurred since the collapse of the Soviet Union.



United States and Canada






Saint Gregory the Illuminator Armenian Catholic Cathedral in Glendale, California


Presently, around 1.5 million Armenians live in North America, of which 35,000 belong to the Armenian Catholic Church.


In the 19th century Catholic Armenians from Western Armenia, mainly from the towns and cities of Karin (Erzurum), Constantinople, Mardin etc., came to the United States seeking employment. At the end of the same century, many survivors of the Hamidian Massacres had concentrated in several U.S. cities, chiefly in New York.
Catholic Armenian communities were also founded in New Jersey, Boston, Detroit, Los Angeles, and other cities of California.


Catholic Armenian educational organizations were also founded in many cities. In Philadelphia and Boston Colleges of Armenian sisters were founded, educating hundreds of children. Later, a similar college was founded in Los Angeles. Mechitarists were preoccupied with the problem of preserving Armenian identity. By the effort of Mekhitarists in Venice and Vienna, the Mkhitarian College was founded in Los Angeles.


Many Armenians came to the United States and Canada from the Middle Eastern countries of Lebanon and Syria in the 1970s and in later years. Also many Armenians immigrated from Argentina, because of the economic crisis. At the same time, many Catholic Armenians inside the United States moved to San Francisco, San Diego, Chicago, Washington D.C., Atlanta, Miami and Indianapolis.


In 2005, by Pope Benedict XVI's decision, the Catholic Exarchate of the USA and Canada was advanced to the status of a diocese. It serviced 35,000 Catholic Armenians in the United States and some 10,000 in Canada. The bishop, or eparch, of the diocese, which has jurisdiction over Canadian and American Catholics who are members of the Armenian Catholic Church, became Manuel Batakian. According to a Monday, May 23, 2011 news release by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, Pope Benedict XVI, named Archpriest Mikaël Antoine Mouradian, superior of the Convent of Notre Dame in Bzommar, Lebanon, as the new bishop of the Eparchy of Our Lady of Nareg in New York for Armenian Catholics. The appointment of Lebanon-born Bishop Mouradian was publicized in Washington, May 21, by Archbishop Pietro Sambi, Apostolic Nuncio to the United States.[4]



France


Next to North America, France holds the largest number of Armenian Catholics outside of the areas of the Middle East and Oriental Europe. The Eparchy of Sainte-Croix-de-Paris was established in 1960 with Bishop Garabed Armadouni as exarch. Since 1977, the eparchy has been led by Bishop Krikor Gabroyan.


There are some 30,000 Armenian Catholics in the eparchy, the headquarters of which is in Paris. The eparchy has six churches apart from the Cathedral of the Holy Cross in Paris: Arnouville-lès-Gonesse, Lyon, Marseille, Saint-Chamond, Sèvres and Valence. A community of Mekhitarist Fathers resides in Sèvres and a convent of Armenian Sisters of the Immaculate Conception runs a school in Marseille.



Demographics




Bishops meeting in Jerusalem, circa 1880 (note the Roman pallium worn by the archbishop in the centre).


According to an 1842 article by C. W. Russell in The Dublin Review there were 150,000 Armenian Catholics worldwide.[5]Malachia Ormanian, a historian and an Armenian Apostolic Patriarch of Constantinople, counted 135,900 Armenian Catholics worldwide: 84,500 (62%) in the Ottoman Empire, 30,000 (21%) in the Russian Empire, and 21,400 (16%) elsewhere, mostly in central Europe.[6] The 1897 imperial census in Russia found 38,840 Catholic Armenians,[7] while 1914 Ottoman government statistics provided 67,838 as the number of Catholic Armenians.[8][9]


According to Annuario Pontificio, the annual directory of the Holy See, the church had 142,853 followers worldwide.[when?][citation needed] The number rose to 736,956 in 2015 according to the same source.[10]


The 2011 census in Armenia there were 13,247 Catholics (of any ethnicity) in the country.[11]



Structure




Headquarters of the Armenian Catholic Patriarchate in Bzoummar, Lebanon





Cathedral of the Holy Martyrs in Gyumri, Armenia




Armenian Catholic church of the Holy Trinity in Aleppo, Syria


The Armenian Catholic Church is broken into Archdioceses, Eparchies, Apostolic Exarchates, Ordinariates for the Faithful of the Eastern Rite and Patriarchal Exarchates, each of which have functions similar to a diocese.



Current hierarchy


The Armenian Catholic Patriarchate of the See of Cilicia is the supreme authority of the Armenian Catholic Church. Krikor Bedros XX Gabroyan is the current Catholicos-Patriarch.


Following is a list of the jurisdictions with their number of adherents.[12]




















































































































































Archeparchies (Archdioceses)
1990
2000
2017

Patriarchate of Cilicia, also sole Metropolitanate as Armenian Catholic Archeparchy of Beirut, Lebanon (Patriarchal proper archdiocese)
15,000
12,000
12,500

Archeparchy of Aleppo (Halab, Beroa), Syria
15,000
17,000
7,000

Archeparchy of Baghdad, Iraq
2,200
2,000
2,400

Archeparchy of Istanbul (Constantinople), Turkey
3,700
3,680
2,500

Archeparchy of Lviv, Ukraine
N/A
N/A
0
Suffragan Eparchies in the Patriarch's Metropolitan Province of Cilicia




Ispahan, Iran
2,200
2,200
150

Alexandria (Iskanderiya) actually in Cairo, Egypt
1,500
1,287
6,500

Kameshli ((Al-)Qamishli), Syria
4,303
4,000
3,500
Other Eparchies (dioceses), in the diaspora




Eparchy of Our Lady of Nareg in the United States of America and Canada
34,000
36,000
36,000

Eparchy of Sainte-Croix-de-Paris, France
30,000
30,000
35,000

Eparchy of Saint Gregory of Narek, Buenos Aires
established in 1989
16,000
16,350

Apostolic Exarchates (missionary, directly dependent on the Holy See)




Armenian Catholic Apostolic Exarchate of Latin America and Mexico
30,000
12,000
12,000

Ordinariates for the Faithful of the Eastern Rites




Greece (Athens)
650
600
200

Ordinariate for Romania (Gherla)
N/A
1,000
626

Eastern Europe (except Romania) (Gyumri, Armenia)
established in 1991
220,000
618,000

Patriarchal Exarchates




Damascus, part of Syria
9,000
8,000
4,500

Jerusalem and Amman (Jordan & Holy Land)
N/A
280
500

TOTAL

142,853

362,047

757,726


Titular sees


TO BE ELABORATED



Titular Metropolitan Archeparchies


Achrida (Ohrid), Pessinus, Traianopolis in Rhodope



Titular Non-metropolitan Archeparchies


Chalcedon, Colonia in Armenia, Mardin, Nisibis of the Armenians, Sebaste, Tarsus



Titular Eparchies


Adana, Amida, Anazarbus, Ancyra, Artvin, Cesarea in Cappadocia, Garin, Kharput, Marasc, Melitene, Mush, Prusa, Tokat, Trapezus



Publications


The Armenian Catholic Church produces a number of publications:




  • Avedik, the official organ of the church


  • Avedaper Verelk, a religious, spiritual and cultural publication of St. Gregory Armenian Catholic Church


  • Avedaper, a weekly bulletin of the Armenian Catholic dioceses


  • Gantch Hrechdagabedin, official publication of the Our Lady of Bzommar Convent


  • Massis, a general monthly publication

  • Church bulletins


The Armenian Catholic Church has presses that publish many liturgical, spiritual books, publications, pamphlets and translations from general Catholic publications.



Gallery






See also



  • Catholic Church in Armenia

  • List of Armenian Catholic Patriarchs of Cilicia

  • Mechitarist Monks of the Armenian Catholic Church

  • Ignatius Maloyan



References


Notes



References




  1. ^ Roberson, Ronald G. "The Eastern Catholic Churches 2016" (PDF). Eastern Catholic Churches Statistics. Catholic Near East Welfare Association. Retrieved 29 November 2016..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ Sarkissian, Karekin (1975) [1965]. The Council of Chalcedon and the Armenian Church. New York: Armenian Church Prelacy. p. 18. In order to strengthen their argument that the Armenian Uniate Church is the descendant of the "Ancient Orthodox and Catholic" Armenian Church...


  3. ^ Addis, William Edward; Arnold, Thomas (1884). A Catholic Dictionary: Containing Some Account of the Doctrine, Discipline, Rites, Ceremonies, Councils, and Religious Orders of the Catholic Church. Catholic Publication Society. p. 132. Latterly the Armenian uniate church, which is in communion with the Holy See...


  4. ^ "Pope Names New Eparch for Armenian Catholics In US And Canada". USCCB News Release. 21 May 2011. Archived from the original on 2011-05-25.


  5. ^ Russell, C. W. (May 1842). "The Armenian Convent of San Lazzaro, at Venice". The Dublin Review. 12: 375.


  6. ^ Ormanian, Malachia (1911). Հայոց եկեղեցին և իր պատմութիւնը, վարդապետութիւնը, վարչութիւնը, բարեկարգութիւնը, արաողութիւնը, գրականութիւն, ու ներկայ կացութիւնը [The Church of Armenia: her history, doctrine, rule, discipline, liturgy, literature, and existing condition] (in Armenian). Constantinople. pp. 259–267.


  7. ^ Первая Всеобщая перепись населения Российской Империи 1897 г. Под ред. Н.А.Тройницкого. т.I. Общий свод по Империи результатов разработки данных Первой Всеобщей переписи населения, произведенной 28 января 1897 года. С.-Петербург, 1905. Таблица XII. Распределение населения по вероисповеданиям. online source


  8. ^ Karpat, K.H. (1985). Ottoman population, 1830-1914: demographic and social characteristics. Madison, Wis: University of Wisconsin Pres. pp. 189–190, 242.


  9. ^ Shaw, Stanford J. (1978). "The Ottoman Census System and Population, 1831-1914". Nationalism and Ethnic Politics. 9 (3): 325–338.


  10. ^ "The Eastern Catholic Churches 2015" (PDF). cnewa.org. Catholic Near East Welfare Association. Archived from the original on 2017-06-07.CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link)


  11. ^ "Population Census 2011: Population (urban, rural) by Ethnicity, Sex and Religious Belief" (PDF). armstat.am. National Statistical Service of the Republic of Armenia.


  12. ^ "The Eastern Catholic Churches 2-008" (PDF). cnewa.org. Catholic Near East Welfare Association.




Sources




  • Frazee, Charles A. (2006) [1983]. Catholics and Sultans: The Church and the Ottoman Empire 1453-1923. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.


  • Kornél, Nagy (2011). "The Catholicization of Transylvanian Armenians (1685-1715): Integrative or Disintegrative Model?". Integrating Minorities: Traditional Communities and Modernization. Cluj-Napoca: Editura ISPMN. pp. 33–56.


  • Stopka, Krzysztof (2016). Armenia Christiana: Armenian Religious Identity and the Churches of Constantinople and Rome (4th-15th century). Kraków: Jagiellonian University Press.



External links







  • Armenian Catholic Church

  • GCatholic

  • Armenian Catholic Eparchy of USA and Canada

  • Armenian Catholic Community in Australia

  • Armenian Catholic Church in Lebanon

  • Armeniapedia – Armenian Catholic Church

  • Article on the Armenian Catholic Church by Ronald Roberson on the CNEWA web site

  • St. Mark's Armenian Catholic Church, near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

  • CWR -- St. Gregory of Narek: Was the New Doctor of the Church a Catholic?


Armenian Religious Relations and the Roman Catholic Church


  • Pope Benedict XIV, Allatae Sunt (On the observance of Oriental Rites), Encyclical, 1755

  • Common Declaration of Pope John Paul II and Catholicos Karekin I, 1996

  • Common Declaration of John Paul II and Aram I Keshishian, 1997

  • John Paul II to Karekin I, 1999

  • Joint Declaration signed by John Paul II and Karekin II, 2000

  • Greeting by Pope Benedict XVI to His Holiness Aram I, 2008

  • Dialogue and Joint Declarations with the Roman Catholic Church






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