Readings:Psalm 33:6-11
Preface of Apostles and Ordinations [Common of a Missionary]
PRAYER (contemporary language)
This commemoration appears in Lesser Feasts & Fasts 2018 with revised lessons. Return to Lectionary Home Page Webmaster: Charles Wohlers Last updated: 23 Jan. 2021
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GREGORY THE ILLUMINATORAPOSTLE TO ARMENIA (23 March 332)
by James Kiefer
Armenians were the first people to adopt Christianity as the state religion.
Tertullian and Eusebius of Caesaria suggest that Christianity was practiced
in Armenia as early as the 2nd century. Eusebius also mentions an exchange
of letters between Jesus Christ and the Armenian king of Edessa Abkar
V (the Black) (9-46 A.D). Legend claims for Armenian the graves of four
apostles: Bartholomew, Simon, Thaddaeus, and Jude. It was sometime
between 288 and 301 that St. Gregory the Illuminator (Grigor Loussavorich
: ca. 240-332), who had been subjected to cruel tortures and incarcerated
in a deep well (Khor Virab) for 13 years for refusing to participate in
pagan rites, converted King Tiridates (238-314). In 302, St. Gregory
was ordained bishop, and in 303 he founded the Cathedral of Etchmiadzin,
near Mount Ararat, which, to this day, is the seat of the supreme patriarch
or catholicos, the head of the Armenian Church. St. Gregory went on to
evangelize several other Caucasian nations and baptized the kings of Iberia
(Georgia), Lazes and Albania. Sometime before his death he retired to
a solitary life in the wilderness. The patron saint of Armenia, he is
now venerated in both the Eastern and Latin Church. from Armenia Online
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