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Diocesan Legate attends planning meeting for global ecumenicalgather
October 19, 2005 07:26:49
PRESS OFFICE Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern) 630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016 Contact: Jake Goshert, Coordinator of Information Services Tel: (212) 686-0710 Ext. 60; Fax: (212) 779-3558 E-mail: jakeg@armeniandiocese.org Website: www.armenianchurch.org
October 17, 2005 ___________________
ARMENIAN CHURCH TO BE REPRESENTED AT WORLD COUNCIL OF CHURCHES BY EASTERN DIOCESAN LEGATE
Bishop Vicken Aykazian, legate and ecumenical officer of the Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern), recently attended a meeting of U.S. religious leaders to map out goals and objectives for an upcoming global ecumenical gathering.
The Diocesan legate is one of 13 people appointed by the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin to represent the Armenian Church at the upcoming 9th assembly of the World Council of Churches in Brazil this February.
In preparation for that meeting, Bishop Aykazian met with more than 150 American religious leaders in Chicago, IL, from October 10 to 12. The leaders represented a majority of the member churches of the National Council of Churches (NCC).
"At the meeting we discussed how we should represent the American-based churches at the World Council of Churches assembly," said Bishop Aykazian, who is active in a variety of ecumenical organizations on behalf of the Eastern Diocese. "We asked, what will our contribution be and what will be the lessons to be learned from this assembly?"
Bishop Aykazian identified several subjects that interested the gathered religious leaders in Chicago: problems in the Middle East; combating HIV in Africa; fighting Islamist terrorism; and the genocide in Sudan. The last point is something the Armenian Church has been involved with for a while.
"These are all problems that concern human beings, so we have certain responsibilities to help. It is the mission of the church to help the powerless, the poor, the afflicted, the diseased, the sick, the homeless. It is the main mission of the church," he said. "And in the Sudan they have suffered tragic genocide. We know there is a genocide taking place and it is a continuing genocide and we have to help. But our church, we as a people, understand more than anyone, because we have suffered through a genocide."
At the end of the conference in Chicago, Bishop Aykazian led a prayer service with a priest from the Orthodox Church of America, an act that shows the importance the ecumenical movement places on the participation of Orthodox churches -- the Armenian Church in particular.
"I'm very pleased that, thanks to the work of Bishop Vicken, the Armenian Church has become a leading voice in the ecumenical movement in the United States and around the globe," said Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate of the Eastern Diocese.
-- 10/17/05
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