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X-WR-CALNAME:Armenian Apostolic Church of Holy Resurrection
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://armenianchurchsydney.org.au
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Armenian Apostolic Church of Holy Resurrection
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230801
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230802
DTSTAMP:20260505T042032
CREATED:20211023T052935Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211023T054400Z
UID:20274-1690848000-1690934399@armenianchurchsydney.org.au
SUMMARY:Commemoration of the 12 Minor Prophets
DESCRIPTION:  \nSaints Hosea\, Joel\, Amos\, Obadiah\, Jonah\, Micah\, Nahum\, Habakkuk\, Zephaniah\, Haggai\, Zechariah and Malachi\nIn addition to Isaiah\, Jeremiah\, Ezekiel and Daniel (the four major prophets of the Old Testament)\, the Armenian Church commemorates the following twelve minor prophets.  The Prophets were those persons through which God spoke his will to the people of the world. They were the voice of God on earth and gave advice to the people of Israel\, warning them against dangers\, and trying to keep them from the temptations of sin. Each prophet clearly comprehended that God spoke to them directly. To that end\, in the Holy Bible\, we find expressions of “God told me”\, “This is what God is saying” etc. \nOften\, God gave them power to work miracles\, proving to people that they were chosen by Him. In the Nicene Creed\, we proclaim that the Holy Spirit “Spoke in the Law\, in the Prophets and in the Gospel”\, once more affirming that God has spoken to us by means of the prophets. \nThe prophets received their revelations through visions\, proverbs and symbols. They were the connecting link in the God and man relationship. The prophets’ purpose was to purify and instill in the human mind the conscience that God is their leader\, as well as to strengthen the faith in the coming of the Messiah and His Kingdom. All prophecies concerning the coming of the Messiah came true in the New Testament\, by means of Jesus Christ. The twelve prophets lived and worked over a broad range of time: \nHosea (Salvation): the Prophet Hosea was the preacher of the Word of God following Amos\, in 750 BC.  He continued his mission until Samaria was conquered in 722-721 BC\, and the Kingdom of Israel was eliminated. As the Israeli state disintegrated\, Assyria became increasingly powerful.  In his prophecies\, Hosea condemned the significant moral decay of Israel and the elimination of social justice. He made declarations concerning the responsibility of the elite.  God speaks of His Love through Hosea. That love demands us to struggle against all forms of injustice and to beware of false idols. \nJoel (the Lord is God) : Little is known about the period when the Prophet Joel lived and when his prophecies were compiled in a separate book.  He spoke of the “Day of the Lord” and exhorted people to turn to God. He has foretold that the day would come when God would “pour out His Spirit” over all people.  This prophecy came true during Pentecost\, when the Holy Spirit descended to earth in the form of tongues of flame. \nAmos (Burden Bearer): the Prophet Amos is the oldest prophet.  He was a shepherd\, who lived in the village of Thecua\, not far from Bethlehem. He lived and worked in the 8th century BC. In his prophecies\, he spoke of the greatness of God\, authority and justice\, the demands of the law\, and especially of the rights of the poor and the needy. He appealed to the rich\, the powerful\, the judges and the priests with great firmness. \nObadiah (Servant of God): the Prophet Obadiah’s book is the shortest of the Minor Prophets. It was most likely compiled in approximately 587 BC.  The prophet told that descendants of Esau (the people of Edom) would be punished and defeated as would all other nations that were the enemies of Israel. This was to make the people of Israel understand that the last word is God’s Word\, and that He alone would come be the final judge all peoples and nations. \nJonah (Dove): Unlike the other prophetic books\, the Book of Jonah is a narrative describing the adventures of a prophet who tried\, in every way\, to disobey God’s command. However\, in the end his attempts were in vain. By the Lord’s command\, a large fish swallowed Jonah\, where he remained for three days and three nights. Only after Jonah’s prayer and redemption did the Lord allow the fish to free Jonah. In the Gospels\, Christ repeatedly refers to this story. \nMicah (Who is like God?):  the Prophet Micah was from the village of Moresheth\, which many identify with the present day Tel-Al-Jadidah. Micah lived in the 8th century BC. He warned of the fall of Jerusalem\, which was the consequence of the sins of man. He called on them to repent and remain obedient to the Will of God. \nNahum (Consolation): the name of the prophet means “consoler” or “comforter”. The Book of Nahum was written in the period between the conquering of Thebes by the Assyrians in 663 BC and the fall of Nineveh to the Babylonians in 612 BC. Nahum taught of the Lord’s jealousy and vengefulness\, including a forceful description of the fright that seized all creation when faced with the judgment of the Lord. The book continues\, however\, and in contrast with this harsh picture of God\, Nahum describes the comforting assurance of God’s loving kindness towards His true servants. \nHabakkuk (Embrace): there is little information available on this prophet. Habakkuk shared in the misfortunes and sufferings of others\, while strongly condemning evil. The book was most likely written towards the end of the 5th century BC to the beginning of the 6th century BC.  The book reads as a dramatic dialogue between God and His prophet and presents the Lord as the eternal and righteous ruler of the world. \nZephaniah (God Hides): the Prophet Zephaniah preached in the latter part of the 7th century BC\, prior to Habakkuk. Zephaniah answered questions concerning the level of God’s interest in mankind\, and whether God has predetermined the course of history. He also preached very forcefully against idolatry in all its forms. \nHaggai (Festive or Festival): the Prophet Haggai preached to encourage the Israelites to rebuild the temple of Jerusalem. He advanced the idea that the poverty of the people and the poor condition of the harvest was due to the Temple remaining in a state of ruins. This book was likely written in 520 BC. \nZechariah (Who God Remembers): the Prophet Zechariah lived and prophesised during the same period as Haggai. The urging of the two prophets brought about the eventual rebuilding of the Temple. The book consists of two parts. The first part contains prophecies dating back to 520-518 BC\, the second part may have been written many years later. \nMalachi (My Messenger): the prophet is the last of the minor prophets. The Book of Malachi\, the last book of the Old Testament\, was written in the first half of the 5th century BC. Malachi\, as a witness to the degradation of society\, exhorted people and priests to change their behavior.  The prophet also preached of God’s unending love and the impending day of final judgment.
URL:https://armenianchurchsydney.org.au/event/commemoration-of-the-12-minor-prophets-2/
CATEGORIES:Feasts & Commemorations
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://armenianchurchsydney.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/12-Minor-Prophets.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230805
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230806
DTSTAMP:20260505T042032
CREATED:20211025T060104Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211025T060126Z
UID:20742-1691193600-1691279999@armenianchurchsydney.org.au
SUMMARY:Commemoration Day of the 200 Pontiffs participating in the Ecumenical Council of Ephesus
DESCRIPTION:  \nThe Ecumenical Council of Ephesus was convened in 431 A.D\, during the reign of King Theodosius II (Theodosius the Younger). 200 Pontiffs participated in the Council\, with the aim of rejecting the false teachings of Nestorius\, Patriarch of Constantinople. According to his teachings there were two independent\, divine and human\, natures in Christ\, contrasting each other. Nestorius preached that Christ was born as a simple man and only later Divinity was settled on His Person. Therefore\, the Holy Virgin Mary was not “Godmother”\, but the mother of a simple man. \nThe Ecumenical Council of Ephesus condemned the teaching of Nestorius and adopted the teaching of Archbishop St Cyril of Alexandria\, which stated that the divine and human natures of Christ do not exist separately\, but are united without confusion. One Lord\, one Jesus\, one face and one united divine and human nature. \nAdditionally\, they agreed that St Mary is not the mother of a simple man\, but she is Theotokos (birth giver of God)\, as she gave birth to the Son of God. \nSt Cyril of Alexandria’s statement “One is the nature of the Incarnate Word of God”\, was thus adopted by the Ecumenical Council of Ephesus. \nThe Armenian Church did not participate in that Ecumenical Council\, but adopted its resolutions and ecumenical authority together with the previous Ecumenical Councils.
URL:https://armenianchurchsydney.org.au/event/commemoration-day-of-the-200-pontiffs-participating-in-the-ecumenical-council-of-ephesus-2/
CATEGORIES:Feasts & Commemorations
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://armenianchurchsydney.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/200-Pontiffs.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230806
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230807
DTSTAMP:20260505T042032
CREATED:20211025T061308Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211025T061329Z
UID:20751-1691280000-1691366399@armenianchurchsydney.org.au
SUMMARY:Eve of the Fast of the Assumption of the Holy Mother of God
DESCRIPTION:  \nThis is the Sunday preceding the week prior to the Feast of the Assumption of St Mary\, Holy Godmother\, one of the major feasts of Armenian Apostolic Church and one of the seven feasts dedicated to St Mary. The fasting period lasts from Monday to Friday.
URL:https://armenianchurchsydney.org.au/event/eve-of-the-fast-of-the-assumption-of-the-holy-mother-of-god-2/
CATEGORIES:Feasts & Commemorations
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://armenianchurchsydney.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/Eve-of-the-Fast-3.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230812
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230813
DTSTAMP:20260505T042032
CREATED:20211101T114905Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211101T114941Z
UID:21299-1691798400-1691884799@armenianchurchsydney.org.au
SUMMARY:Feast of the Apparition (Shoghakat) of Holy Etchmiadzin
DESCRIPTION:  \nThe Feast of Shoghakat of Holy Etchmiadzin that is always observed on the Saturday prior to the Feast of the Assumption. Shoghakat refers to the vision of the rays of light seen by St Gregory when God chose the site for the Mother Cathedral. The feast is celebrated at the time of Assumption because the Cathedral in Etchmiadzin is named in honour of the Holy Mother\, although through the years it became known as Etchmiadzin. The name of St Shoghakat was given to the church\, according to tradition\, because it was built where “the divine light had shed” (shogh gatadz er) on the Hripsimiants virgins. \nThe foundation was laid in 301 A.D and the Cathedral of Holy Etchmiadzin was consecrated in 303 A.D on the day of the Feast of the Assumption of the Holy Mother of God. \nFor 1\,700 years\, the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin has been\, and continues to be\, the spiritual heart and centre of the Armenian Church and is her most sacred sanctuary. Her spiritual\, national and historical significance has only increased through the centuries.  Through the vision of St Gregory\, God Incarnate descended upon the soil of Armenia and predetermined her future\, making Armenia the first nation in the world to adopt Christianity as its official religion.
URL:https://armenianchurchsydney.org.au/event/feast-of-the-apparition-shoghakat-of-holy-etchmiadzin-2/
CATEGORIES:Feasts & Commemorations
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://armenianchurchsydney.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/Etchmiadzin-Gregory.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230813
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230814
DTSTAMP:20260505T042032
CREATED:20211010T100633Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211101T113123Z
UID:21281-1691884800-1691971199@armenianchurchsydney.org.au
SUMMARY:Feast of the Assumption of the Holy Mother of God (Asdvadzadzin)
DESCRIPTION:  \nEach year on the Sunday closest to the date of August 15\, the Armenian Church celebrates the Feast of the Assumption of St. Mary\, the Holy Mother of God. In the calendar of the Armenian Church\, this feast is the fourth of five major feasts that are commemorated\, and is the oldest one dedicated to St. Mary. \nIn the Holy Bible\, there is little information concerning the details of St. Mary’s life. As a result\, the story of her Assumption has been preserved and passed on to us through the Holy and Sacred Tradition of the Apostolic Church. \nFollowing the crucifixion of Jesus Christ\, the Holy Virgin remained in Jerusalem\, and lived under the care of St. John the Evangelist. For nearly 12 years\, St. Mary lived by praying\, fasting\, and often visiting the empty tomb of her beloved Son. During one such visit to the tomb\, the Archangel Gabriel appeared and gave her the news of her imminent assumption to heaven. St. Mary relayed the news to her relatives and all Christians\, asking them to bury her in the valley of Gethsemane. St. Mary also asked the Apostle John to celebrate a Divine Liturgy\, so she may receive Holy Communion one final time. After receiving Holy Communion\, St. Mary returned to her room. As the Apostles prepared to mourn her death\, St. John asked the Mother of God to leave an image of her face on a board of wood.  St. Mary took the board\, crossed herself and brought it close to her face.  Moistening the board with her tears\, she asked God that by means of the board\, people would be cured from disease.  As the Apostles surrounded St. Mary\, an indescribable light appeared. The Son of God and the angels of heaven appeared in the room. Upon seeing Christ\, St. Mary died. \nSt. Bartholomew the Apostle was absent and did not participate in the burial service of St. Mary. Upon his return to Jerusalem\, he wished to see St. Mary for the last time. Per his request\, the Apostles opened the tomb\, yet they did not find the remains of St. Mary.  According to His promise\, Jesus Christ had delivered His mother to His heavenly kingdom. The Apostles gave the board of St. Mary to St. Bartholomew for consolation.\nAccording to Moses of Khoren\, St. Bartholomew brought the board to Armenia. It is kept in the Province of Andzav\, in a location called Darbnots. Years later\, a church was built there in honour of St. Mary and a convent was opened. \nIn the Northern Hemisphere\, on the Feast of the Assumption of St. Mary\, the Ceremony of the Blessing of the Grapes is conducted and the harvest for the entire year is blessed on that day. In Australia\, the Blessing of the Grapes takes place on the last Sunday of January as per the seasonal availability of grapes. \nThe Armenian Church has a deep and abiding respect towards St. Mary.  Special emphasis is placed on her being a mother\, her honesty\, her unique spirit of humility\, her virtuous behaviour and her unselfish dedication. For Armenian women\, the Holy Virgin is the embodiment of virtue\, pious motherhood\, and the protector of family sacredness. \n 
URL:https://armenianchurchsydney.org.au/event/feast-of-the-assumption-of-the-holy-mother-of-god-asdvadzadzin-2-2/
CATEGORIES:Major Feasts (Daghavarner)
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230822
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230823
DTSTAMP:20260505T042032
CREATED:20211025T062855Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211025T062922Z
UID:20761-1692662400-1692748799@armenianchurchsydney.org.au
SUMMARY:Commemoration of Saints Joachim and Anna and the Oil Bringing Women
DESCRIPTION:  \nSt Anna and St Joachim\, the parents of St Mary\, are not mentioned by name in Holy Scripture. There is\, however\, a wealth of oral tradition concerning them. St Anna was a descendant of the royal line of King David. As she grew up\, she was espoused to a God fearing\, God loving man named Joachim\, who lived near Nazareth. \nThis holy couple lived in great faith\, simplicity and humility for twenty years without being blessed with children. Among the Jews this was viewed as a disgrace and a chastisement from heaven. Joachim and Anna were very unhappy because they had no children\, but they never complained to the Lord\, instead\, they prayed continually that a child would be born to them. In sincere humility Joachim and Anna submitted to divine will. \nConfidence in the goodness of God sustained them in their bitterest moments\, and as they advanced into middle age they redoubled their offerings to God in the hope of obtaining grace from heaven. One day after long prayers and abundant tears\, St Anna suddenly remembered having read in the Holy Scripture that the mother of Samuel\, who like herself was named Anna\, had made a vow that if she should be blessed with a child\, she would dedicate it to God. St Anna followed her example. From the depth of her heart she uttered the same words pronounced by her saintly ancestor. St Joachim went into the desert to devote himself to prayer and fasting. St Anna performed the same devotion in her own house. St Joachim spent forty days in the desert. His grief soon turned into joy. An angel of the Lord came to him and said: “Joachim\, you have been a faithful servant of God. The Most High from his throne in heaven has heard your prayers and longings. He will grant to you and your devout companion more than you have asked for. For behold Anna shall conceive and bring forth a daughter who shall be blessed among women and she shall be called Mary. This shall be a sign to you; namely\, when you go to Jerusalem\, you will meet your wife before the gate which is called golden.”  \nAbout the same time an angel appeared to St Anna and brought her the same joyful tidings. Without knowledge of the other’s revelation\, Joachim and Anna rose up and went to the temple to give thanks to God. They met each other at the Golden Gate that stands behind the temple. Together they entered the temple with great joy and offered up a lamb. With humble prayers they thanked God for the great honour bestowed upon them. \nA daughter\, Mary (meaning illuminated)\, was born to them\, and they did not forget their promise to dedicate the child to the service of God. When Mary was three years old\, her parents took her to the temple where she was dedicated. Tradition tells us that she stayed there in the care of devoted women until she was betrothed at about the age of fourteen. \nThe Oil Bringing Women are the witnesses of Christ’s torments. They are the first to give the good tidings of the Resurrection of our Lord. These women followed Christ during His earthly mission. The church calls them “Oil-Bringing Women” because on the Sunday morning\, following Christ’s death\, they hurried to the tomb to anoint the body of Jesus by the aromatic oils they had prepared. Due to their devoutness they were the first to see the Risen God\, which they conveyed to the Apostles. \nThey were also present during Pentecost and\, together with the Apostles\, received the graces of the Holy Spirit. \nThe Armenian Apostolic Church commemorates the memory of St Joachim and St Anna together with the Oil Bringing Women. \n 
URL:https://armenianchurchsydney.org.au/event/commemoration-of-saints-joachim-and-anna-and-the-oil-bringing-women-2/
CATEGORIES:Feasts & Commemorations
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://armenianchurchsydney.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/Joachim-and-Anna.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230824
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230825
DTSTAMP:20260505T042032
CREATED:20211025T071225Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211025T071248Z
UID:20771-1692835200-1692921599@armenianchurchsydney.org.au
SUMMARY:Commemoration of the Prophet Jeremiah
DESCRIPTION:  \nSt Jeremiah is one of the major prophets of the Bible. He was the son of Hilkiah\, one of the priests of the town Anathoth\, not far from Jerusalem. He lived and preached in Jerusalem. Feeling the calling to serve God he devoutly served\, refusing to marry and have his own family. \nHis life straddled the 7th and 6th centuries before Christ\, making him a contemporary of the Athenian lawgiver Solon. Jeremiah received his prophetic calling in a time of great promise: the reign of the godly king Josiah\, during which a lost book of Moses (eventually known as Deuteronomy) was rediscovered\, and a movement of spiritual renewal awakened among the Hebrew people. \nHowever when Josiah died in battle\, his successors were weak and wasteful and Jeremiah’s generation saw its worst fears realised: the conquest of their holy city\, Jerusalem and the bitter exile of a nation from its homeland. \nJeremiah documented his painful experiences in the Old Testament book of his name\, as well as in the aptly titled book of Lamentations. As a result\, he became known to the ages as the “weeping prophet.”  Jeremiah’s vivid\, sorrowful prophecies were picked up by the evangelist St Matthew in his telling of Christ’s life (“Rachel weeping for her children” at Mt 2:17; “thirty pieces of silver” at Mt 27:9).  Today\, we derive the word “jeremiad”\, meaning a long\, mournful complaint\, from this sombre figure. \nYet even in defeat\, Jeremiah was something other than a voice of doom. To his people he spoke with the words of God; and they were words of hope\, not despair. Consider this inspiring passage by the prophet\, in which God speaks to a dispirited nation in exile: \n“For surely I know the plans I have for you\, says the Lord: plans for your welfare and not for harm\, to give you a future with hope.  Then\, when you call upon me and come and pray to me\, I will hear you.  When you search for me\, you will find me; if you seek me with all your heart\, I will let you find me\, says the Lord.  And I will restore your fortunes and gather you from all the nations and all the places where I have driven you\, says the Lord.  And I will bring you back to the place from which I sent you into exile.”  (Jer 29:11-14) \nJeremiah’s words and example have held special meaning for Armenian Christians\, as we have witnessed St Gregory of Narek\, who borrowed the title “Lamentations” for his own masterpiece of mystical poetry.  The similarities between the travails of Jeremiah’s time and the experiences of our own people hardly need to be enumerated. \nThe more important similarity\, of course\, is the spirit of hope\, grounded in a loving\, fatherly God\, which allows people to endure\, overcome\, and live on\, whether in the 6th century B.C\, the 20th century A.D\, or today. \nRef: Christopher H. Zakian @ vemkar.us
URL:https://armenianchurchsydney.org.au/event/commemoration-of-the-prophet-jeremiah-2/
CATEGORIES:Feasts & Commemorations
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://armenianchurchsydney.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/Jeremiah.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230826
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230827
DTSTAMP:20260505T042032
CREATED:20211026T051655Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211026T051803Z
UID:20794-1693008000-1693094399@armenianchurchsydney.org.au
SUMMARY:Commemoration of St Thomas
DESCRIPTION:  \nSt Thomas was born a Jew and was called to be one of the Twelve Apostles of Jesus Christ. His name in Aramaic (Te’oma) and Greek (Didymos) means “twin”. John 11:16 identifies him as “Thomas\, called the Twin”. However\, we do not know of his twin or how he came to have this name. \nHe was a dedicated but impetuous follower of Christ. When Jesus said He was returning to Judea to visit His sick friend Lazarus\, Thomas immediately exhorted the other Apostles to accompany Him on the trip which involved certain danger and possible death because of the mounting hostility of the authorities (John 11:16). \nAt the Last Supper\, when Christ told His disciples that He was going to prepare a place for them to which they also might come\, because they knew both the place and the way\, Thomas said “Lord\, we don’t know where you are going\, so how can we know the way?” to which he received the beautiful reply from Jesus “I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me” (John 14:6). \nSt Thomas is however\, most popularly known by his nickname “Doubting Thomas”\, due to his demand for tangible evidence in order to believe that Jesus was alive. \nThe Gospel of John alone includes the incident of the appearance of the risen Lord to Thomas (John 20:24-29). This story presents the relation between ‘seeing’ and ‘believing’\, where Thomas stands as a believer who believes after seeing the risen Christ. Thomas’ confession of Jesus as “My Lord and My God” is considered as the utterance of a staunch believer with renewed experience of the divine presence. Thomas’ determination to see and touch the Lord connects us directly with the resurrection belief. His statement “Unless I see the nail marks in his hands and put my finger where the nails were\, and put my hand into his side\, I will not believe.” (John 20:25)\, proves that he was a witness of Jesus’ crucifixion. He saw that Jesus was nailed in his hands and other parts of the body and secondly\, he saw that Jesus was pierced in his side by the soldiers. \nSt Thomas is believed to have travelled outside the Roman Empire to preach the Gospel\, travelling as far as South India. He is often regarded as the patron saint of India and the name Thomas remains quite popular amongst the Christians of the Indian subcontinent. St Thomas is thought to have been martyred at St Thomas Mount in Chennai around 72AD. \n  \n  \n 
URL:https://armenianchurchsydney.org.au/event/commemoration-of-st-thomas-2/
CATEGORIES:Feasts & Commemorations
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230827
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230828
DTSTAMP:20260505T042032
CREATED:20211101T112725Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211101T113218Z
UID:21274-1693094400-1693180799@armenianchurchsydney.org.au
SUMMARY:Discovery of the Belt of St Mary (Theotokos)
DESCRIPTION:  \nThe Belt (Girdle) of the Blessed Virgin Mary\, today divided into three pieces\, is the only remaining relic of her earthly life. According to tradition\, the belt was made out of camel hair by the Virgin Mary herself\, and at her Assumption\, she gave it to the Apostle Thomas. According to Tradition\, the Apostle Thomas was the only apostle absent at the Assumption of the Mother of God. He was grieved to learn of this\, but suddenly found himself witnessing the Virgin’s ascent to Heaven. He pleaded with her to give him a blessing; she untied her belt and gave it to him. \nDuring the time of the early Church\, when Christians were persecuted\, St Mary’s possessions were kept hidden and secret. Her belt was the first item to be discovered in Jerusalem in the fifth century. This discovery is the basis for one of the eight feast days in the Armenian liturgical calendar devoted to the Holy Mother. \nDuring the early centuries of the Christian era it was kept at Jerusalem and in the 4th century we hear of it at Zela in Cappadocia. In the same century\, Theodosius the Great brought it back to Jerusalem\, and from there his son Arcadius took it to Constantinople. There it was originally deposited in the Chalcoprateion church\, whence it was transferred by the Emperor Leo to the Vlachernae church (458). During the reign of Leo VI ‘the Wise’ (886-912)\, it was taken to the Palace\, where it cured his sick wife\, the Empress Zoe. \nThe Empress had a vision that she would be healed of her infirmity if the Belt of the Mother of God were placed upon her. The Emperor then asked the Patriarch to open the coffer. The Patriarch removed the seal and opened the coffer in which the relic was kept and the Belt of the Mother of God appeared completely whole and undamaged by time. The Patriarch placed the Belt on the sick Empress\, and immediately she was freed from her infirmity. They sang hymns of thanksgiving to the Most Holy Theotokos\, then they placed the venerable Belt back into the coffer and resealed it. The Empress\, as an act of thanksgiving to the Mother of God\, embroidered the whole girdle with gold thread\, giving it the appearance which it bears today. \nParts of the Holy Belt are in the Vatopedi Monastery on Mount Athos\, in Trier Monastery and in Georgia. \nThe Armenian Church celebrates the Discovery of the Belt of Theotokos on the second Sunday after Assumption.
URL:https://armenianchurchsydney.org.au/event/discovery-of-the-belt-of-st-mary-theotokos-2/
CATEGORIES:Feasts & Commemorations
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://armenianchurchsydney.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/Mary-Belt.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230829
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230830
DTSTAMP:20260505T042032
CREATED:20211026T093904Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211026T093936Z
UID:20834-1693267200-1693353599@armenianchurchsydney.org.au
SUMMARY:Commemoration of the Prophets Ezekiel\, Ezra and Zechariah: St John the Baptist’s Father
DESCRIPTION:  \nProphecy is one of the most important phenomena of the Old Testament. A Prophet is the person who has had a close relationship with God\, that is\, he “has spoken” with God\, or has received a message from God\, or has been sent by God to a person or a nation to transfer His message. The main characteristic trait of the true prophet is his being incorruptible\, independent\, brave and extremely faithful to the divine message and commandment. \nThe author of prophecies is God. He has transferred his revelation to man thanks to the inspiration of the Holy Spirit. First He has inspired His ideas\, and then man\, under His influence\, comprehending the ideas\, has transferred them to the people. \nProphet Ezekiel\, whose name means “strengthened by God\,” grew up in Jerusalem\, served as a priest in the temple and was among the second group of captives taken to Babylon\, along with King Jehoiachin. While in Babylon he became a prophet of God; he is the author of the Old Testament book that bears his name. \nEzekiel’s ministry began with condemnation and judgment of the nation Judah. After the destruction of Jerusalem\, Ezekiel’s prophecies speak of hope for the future. Ezekiel wanted to help the people learn from their failures. He announced impending judgment upon the nations that surrounded Judah and reestablished hope for the restoration of Israel. His vision of the valley of dry bones (Ezekiel 37) pictures new life being breathed into the nation\, which will occur in the Millennial Reign of Christ on earth. \nEzekiel did not hesitate in his mission and steadfastly followed God’s instructions. He had a passionate view of judgment and hope\, and he reflected God’s own sorrow over the people’s sins. \nProphet Ezra was the second of three key leaders to leave Babylon for the reconstruction of Jerusalem. Zerubbabel reconstructed the temple (Ezra 3:8)\, Nehemiah rebuilt the walls (Nehemiah chapters 1 and 2)\, and Ezra restored the worship. Ezra was a scribe and priest sent with religious and political powers by the Persian King Artaxerxes to lead a group of Jewish exiles from Babylon to Jerusalem (Ezra 7:8\, 12). Ezra condemned mixed marriages and encouraged Jews to divorce and banish their foreign wives. Ezra renewed the celebration of festivals and supported the rededication of the temple and the rebuilding of the Jerusalem wall. Ezra 7:10 describes a shaping of the community in accordance with the Torah. Ezra’s goal was to implement the Torah (Law of Moses)\, and his impeccable priestly and scribal credentials allowed him to remain the model leader. \nEzra’s effective ministry included teaching the Word of God\, initiating reforms\, restoring worship\, and leading spiritual revival in Jerusalem. \nZechariah (Zacharias) is John the Baptist’s father\, who served in the temple of Jerusalem. He is different to the minor prophet\, Zechariah\, who wrote the book of Zechariah. \nZechariah and his wife Elizabeth\, who was the sister of Anna\, St Mary’s mother\, had no children for many years. Elizabeth was well past child bearing age when Zechariah was offering a sacrifice in the Temple. The angel Gabriel appeared to him and said “Do not be afraid\, Zechariah; your prayer has been heard. Your wife Elizabeth will bear you a son\, and you are to call him John. He will be a joy and delight to you\, and many will rejoice because of his birth\,  for he will be great in the sight of the Lord. He is never to take wine or other fermented drink\, and he will be filled with the Holy Spirit even before he is born.  He will bring back many of the people of Israel to the Lord their God. And he will go on before the Lord\, in the spirit and power of Elijah\, to turn the hearts of the parents to their children and the disobedient to the wisdom of the righteous—to make ready a people prepared for the Lord.” (Luke 1: 11-17) \nAlthough this was great news\, Zechariah did not initially believe the angel. He objected that this could not be possible\, since he and his wife were too old. Because of Zechariah’s unbelief\, Gabriel told him that he would be rendered mute until the baby was born. Zechariah was immediately unable to speak\, and\, when he came out of the temple\, he had to communicate with hand gestures. The people gathered outside the temple praying\, realised that he had seen a vision of some kind. Zechariah went home\, and it happened just as the angel had said. Elizabeth became pregnant (Luke1: 18-24). \nThe next time Zechariah is mentioned is after the birth of his son. At the child’s circumcision\, Elizabeth’s family and friends wanted to name the baby after Zechariah\, but Elizabeth insisted that his name should be John (Luke 1:59–60). When they consulted Zechariah\, he asked for a writing tablet and to everyone’s astonishment he wrote\, “His name is John’” (Luke1:63). Immediately\, Zechariah was able to speak and began at once to praise the Lord. Luke 1:67–79 records the prophetic words that Zechariah proclaimed\, which may have been in the form of a song. His words indicate the change of heart and the faith that had grown during his nine months of muteness. \nZechariah died protecting his son. When King Herod ordered the slaughter of all males under the age of two\, in an attempt to prevent the prophesied Messiah from coming to Israel\, Zechariah refused to divulge the whereabouts of his son (who was in hiding)\, and he was therefore murdered by Herod’s soldiers.
URL:https://armenianchurchsydney.org.au/event/commemoration-of-the-prophets-ezekiel-ezra-and-zechariah-st-john-the-baptists-father-2/
CATEGORIES:Feasts & Commemorations
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230831
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230901
DTSTAMP:20260505T042032
CREATED:20211026T110205Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211026T110341Z
UID:20874-1693440000-1693526399@armenianchurchsydney.org.au
SUMMARY:Commemoration of Saints John the Baptist and Job the Righteous
DESCRIPTION:  \nJohn the Baptist is one of the most significant and well known figures in the Bible.While John was known as “the Baptist\,” he was in fact the first prophet called by God since Malachi some 400 years earlier. John’s coming was foretold over 700 years previously by another prophet: “A voice of one calling: ‘In the desert prepare the way for the LORD; make straight in the wilderness a highway for our God. Every valley shall be raised up\, every mountain and hill made low; the rough ground shall become level\, the rugged places a plain. And the glory of the LORD will be revealed\, and all mankind together will see it. For the mouth of the LORD has spoken'” (Isaiah 40:3–5). This passage illustrates God’s master plan in action as God selected John to be His special ambassador to proclaim His own coming. \nAlthough his name implies that he baptised people (which he did)\, John’s life on earth was more than just baptising. John’s adult life was characterised by devotion and surrender to Jesus Christ and His kingdom. John’s voice was a “lone voice in the wilderness” (John 1:23) as he proclaimed the coming of the Messiah to a people who desperately needed a Saviour. He was the precursor for the modern day evangelist as he unashamedly shared the good news of Jesus Christ. He was a man filled with faith and a role model to those of us who wish to share our faith with others. \nJohn’s birth was miraculous. He was born of elderly parents who had never been able to have children (Luke 1:7). The angel Gabriel announced to Zechariah that he would have a son and true to the word of the Lord\, Zechariah’s wife\, Elizabeth\, gave birth to John. At the circumcision ceremony\, Zechariah said about his son\, “You\, my child\, will be called a prophet of the Most High; for you will go on before the Lord to prepare the way for him” (Luke1:76). \nJohn was related to Jesus\, as their mothers were cousins (Luke 1:36). In fact\, when the angel Gabriel told Mary that she would give birth to Jesus\, he also told her about John. When Mary was carrying Jesus in her womb\, she visited Elizabeth\, and John leapt in his mother’s womb for joy at the sound of Mary’s voice (Luke 1:39-45). \nAs an adult John lived a rugged life in the mountainous area of Judea\, between the city of Jerusalem and the Dead Sea. He wore clothes made of camel’s hair with a leather belt around his waist\, the typical garb of a prophet. His diet was a simple one\, locusts and wild honey (Matthew 3:4). John lived a simple life as he focused on the kingdom work set before him. \nJohn the Baptist’s ministry grew in popularity\, as recounted in Matthew 3:5–6: “People went out to him from Jerusalem and all Judea and the whole region of the Jordan. Confessing their sins\, they were baptised by him in the Jordan River.” To be baptised by John was to admit your sin and repent of it\, to be prepared for the Saviour’s coming. The repentance associated with John’s baptism also kept the self righteous out of the water\, as they did not see themselves as sinners. For the self righteous\, John had stern words\, calling them a “brood of vipers” and warning them not to rely on their Jewish lineage for salvation\, but to repent and “bear fruit in keeping with repentance” (Matthew 3:7–10). People of that day simply did not address leaders\, religious or otherwise\, in this manner for fear of punishment. But John’s faith made him fearless in the face of opposition. \nJohn the Baptist was thought to be a prophet of God (Matthew 14:5)\, and many people thought that he was the Messiah. However\, he had a clear vision for what he was called to do. In John 3:28\, John says\, “You yourselves can testify that I said\, ‘I am not the Christ but am sent ahead of him.'” John cautioned his disciples that what they had seen and heard from him was just the beginning of the miracle that was to come in the form of Jesus Christ. John was merely a messenger sent by God to proclaim the truth. His message was simple and direct: “Repent\, for the kingdom of heaven is near” (Matthew 3:2). He knew that\, once Jesus appeared on the scene\, John’s work would be all but finished. He willingly gave up the spotlight to Jesus\, saying\, “He must become greater; I must become less” (John 3:30). \nPerhaps there is no greater example of humility than what is seen in both Jesus and John in Matthew 3:13–15. Jesus came from Galilee to be baptised by John in the River Jordan. John rightly recognised that the sinless Son of God needed no baptism of repentance and that he was certainly not worthy to baptise his own Saviour. However Jesus answered John’s concern by requesting baptism “to fulfill all righteousness\,” meaning that He was identifying Himself with sinners for whom He would ultimately sacrifice Himself\, thereby securing all righteousness for them (2 Corinthians 5:21). In humility\, John obeyed and consented to baptise Jesus (Matthew 3:13–15). As Jesus came up out of the water\, “heaven was opened\, and he saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and alighting on him. And a voice from heaven said\, ‘This is my Son\, whom I love; with him I am well pleased’” (verses 16–17). \nJohn the Baptist’s ministry\, and his life\, came to an abrupt end at the hand of King Herod. He was tricked into  beheading John by the daughter off Herodias. It was a sad and ignoble end to the life of such a faithful man. \nThe life of Job demonstrates that humans are often unaware of the many ways God is at work in the life of each believer. Job’s life is also one that prompts the common question\, “Why do bad things happen to good people?” It is the age old question\, and difficult to answer\, but believers know that God is always in control\, and\, no matter what happens\, there are no coincidences; nothing happens by chance. Job was a believer. He knew that God was on the throne and in total control\, though he had no way of knowing why so many terrible tragedies were occurring in his life. \nJob was “blameless and upright; he feared God and shunned evil” (Job 1:1). He had ten children and was a man of great wealth. The Bible tells us that one day Satan presented himself before God and God asked Satan what he thought of Job. Satan accused Job of honouring God only because God had blessed him. So\, God allowed Satan to take away Job’s wealth and his children. Later\, God allowed Satan to afflict Job physically. Job grieved deeply but did not charge God with wrongdoing (Job 1:22; 42:7–8). \nJob’s friends were certain that Job must have sinned in order to deserve punishment and argued with him about it. But Job maintained his innocence\, though he confessed that he wanted to die and did ask questions of God. A younger man\, Elihu\, attempted to speak on God’s behalf before God\, Himself\, answered Job. Job 38—42 contains some of the most stunning poetry about the magnitude and might of God. Job responded to God’s discourse in humility and repentance\, saying he had spoken of things he did not know (Job 40:3–5; 42:1–6). God told Job’s friends that He was angry with them for speaking falsehoods about Him\, unlike Job who had spoken truth (Job 42:7–8). God told them to offer sacrifices and that Job would pray on their behalf and God would accept Job’s prayer. Job did so\, likely forgiving his friends for their harshness himself. God restored Job’s fortunes two fold (Job 42:10) and “blessed the latter part of Job’s life more than the former part” (Job 42:12). Job lived 140 years after his suffering. \nJob never lost his faith in God\, even under the most heartbreaking circumstances that tested him to his core. Though depressed enough to curse the day of his birth (Job 3:1–26)\, Job never cursed God (Job 2:9–10) nor did he waver in his understanding that God was still in control. Job’s three friends\, on the other hand\, instead of comforting him\, gave him bad advice and even accused him of committing sins so grievous that God was punishing him with misery. Job knew God well enough to know that He did not work that way; in fact\, he had such an intimate\, personal relationship with Him that he was able to say\, “Though he slay me\, yet will I hope in him; I will surely defend my ways to his face” (Job 13:15). When Job’s wife suggested he curse God and die\, Job replied “You are talking like a foolish woman. Shall we accept good from God\, and not trouble?” (Job 2:10). \nJob knew who his Redeemer was\, he knew that He was a living Saviour\, and he knew that someday He would physically stand on the earth (Job 19:25). He understood that man’s days are ordained (numbered) and they cannot be changed (Job 14:5). The spiritual depth of Job shows throughout the book. James refers to Job as an example of perseverance\, writing\, “Brothers and sisters\, as an example of patience in the face of suffering\, take the prophets who spoke in the name of the Lord. As you know\, we count as blessed those who have persevered. You have heard of Job’s perseverance and have seen what the Lord finally brought about. The Lord is full of compassion and mercy” (James 5:10–11). \nOur responsibility to God is to obey Him\, to trust Him\, and to submit to His will\, whether we understand it or not. When we do\, we will find God in the midst of our trials—possibly even because of our trials. We will see more clearly the magnificence of our God\, and we will say\, with Job\, “My ears had heard of you but now my eyes have seen you” (Job 42:5). \nThe Armenian Church celebrates the feast day of these two unlikely pairings on the same day. One comes from the Old Testament\, the other from the New. One was a comfortable man of the world who was stripped of every blessing he had. The other was a man who rejected the world\, who voluntarily cast off the material comforts of life. \nJohn and Job are opposites in so many ways. Yet what they held in common was vastly more important. \nEach was a voice crying out in a wilderness. Each stood in a desert of material poverty: comfortless and even friendless; stripped of all worldly pretension. Yet even in such a state\, John and Job testified with all their heart that they were not alone. God was with them\, and in the end\, that was the only thing that mattered. \nRef: gotquestions.org
URL:https://armenianchurchsydney.org.au/event/commemoration-of-saints-john-the-baptist-and-job-the-righteous-2/
CATEGORIES:Feasts & Commemorations
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