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(st-catherine.ru) - On October 14, 2010, with the blessing of His Beatitude, Metropolitan JONAH of All America and Canada and by invitation of the Georgian Orthodox Church, His Grace, Bishop MICHAEL of New York and New Jersey together with Archimandrite Zacchaeus, Representative of the Orthodox Church in America to the Moscow Patriarchate participated in the celebration of the 1000th Anniversary of the Patriarchal Cathedral of the Life-Giving Tree in Mtskheta, Georgia. Also accompanying His Grace, Bishop MICHAEL was Archpriest Alexander Tandilashvili who, while still a cleric of the Georgian Orthodox Church, serves in the Orthodox Church in America’s Diocese of New York and New Jersey.
The celebration began with the festal Divine Liturgy led by His Holiness and Beatitude ILIA II, Archbishop of Mtskheta and Tbilisi, Catholicos-Patriarch of All Georgia, together with His Beatitude ANASTASIOS, Archbishop of Tirana, Durres, and All Albania and also His Beatitude, Metropolitan CHRISTOPHER, Archbishop of Prague and Primate of the Church of the Czech Lands and Slovakia; Representatives of each of the 15 Local Autocephalous Orthodox Churches; and hierarchs and clergy of the Patriarchate of Georgia at the Cathedral of the Life-Giving Tree in Mtskheta. A very special blessing for all in the Cathedral was the presence of one of the nails that were used when Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ was affixed to the cross and crucified for us and for our salvation on Golgotha. Following the Patriarchal Divine Liturgy, this holy item was available for veneration.
Following the Divine Liturgy congratulatory remarks were offered by the Primates of the Churches of Albania and the Church of the Czech lands and Slovakia to the Primate of the Georgian Orthodox Church. Likewise, official greetings of His All Holiness, Patriarch BARTHOLOMEW of Constantinople, New Rome and Ecumenical Patriarch were read by his representative at the event, His Eminence, Metropolitan JOHN of Pergamon. Afterwards, a festal luncheon was offered for all the guests together with His Holiness and Beatitude, Patriarch and Catholicos ILIA II of Georgia. Following the luncheon, His Grace, Bishop MICHAEL of New York and New Jersey and Archimandrite Zacchaeus were received by the Georgian Patriarch for a private meeting during which the greetings of His Beatitude, Metropolitan JONAH of All America and Canada together with those of the Holy Synod of Bishops, the Clergy, Monastics and Faithful of the Orthodox Church in America were conveyed.
Later that evening, a festal reception was held by His Holiness and Beatitude, Patriarch-Catholicos ILIA during which once again, the Representatives of the Orthodox Church in America at the event were able to share in fellowship with the Primate of the Georgian Orthodox Church.
And also...
(mospat.ru) - On October 14, 2010, the Day of the Holy Robe and the Life-Giving Pillar (Svetitsovloba), Orthodox Georgia celebrated the millennium of its main cathedral ‘Svetitshoveli’ in the old Georgian capital city of Mtskheta. At the same time, the Church celebrated the 1700th anniversary of the first church built in the place where the Robe of the Lord was buried.
In the Cathedral of the Twelve Apostles ‘Svetitshoveli’, which was built by King George I with the blessing of Patriarch-Catholicos Melchizedek I in the period from 1010-1029 at the place where the first Christian church was built in Georgia in the 4th century, the Divine Liturgy was celebrated by His Holiness and Beatitude Iliya II, Catholic-Patriarch of All Georgia. Among his concelebrants were Archbishop Anastasios of Tirana and All Albania and Archbishop Christopher of the Czech Lands and Slovakia, members of the Local Orthodox Churches’ delegations, and hierarchs and clergy of the Georgian Orthodox Church.
Among the concelebrants were also Metropolitan Hilarion of Volokolamsk, head of the Moscow Patriarchate’s department for external church relations, Metropolitan Aganfangel of Odessa and Izmail, Archbishop Feognost of Sergiev Posad, Archpriest Nikolay Balashov, DECR vice-chairman, and clergy of the Russian Orthodox Church. Among the worshipers was Sister Georgia, abbess of the Russian Gorneye Convent in the Holy Land.
There were also Metropolitan John of Pergamon and Metropolitan Emmanuel of France (Patriarchate of Constantinople), Bishop Nikodemos of Nitria (Patriarchate of Alexandria), Archbishop Theophanes of Gerason (Patriarchate of Jerusalem), Bishop Anthony of Moravia (Serbian Patriarchate), Metropolitan Laurentius of Transylvania (Romanian Patriarchate, Metropolitan Nicholas of Plovdiv (Bulgarian Patriarchate), Bishop Christopher of Carpathia (Church of Cyprus), Metropolitan Damaskinos of Didim (Greek Orthodox Church), Archbishop Jacob of Gdansk and Bialystok (Polish Orthodox Church), and Bishop Michael of New York (Orthodox Church in America).
With the blessing of Patriarch Kirill of Moscow and All Russia, Metropolitan Hilarion congratulated Patriarch Iliya on this remarkable feast in the life of the Georgian Orthodox Church, which acquired pan-Orthodox character.
After the liturgy Patriarch Iliya addressed the congregation. He welcomed the delegations of Local Orthodox Churches and said, ‘The Georgian Church does not remember to ever have such a feast – the entire world is with us today. We thank the Lord for His great mercy and grace’.
The Patriarch spoke about the great shrines – the Lord’s robe and the sheepskin of the Prophet Elijah, which Georgia accepted in her time, and about Georgia as one of the appanages of the Mother of God. Speaking about the history of the Georgian Church, he said that the faith of Christ was brought to his land by Sts Andrew the First-Called and Simon the Canaanite.
‘Svetitshoveli is a great candle which was enkindled by St Nina Equal-to-the-Apostles and by the holy Emperor Constantine the Great. Constantine Equal-to-the-Apostles gave to Georgia two nails with which the Lord was crucified, and today one of these nails lies on the altar during the Divine Liturgy’, the Primate of the Georgian Church said.
A great many believers assembled for the celebrations. Among the worshippers were also pilgrims from Russia who were in Georgia at that time through the services of the Martha and Mary pilgrimage agency.
What position do the men in the first photo hold? Are those vestments of some sort? Very peculiar to see daggers...
ReplyDeleteAll I could find...
ReplyDeletehttp://www.everyculture.com/multi/Du-Ha/Georgian-Americans.html
"Traditional clothing is still found in the homes of some older generation Georgian Americans, and is usually worn during Georgian folk festivals. Men wear black wool pants and a long-sleeved shirt that buttons half way down the front. This shirt is usually black and is often decorated around the edges with silver or gold thread. Soft, tight-fitting leather boots that extend above the knee are also worn. These boots have a thin sole and no heels. A wool coat, usually black, brown, white, or gray in color, is worn over the shirt and pants. It has no collar and is cut with a long, narrow, V shaped opening from the neck halfway to the waist. Rows of narrow pockets, six or eight on each side of the coat are sewn across the chest. A belt containing a dagger ( kinjal) or sword is worn around the waist. The head is adorned with a papakha, a fur cap of sheep or goatskin with the fleece side out, which hangs down over the forehead. During winter months a bashlik, which is a hood of finely woven woolen material that can be tied around the neck, is worn. A cape made of goat or sheep wool, called a bourka, is worn around the shoulders. It is usually black and semicircular in shape, and fastened at the neck with thongs."