
ArmInfo. The Armenian authorities are exceeding their authority by attacking and threatening the Armenian Apostolic Church (AAC), which is legally separate from the state. The Armenian people treat it "with great respect" and have not given Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan the authority to reform it at his own discretion, as stated by Archpriest Nikolai Balashov, advisor to His Holiness Patriarch Kirill of Moscow and All Rus, to RIA Novosti.
On Wednesday, while speaking in parliament, Pashinyan threatened to confiscate state owned churches being used free of charge by the church, claiming that "there is no spiritual life there." According to the politician, the place where "spiritual life exists" is the Hovhannavank Monastery, whose abbot was Priest Aram Asatryan (earlier, Catholicos of All Armenians Karekin II defrocked Asatryan for numerous violations and discrediting the church). Also, according to media reports, Pashinyan stated in parliament that the head of the Armenian Apostolic Church, Karekin II, is no longer a clergy member. Pashinyan also accused Karekin II's brother, Archbishop Yezras, the head of the Russian and New Nakhichevan Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church, of being a "KGB agent."
"One may get the impression that the current leader of the Armenian government has decided to engage in an unequal struggle with the national spiritual foundations and, to this end, is resorting to persecution and insults against church hierarchs and clergy in general, arresting clergy, and threatening to confiscate church buildings. This may be due to the influence of external forces, as such ideas clearly do not reflect the feelings of the Armenian people, who hold their church in great respect and have not given Pashinyan the authority to reform it at his own whim," Balashov said. He added that, according to Armenian law, the church is separate from the state, and government officials have no right to interfere in its affairs. "A political figure in a secular state has no right to interfere in the structure of church life, which is determined by the canonical decrees of the church itself. The Armenian Constitution guarantees the freedom of religious organizations and emphasizes that they are autonomous and separate from the state. Thus, the prime minister is violating his constitutional authority with such statements, allowing himself to make offensive statements and threats against church leadership," the Patriarch's adviser emphasized.
He also mentioned that, according to the same Armenian constitution, the state recognizes "the exclusive historical mission of the Armenian Apostolic Holy Church as the national church in the spiritual life, development of national culture, and preservation of national identity." "History has shown that the struggle against the faith of the people and the church inevitably ends in defeat, leaving the perpetrators ashamed," the agency's source concluded.