
ArmInfo. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan's apostate campaign in Gyumri has further strengthened the understanding in Armenian society that the current leader of Armenia sows division, disbelief, anger, lawlessness, and abomination wherever he appears. Levon Zurabyan, Deputy Chairman of the Armenian National Congress (ANC), wrote this on his Facebook page, reacting to the Armenian Prime Minister's post about the need to "play the national anthem before Sunday services in Armenian churches."
The politician noted that the Armenian Prime Minister's statement that "in 301, the Armenian Church was created by the state" creates the impression that Pashinyan is unaware that the Armenian Apostolic Church was founded by the Apostles Thaddeus and Bartholomew, and fails to recognize that the boundaries of state and religious denominations diverge, since the spheres of state and spiritual authority cannot fully coincide. "The main heretical and divisive figure in the Armenian world must be eliminated if we want to continue to exist as a state-organized nation," the ANC deputy chairman noted.
In this vein, Zurabyan noted that Pashinyan, who is grossly violating the Armenian Constitution, laws, and, above all, Article 441 of the RA Criminal Code (abuse of power by an official), is oblivious to the fact that his government is gradually assuming the guise of an occupation regime. Thus, as the ANC deputy chairman noted, by seizing the "Seven Wounds" Church in Gyumri with special forces on December 7, the Armenian prime minister transformed a political show in which he was involved into a police operation. "To carry out his schismatic actions, Pashinyan relies on the most discredited, immoral, mercantile, and opportunistic representatives of the Armenian Apostolic Church (AAC). Pashinyan controls the latter under threat of criminal prosecution or by promising them positions of power. Thus, the liturgy at the Seven Wounds Church was more reminiscent of the oppression of the people by an alien, hated state than a liturgy dedicated to the memory of the victims of the Spitak earthquake of December 7, 1988," Zurabyan noted.
On December 7, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan participated in the so-called liturgy at the Seven Wounds Church in Gyumri. However, not a single clergyman of the Shirak Diocese agreed to conduct the liturgy for the Armenian prime minister, as one of the conditions was to omit the name of the Catholicos of All Armenians and the head of the diocese from the service. Consequently, the Armenian authorities were forced to bring their own puppet bishops, who opposed the Catholicos. Furthermore, officers from the National Security Service of Armenia sealed the church doors that evening, preventing anyone from entering. Thus, for the first time in 200 years, the bells of the Seven Wounds Church did not ring on the morning of December 7, inviting the faithful to the liturgy. It is also noteworthy that, despite the Armenian authorities' attempts to avoid mentioning the Catholicos' name during the liturgy, the Church choir nonetheless sang the names of both Karekin II and Archbishop Mikael Ajapahyan, the head of the Shirak Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church, who was imprisoned on trumped-up charges.
On December 7, the Mother See of Etchmiadzin also announced the indefinite postponement of the bishops' meeting scheduled for December 10-12 due to increasing pressure on the clergy.
As a reminder, the Armenian Prime Minister launched a campaign against the Armenian Apostolic Church in May, seeking the resignation of Karekin II, Catholicos of All Armenians. As part of this campaign, all dissenters, both clergy and ordinary citizens, are being imprisoned on various serious charges.