A wonderful article from The Huntsville Times written by Rev. the Dr. Andy Anderson about his experiences in Armenia.

HUNTSVILLE, Alabama — Prior to my Sabbatical travels to Armenia last summer, the No. 1 FAQ was, “Where in the world is Armenia?”
The rich Armenian culture developed in the Caucasus, the peninsula between the Baltic and Black Seas, several thousand years BCE. Armenia’s ancient borders were once much larger, including parts of Turkey and Mount Ararat, still a national symbol.
Not too many Americans travel to Armenia unless they are descendants of the Armenian diaspora returning to their homeland. It is a matter of cultural pride to visit this tiny country by Armenians dispersed throughout the world because of the late 19th century genocide and the 1915 massacre by Turkish political forces, when a reported 1,500,000 Armenians were killed.
I have always admired the Armenians’ stalwart faith in becoming the first Christian nation in 301, more than a decade before the Roman emperor Constantine directed Rome’s conversion. I discovered the beautiful Armenian Oriental Orthodox tradition in Jerusalem four years ago on Pilgrimage to the Holy Land.
I was amazed to learn their story and discovered why their presence in Jerusalem is so strong. And so I was drawn to learn more about these people, whom I had only known about as a child by being told “to eat all my vegetables because of the starving Armenians!”
Armenian faith

Here’s their amazing story in a nutshell: Against all odds of persecution through the centuries, the Armenians have clung to their Christian identity.
They refused to follow Zoroastrianism when the Persians conquered Armenia in the 5th century, and then again, for centuries under Muslim political domination, refused to give up their Trinitarian belief for Islam.
Even in the late 19th Century, the Russian Czar wanted the people of Armenia to “reform” their ancient Armenian Apostolic Church and assimilate into the Russian Orthodox tradition.
But through it all, they stood firm in the faith as they had received it from the Apostles Thaddeus and Bartholomew less than a decade after Christ’s death and resurrection.
Finally their oppressors just metaphorically – but after much literal persecutions and even battles – “threw their hands up.” In so many words they said, “Okay, keep your faith as long as you pay your tribute” – a kind of quiescent reversal of Jesus’ words to “render unto Caesar what is Caesar’s and unto God what is God’s.”
The Armenians’ spirit of brave perseverance and national pride are singularly tied to their ancient Christian identity. Through decades of Soviet Union domination, when anyone who wanted to have a decent job could not profess Christianity, they secretly observed the Sacraments, baptizing their children and having their marriages blessed.

Immediately after the Soviet Union’s downfall, they openly embraced the faith and began the monumental task of repairing their
ancient churches and building magnificent new ones.
The capital city, Yerevan, with 1 million souls, had over 1,000 churches in 1922, prior to Armenia’s becoming a Soviet republic. In 1991, after the collapse of the Soviet Union, there remained only three churches.
Now there are 36, with more under construction, including the magnificently modern cathedral where 2,500 worshipers can gather at one time
Their church buildings, ancient and modern, are built of massive hewn stones, built to withstand the recurrent seismic activity of tectonic shifts through the centuries. With powerful arches and stalwart barrel towers, these buildings are poetic expressions of the people’s faith and resilience.

Geghard Monastery
There are several UNESCO World Heritage sites among the numerous, literally thousands of churches whose antiquated walls built high on mountain cliffs stand sentinel over a nation’s rebuilding.
Tourists and local Armenians flock to these holy sites to light candles and say prayers.
One of my favorites is the Geghard Monastery, whose first buildings date to the middle of the 4th century. Geghard is a holy, thin place that still welcomes hundreds of thousands of pilgrims each year.
The grounds of the monastery literally hang off the cliffs overlooking the Azat River Gorge, and from the rock walls monastic cells and several small churches have been cut out of the surrounding volcanic tuff in an 11th-century feat of engineering and architecture.
The interiors of these rooms are dark, save for prayer candles that have been lit by curious visitors and prayerful pilgrims alike.
One of the churches here has been designed so that the acoustics produce a remarkable and authentically holy and mysterious reverberation of sound, almost a divine echo.

Place of ‘valid prayer’
I could only imagine listening to the ancient Armenian chant, which is still used during worship today and predates Gregorian chant, when this place was at its height – an experience that would surely be intensified by the piety, order and purpose of faithful Armenians prevailing through the centuries.
Standing there, the words of T. S. Eliot in “Four Quartets” came to mind:
If you came this way,
Taking any route, starting from anywhere,
At anytime or at any season,
It would always be the same: You would have to put off
Sense and notion. You are not here to verify,
Instruct yourself, or inform curiosity
Or carry report. You are here to kneel
Where prayer has been valid.
Prayer has been valid in Armenia through the centuries. I am most fortunate and blessed to have knelt with them.
Rev. the Dr. Andy Anderson
Like always finishing with more pictures



















[…] The monastery of Geghard (Armenian: Գեղարդ, meaning spear) is a unique architectural construction in the Kotayk province of Armenia, being partially carved out of the adjacent mountain, surrounded by cliffs. It is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The complex of medieval buildings is set into a landscape of great natural beauty, surrounded by towering cliffs at the entrance to the Azat Valley. The monastery complex was founded in the 4th century by Gregory the Illuminator at the site of a sacred pagan spring inside a cave, holding one of Armenia’s purest water-springs. The monastery of Geghard contains… Read more »
A remarkable Place…My husband and I visited Armenia this Easter 2014 and Geghard was the highlight of our stay in and around Yerevan….Extraordinary, mystical and truly unique……
I have visited Armenia 09-2003 @nd trip was in 08-2007, I am very Familiar and happy to say It is The Highlight of my Life, We visited Most of the Churches, the Cathedrale Echmeazine,Enjoyed Marriot Hotel in Yerevan, Beautiful & Happy people, Monastery of Keghart Its Unique location it gives you chill to imagine how this people were able to buildGreat Churches at that time , Even Gharapagh hasdifferent Beauty of Location it should be on every Bodies list to Visit, great experience I recommend Highly… Bertha Guiragossian.