St Nerses I was a Bishop,martyr, and Patriarch of the Armenian Church. The father of St. Isaac the Great. A native of Armenia, he studied in Cappadocia and wed a princess who gave birth to Isaac. After she died, he served as a chamber lain in the court of King Arshak of Armenia. In 353 he was made Catholicos (Patriarch) of the Armenians. Nerses devoted much effort to reforming the Armenian Church, including convening a synod in 365 based on the principles he had studied under St. Basil at Caesarea. Though he established hospitals and monasteries, his reforms and denunciation of King Arshak’s murder of the queen led to his exile. He returned after Arshak’s death in battle, but relations were not much better with the new Armenian ruler, Pap, whose dissolute lifestyle caused Nerses to refuse him admission into church. Nerses was invited to a royal banquet at Khakh, on the Euphrates River, and was assassinated by poison.
You may also like
The End Times Are Coming: 33rd Sunday in Ordinary Time
Today, Jesus describes a cataclysmic future event in a very old way. Why? Gospel (Read Mk 13:24-32) To understand today’s reading, we must set it within its context in St. Mark’s Gospel. In Mk 13:1-2, we see that as...
There is More to Heaven
This time of year the Church urges us to consider what happens to us when our earthly lives are no more. It is an exercise in which few people relish the thought of engaging because, quite frankly, it’s terrifying. Even...
St. Thomas the Apostle: A Guide To Our Inner Room
Have you ever felt left out when you wanted to be included? If you have, pray to St. Thomas the Apostle; I think he will understand how you feel. St. Thomas the Apostle—one of the twelve, a devoted follower and...