of Gregory of Narek on the wall of the
Armenian Cathedral of Moscow. He is depicted as holding the
Book of Lamentations with "Speaking with God from the Depths of the Heart" engraved on it.
Armenian Apostolic Church The Armenian Apostolic Church celebrates his feast on the second Saturday of October, during the Feast of the
Holy Translators (, ). Dedicated to him,
Mesrop Mashtots,
Yeghishe,
Movses Khorenatsi,
David the Invincible, and
Nerses Shnorhali, it was declared a national holiday in Armenia in 2001. The exact date of his canonization by the Armenian Church is unknown, but he was already recognized as a saint by 1173, when
Nerses of Lambron (Lambronatsi) included, in the earliest extant manuscript of the
Book of Lamentations, a biographical section on him entitled "The Life of the Holy Man of God Grigor Narekatsi". His contemporary, historian
Ukhtanes (c. 940-1000) called Gregory a "Universal
vardapet" (). In the 15th century, when the
Catholicosate of Aghtamar was at the center of efforts to revive Armenian statehood, monks at the
Cathedral of Aghtamar sought to construct a tradition that would link the Catholicosate to Gregory. One such tradition claimed that Gregory himself had founded the Catholicosate. In ritual books commissioned by Zakaria III and Stepanos IV Tegha, Gregory is depicted more than just
equal-to-the-apostles. A relic of Gregory is preserved at the Treasury Museum of the
Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin. Recently, it was brought out to
Etchmiadzin Cathedral for the feast of the Holy Translators on 13 October 2012 and for the
foot washing and oil blessing ceremony on
Holy Thursday on 9 April 2020. Several churches built in Armenia in the 21st century have been named after him. The St. Gregory of Narek Armenian Apostolic Church in
Richmond Heights, Ohio, near
Cleveland, was built in 1964.
Catholic Church 's Mother House at
San Lazzaro degli Armeni,
Venice. The
Armenian Rite has always been practiced to some degree in the
Catholic Church. For example, even though the
Monastery of Narek was founded by Armenian monks fleeing
religious persecution in
Cappadocia under the
Byzantine Emperor
Romanus Lecapenus, the monks of Narek, including Gregory himself, were repeatedly accused of involvement in the Tsayt movement—a school of thought within the Armenian Apostolic Church that accepted the teachings of the
Council of Chalcedon while continuing to offer the
liturgy in
Classical Armenian. To Armenians who viewed the Chalcedon as a contradiction of
Cyril of Alexandria and therefore as
heresy, the Tsayts were accused of being "Greeks but with an Armenian tongue", and even as "half, insufficient, or inadequate Armenians". Meanwhile, criticisms by Gregory of the
Tondrakians—a
Paulician breakaway sect regarded by both
Oriental Orthodox and
Chalcedonian Churches as heretics—have survived, but no similar criticisms of the Council of Chalcedon, the
papacy, or of the Tsayts are known to exist by his hand. This would become important centuries later, when the
Mekhitarist Order was founded by
Mkhitar Sebastatsi as part of a wider movement within the Armenian Apostolic Church towards acceptance of the Council of Chalcedon and reunification with the
Holy See. Encouraged by French
Jesuit and
Capuchin missionaries in the
Ottoman Empire, this movement eventually resulted in both the 1707 martyrdom of
Gomidas Keumurdjian and the 1742 formation of the
Patriarchate of Cilicia to head the
Armenian Catholic Church. For many reasons, Gregory and
Nerses Shnorhali were the only two post-Chalcedon Armenian theologians used by the Mekhitarist monks to preach reunion through their publishing apostolate based at
San Lazzaro Island in
Venice. In his 1987 encyclical
Redemptoris Mater,
Pope John Paul II called Gregory "one of the outstanding glories of Armenia." On 18 February 1989, John Paul II established the Armenian Catholic Eparchy of Saint Gregory of Narek in Buenos Aires. John Paul II referred to him in several other addresses. Article 2678 of
Catechism of the Catholic Church, promulgated by John Paul II in 1992, mentions the tradition of prayer in Gregory's works. John Paul II also described Gregory as "one of
Our Lady's principal poets" and "the great doctor of the Armenian Church" in his 18 February 2001
Angelus address. Gregory was recognized officially in the revised 2001
Roman Martyrology and its updated 2004 edition. This recognition went largely unnoticed until his declaration as a
Doctor of the Church in 2015, causing some in Catholic media to state incorrectly that the declaration was an act of
equipollent canonization.
Doctor of the Church On 4 September 2014,
Nerses Bedros XIX Tarmouni, the Patriarch of Cilicia in the Armenian Catholic Church, appointed Archbishop
Levon Zekiyan of the Mekhitarist Order as
postulator, with orders to argue for Gregory of Narek being named a Doctor of the Church. Proof was demanded from Zekiyan that the Armenian Apostolic Church has never been
Monophysite and only rejected the Council of Chalcedon due to a misunderstanding over semantics. On 12 April 2015, on
Divine Mercy Sunday, during a Mass for the
centennial of the
Armenian genocide at
St. Peter's Basilica, Francis officially proclaimed Gregory as Doctor of the Church in the presence of Armenian President
Serzh Sargsyan, Catholicos of All Armenians
Garegin II, Catholicos of Cilicia
Aram I, and Armenian Catholic Patriarch Nerses Bedros XIX Tarmouni. In a 2023 address, Francis said of Gregory: "What is most striking about him is the universal solidarity of which he is an interpreter." Gregory is the 36th and the first Armenian Doctor of the Church. He is also the "second saint coming out of the
Eastern Church" to become a Doctor and the only Doctor "who was not in
communion with the Catholic Church during his lifetime." Gregory's recognition as a Doctor of the Church was commemorated by the
Vatican City state with a postage stamp put into circulation on 2 September 2015. On 5 April 2018, a two-meter-high bronze statue of Gregory, erected by , was unveiled at the
Vatican Gardens by
Mikayel Minasyan, Armenia's ambassador to the Holy See. The ceremony was also attended by Pope Francis, Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, and Armenian Apostolic leaders Garegin II and Aram I. In 2021 the
Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments established an optional memorial for Gregory on 27 February on the
General Roman Calendar. ==Legacy==