Early years Antoun, born
Antoun issa Khouri (, in
Damascus,
Syria) was the fourth of six children born to the late Wedad Elias Abraxia and Yssa Khouri. After completing his elementary education at the Orthodox School in Meedan, Syria, he entered the
Minor Seminary at
Balamand Monastery, near Tripoli, Lebanon, at the age of fourteen, where he met his lifelong friend, the future Metropolitan
Philip Saliba. At the Balamand Seminary he completed his junior and senior high school studies and then went on to receive his diploma in theology from the Balamand Theological Academy of Saint John of Damascus. On October 28, 1951, he was
ordained to the
diaconate by
Alexander III, the Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch and All the East, at the Patriarchal Cathedral of the Dormition of the Theotokos in Damascus. While a deacon at the
cathedral, he was instructor, then Dean of the Saint John of Damascus School. While in Damascus, he undertook undergraduate studies at the
Assiyat Orthodox College from which he was graduated in 1957. In the same year he was assigned to the
Antiochian Orthodox Archdiocese of Brazil, where he served at the Metropolitan Cathedral of Saint Paul and as secretary to Metropolitan
Ignatius Forzley of São Paulo.
Graduate education and priesthood In 1959 Antoun arrived in United States for graduate theological studies at
St. Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary near New York City, from which he graduated in 1962, having been ordained to the
priesthood on May 29, 1960, by Metropolitan
Antony Bashir, the Archbishop of New York and all North America. On August 3, 1969, he was elevated to the dignity of
Archimandrite by Metropolitan
Philip Saliba. As a priest he served the following pastorates: St. George Church in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; St. George Church in Toronto, Ontario; St. George Church in Allentown, Pennsylvania and St. Nicholas Cathedral in Brooklyn, New York. From 1969 to 1977, he worked from the Archdiocesan chancery in Englewood, New Jersey, as personal aide to Metropolitan Philip.
Episcopacy The General Assembly of the Archdiocese of North America, consisting of
clergy and
lay delegates from
parishes throughout the United States and Canada, nominated Archimandrite Antoun for the office of
auxiliary bishop to the Metropolitan on August 1, 1981, and the
Holy Synod of the
Patriarchate of Antioch and All the East elected him to that office at a session in Damascus, Syria, on November 4, 1982, as
titular bishop of Selefkia. He was consecrated to the episcopacy on January 9, 1983, at St. Nicholas Cathedral in Brooklyn, New York, by Metropolitan Philip Saliba of North America; Archbishop
Michael Shaheen of Toledo, the Auxiliary of the Archdiocese of North America; Archbishop
Elias Saliba, the superior of the
Patriarchal Monastery of St. George (Tel-Kalakh, Syria); Bishop
Paul Bandaly, the Patriarchal Vicar (now Metropolitan of Akkar, Lebanon); and Bishop
Antonio Chedraoui, the Patriarchal Legate for the Diocese of Mexico and Central America. By a decision of the
Holy Synod of the Patriarchate dated October 9, 2003, he became a diocesan bishop bearing the title of
Bishop of Miami and the Southeast. Antoun maintains his office and residence at the Archdiocesan Chancery in Englewood, New Jersey, although he has a secondary residence in Florida ==Death==