Brief
Biography of Our Catholicos in Etchmiadzin
His Holiness KAREKIN II was born in
1951 in the village of Voskehat, near Etchmiadzin, and baptized Ktrij
Nersissian.
He entered the seminary of Holy Etchmiadzin in 1965, graduating with honors in 1971. For a year after graduation he taught at
the seminary. He was ordained as a deacon in 1970 and a monk (celibate priest)
in 1972, at which time he received the priestly name Karekin.
Shortly thereafter, His Holiness Vasken I (Catholicos of All Armenians, 1956-1994) sent the new priest
to Vienna to study theology. In 1975, Fr. Nersissian moved to Germany, where he studied and
graduated from Bonn University while serving as pastor
to the local Armenian community. Following a brief return to Armenia, he enrolled in
postgraduate studies at the Russian Orthodox Academy in Zagorsk, Russia, from which he graduated
in 1979.
In March 1980, he entered the
service of the Araratian Pontifical Diocese, the
Armenian Church's most populous diocesan jurisdiction, which incorporates the
capital, Yerevan, and the vicinity of the Mother See
of Holy Etchmiadzin. Appointed head of that diocese
in June 1983, he was elevated to the rank of Bishop on October 23rd of that
year, by the hand of His Holiness Vasken I. Catholicos Vasken granted him the
title of Archbishop in November 1992.
He was elected the Supreme Patriarch
and Catholicos of All Armenians on October 27, 1999, when more than 450 delegates from
Armenian Church jurisdictions around the world met in a National Ecclesiastical
Assembly at Holy Etchmiadzin, the Church's Mother
See, located in the Republic of Armenia. As the 132nd in a
continuous line of Catholicoi dating back to the
Fourth Century, Catholicos Karekin
II presides over the Supreme Spiritual Council (the Armenian Church's governing
college of bishops), and is the chief shepherd of the world's 7 million
Armenian Apostolic Christians.
He has been notable for using
technology, especially television broadcasts, as a tool of evangelism and
outreach.