Από σήμερα αρχίζουν οι τρεις ημέρες πένθους στην
Ιερά Αρχιεπισκοπή Θυατείρων και Μ.Β. Είναι ημέρες αποχαιρετισμού του πρώην
Ποιμενάρχη μας μακ. Αρχιεπισκόπου κυρού Γρηγορίου.
Archbishop Gregorios. Photo by Alexios Gennaris. |
Ο αγαπητός φίλος μας Rev’d Canon Dr William Taylor, Πρόεδρος του Διαχριστιανικού
Οργανισμού Anglican
& Eastern Churches Association έγραψε μια Νεκρολογία για τον κοιμηθέντα
Αρχιεπίσκοπο και τη δημοσίευσε στις 29 Νοεμβρίου τ.έ. στην επίσημη εφημερίδα
της Αγγλικανικής Κοινωνίας Church Times!
H Νεκρολογία έχει ως εξής:
HIS
Eminence Archbishop Gregorios (born Gregorios Theocharous Hadjitofi), a former
Archbishop of Thyateira & Great Britain, died at 7am on Wednesday 20
November, aged 91.
Born in the
village of Marathovounos, in Cyprus on 28 October 1928, he was the ninth and
last child of Maria and Theocharis Hadjitofi, who died when Gregorios was three
years old. After completing his primary education at the village school, the
11-year-old Gregorios became an apprentice shoemaker in his brother-in-law’s
shop, working there for the next eight years. At the age of 20, he was accepted
in secondary school; he enrolled in 1949 at the Higher Commercial School of
Lefkoniko. In 1951, he transferred to the Pan-Cypriot Gymnasium in Nicosia, and
was ordained deacon in 1953 in St Sava’s, Nicosia, by the late Archbishop
Makarios III.
His
ecclesiastical life and career thus begun, he graduated from the Gymnasium in
1954 and was enrolled in the Theological School of the University of Athens,
but, before receiving his university degree in 1959, he was sent to serve at
All Saints’ in Camden, London. He was ordained priest by the Archbishop of
Thyateira, Athenagoras (Kavvadas), later that year.
In 1964, he
was appointed Chancellor of the Archdiocese of Thyateira, and, in 1970, was
consecrated Bishop of Tropaiou, administering St Mary’s Cathedral and St
Barnabas the Apostle in Wood Green, north London. In 1988, he was unanimously
elected by the Sacred Synod of the Ecumenical Patriarchate as Archbishop of
Thyateira & Great Britain, thus beginning a 30-year archiepiscopate,
throughout which he was Orthodox Patron of the Anglican and Eastern Churches
Association. It was during this time that he rose to national and international
recognition as the “face of Orthodoxy” in these islands.
Neither the
bare bones of a long and well-lived life, nor the recording of ecclesiastical
honours convey personality. It was this which made Archbishop Gregorios stand
out, and at the same time drew people to him. He was not impressed by high
rank, wealth, or power, and never dismissed people at the opposite end of the
spectrum.
A close
friend of Archbishop Gregorios recalled arriving at his residence very early
one morning to go out on an official engagement with him to find the
rubbish-collecting van outside the house and hearing laughter from behind the
van. There was Archbishop Gregorios, laughing and joking with the rubbish
collectors, acknowledging their humanity and the dignity of their work. At the
same time, he acted as spiritual adviser to the high-born, including royalty.
As
Archbishop, he never became remote, grand or bureaucratic. Whenever I needed to
speak to him I did, and never had to make an appointment with the PA to the PA
to the PA. As a Bishop, he cared about clergy - not only his own, but also
others not of his own Church. When I had trouble of my own, it was to him I
turned, knowing that I would be given the time and the wisdom I needed, with no
“note on the file” culture. At Christmas, I would often find a simple gift on
my doorstep (homemade Cypriot marmalade was a favourite) with a note from him.
The human connection was always there, especially in his capacity to make the
person to whom he was talking feel like the most important person in the room.
Unusually, he combined high ecclesiastical office with great spiritual wisdom
and human warmth.
He was the
right Archbishop for the right times, overseeing the rapid growth of the Greek
Orthodox Church in the UK from less than 100 parishes and monasteries at the
time of his appointment as Archbishop to 125 at the time of his retirement and
subsequent death in 2019 - In the last decade, more than 100,000 Greeks arrived
to live in the UK. He was also dedicated to the many church schools in the
Archdiocese, always supporting and encouraging the staff and students by his
frequent visits. During this time, Orthodoxy (in its many forms) became part of
the mainstream expression of the Christian faith in this country, and latterly no
national event seemed complete without his presence.
His final
days were, by his own lights, too long. As he lay confined to bed, he expressed
the hope that he was ready to die, while still retaining the wisdom for which
he was known for those around him. An Anglican Bishop who was close to him
visited him in his final days and asked for his blessing, which he gave. When
told that his visitor would be ordaining deacons the next day, his eyes lit up
and he said, “Deacons - the meaning of the ordained ministry.”
Archbishop
Gregorios embodied the orthodox Christian belief, expressed through the
Orthodox Church, that our full humanity will be revealed only after the death
of our physical body. It is that full humanity which he has now entered close
to His Lord and ours.
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