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Athenagoras in the ruins of the church of Saint Constantine
'His All Holiness Athenagoras I, by the grace of God, Archbishop of Constantinople New Rome and Ecumenical Patriarch' (
Greek: ''Πατριάρχης Αθηναγόρας'', born 'Aristokles Spyrou' / ''Αριστοκλής Σπύρου'') (
March 25,
1886 -
July 6/
7,
1972) was the 268th
Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople from
1948 to
1972.
Life
Patriarch Athenagoras was born Aristokles Spyrou in
Vasilikón, near
Ioannina,
Epirus,
Greece, on
March 25, 1886, the son of the village doctor. His mother died when he was only 13. He attended the
Patriarchical Theological School at Halki, Turkey, graduating in 1910. Upon graduating he was
ordained to the diaconate taking the name Athenagoras. He served as
archdeacon of the Diocese of Pelagonia before becoming the secretary to
Archbishop Meletius (Metaxakis) of Athens in 1919. He was raised to the episcopacy as the Metropolitan of Corfu in 1922 while still a deacon.
Returning from a fact-finding trip to the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese in America in 1930,
Metropolitan Damaskinos recommended to
Pat. Photios II that he appoint Metr. Athenagoras to the position of Archbishop of North and South America as the best person to bring harmony to the American diocese. The patriarch made the appointment on
August 30, 1930.
When Abp. Athenagoras assumed his new position on
February 24, 1931, he was faced with the task of bringing unity and harmony to a diocese that was racked with dissension between Royalists and
Venizelists who had virtually divided the country into independent dioceses. To correct this he centralized the eccelesiastical administration in the Archdiocese offices with all other bishops serving as auxiliaries, appointed to assist the archbishop, without dioceses and administrative rights of their own. He actively worked with his communities to establish harmony. He expanded the work of the clergy-laity congresses and founded the
Holy Cross School of Theology. Through his capable leadership he withstood the early opposition and gained the love and devotion of his people.
On
November 1, 1948, Abp. Athenagoras was elected Patriarch of Constantinople. He was honored to be flown to Istanbul to assume his new position in the personal airplane of the American president Harry Truman. As patriarch, he was actively involved with the
World Council of Churches and improving relations with the Bishop of Rome.
He died in
Istanbul (Constantinople) on July 7, 1972.
Legacy

Paavi and patriarch Athenagoras I and Pope Paul VI in Jerusalem in 1964.
His meeting with
Pope Paul VI in
1964 in
Jerusalem led to rescinding the 1054 excommunications of the
Great Schism. This was a significant step towards restoring communion between Rome and Constantinople. It produced the Catholic-Orthodox Joint declaration of 1965, which was read out on
December 7, 1965, simultaneously at a public meeting of the Second Vatican Council in Rome and at a special ceremony in
Istanbul. The declaration did not end the 1054 schism, but showed a desire for greater reconciliation between the two churches, represented by
Pope Paul VI and Ecumenical Patriarch Athenagoras I. Nevertheless, not all Orthodox leaders at the time were happy with this Catholic-Orthodox Joint declaration, e.g., Metr.
Philaret's 1965 epistle to the patriarch.
Equally unpopular to both Orthodox and the Papacy was his acceptance of the special relationship that exists between the Orthodox, specifically Greek, and the
Melkite Greek Catholic Church, wherein the
Melkites never severed their ties with the Orthodox, and consider their church an especially unique bridge between the separated Churches due to its Patriarchal nature, and the culture of the Near East where the Great Schism is treated by the laity and many clergy as if it had never happened.
Source
★
Athenagoras I (Spyrou) of Constantinople, an OrthodoxWiki article
External links
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Catholic-Orthodox Joint declaration of 1965
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A Protest to Patriarch Athenagoras On the Lifting of the Anathemas of 1054 by Metr. Philaret of New York (December 2/15, 1965)
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Another Common Declaration of Pope Paul VI and the Ecumenical Patriarch Athenagoras I dated
28 October 1967
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Remembering Patriarch Athenagoras
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Athenagoras I at Find-A-Grave