AGATHANGELOS
History of St. Gregory and the 
Conversion of Armenia
Introduction
Though we cannot date Agathangelos' History 
precisely, we know that it was written earlier than the tenth century, and most 
likely did not receive its final form before the year 450. There are several 
versions of the History, and there is also at least one other Armenian 
account of Saint Gregory's life which differs considerably from Agathangelos' in 
the facts and details its presents.
The name "Agathangelos" (which in Greek appropriately 
means "good news") is probably fictional, even though the writer introduces 
himself in the Prologue as a man from the great city of Rome who is well versed in 
literary skills and knows several languages. The Prologue also tells us that 
Agathangelos was an eyewitness to the events he describes. It is unlikely that 
this is true, especially because some of the words he uses are taken directly 
from the life of Mesrob Mashdotz written by that great monk's student, Koriun 
(about which you can read in the first volume of this 
series).
What, then, is this History? It is a piece of 
hagiography (a biography of a saint, written usually with affection and 
admiration rather than impartial judgment) which contains many of the 
traditional characteristics of that genre. It is customary for a hagiographer to 
say he witnessed the events he writes about, for example. It is also typical for 
the writer to describe the saints' tortures at the hands of pagans in great 
detail, as Agathangelos does here. The long public prayers which Gregory recites 
as he is being tortured, and his seeming imperviousness to the pain being 
inflicted on him, are typical of the descriptions in many lives of saints. 
Another thing that often appears, as it does here, is a "text" of an 
anti-Christian edict that a pagan king makes when the Christians threaten his 
price and power.
If so much of the History, including its writer's 
name, is fictitious, how can we accept it as a piece of history? What does it 
offer to the modern reader? In fact it offers a very great deal. Agathangelos 
does give us a history of Gregory's life and times; the people and events he 
writes about really existed and had a great impact on the life of the Christian 
Church and the Armenian people.
But we cannot look at this History as merely an 
impartial recording of events, for it was not written to be that. Agathangelos 
has produced an account which is meant to describe Christian faith and its 
powerful effects, and to inspire those who read it to greater faith. We can see 
this in many of the History's characteristics. First, the biblical 
references and similes are innumerable. The prologue uses the nautical imagery 
so popular in Agathangelos' time, and ties it directly to the Bible's story of 
the search for the pearl of great price. The long prayers of Gregory and of 
Hripsime are filled with Biblical phrases and references of those who preceded 
them in suffering and enduring for the Lord.
Even when Agathangelos describes well-known events, he 
borrows from the Bible. Diocletian's persecution of the Church is talked about 
completely in Bible images, with no reference to any actual events. Gregory is 
nourished in the terrible pit as Elijah was; Drtad's bestial transformation 
recalls that of Nebuchadnezzar. There are also countless references to 
liturgical and patristic writings, and it is unfortunate that we modern readers 
miss so many of these. Agathangelos presumed on the part of his readers an 
intimate familiarity with the Scriptures, Liturgy, and spiritual writings that 
most of us today simply do not possess.
Agathangelos had a purpose in mind as he wrote about 
Gregory. That purpose is reflected in some of the differences in emphasis 
between Agathangelos' work about the saint and the work of others. For example, 
Movses Khorenatsi gives us much more detail about Gregory's origins, and tries 
to tie him to the first enlightener, Thaddeus. In general, he gives more detail 
about all aspects of Gregory's life than Agathangelos does. But Agathangelos is 
not interested in establishing an apostolic tie for Gregory, or presenting his 
life in detail. His purpose is mainly to enhance Gregory's role as the first 
bishop, first church builder, and first establisher of a hierarchy in the 
Armenian Church. He wants to show the importance of the hierarchical structure 
of the Church, and emphasize the authority of the patriarch's position, and this 
he does by tying both to the great saint so highly venerated in the 
Church.
Central to this effort is Agathangelos' description of 
Gregory's vision of the burial place of the martyrs. Gregory is shown a golden 
base where the cathedral at Vagharshapat (later Etchmiadzin) is to be built. 
Thus Agathangelos establishes a divine foundation for the cathedral and for the 
church leaders who will reside there  so again, he makes a case for the 
"rightness" of the hierarchs and the hierarchical structure of the 
Church.
The History is, as we have said, hagiographical. 
To some people this means that its value is diminished because of it is 
invented, some facts are embroidered, and the writer is consciously trying to 
make his subject "look good." In many modern dictionaries of saints' lives, you 
will see events dismissed impatiently as "merely legendary" or "invented by a 
pious biographer." But we must remember that historical writing is always 
interpretive. Nobody can write about things that happened and not assign some 
meaning to them. And the truth is that the Christian saints and martyrs did 
stand up against the most powerful rulers the earth had ever known, so powerful 
that they were traditionally considered to be divine. The truth is that saints 
changed the world in ways that nobody else has ever done, and that they are 
known throughout the world despite the absence of "advanced" communications 
equipment in their time. They were persecuted by hard-headed kings; they 
did change history; they did bring whole nations to 
Christ.
Agathangelos wrote as those of his day wrote. It is not 
the way we write today, and perhaps we can grumble that he did not "stick to the 
facts." But if we believe that the greatest fact is Christ and His salvation, 
then the History is a factual work. It does give us the truth, for all 
the people in it lived through the things it describes. But it gives us that 
truth in light of the coming of Christ. In all the world, there is no brighter 
or clearer light than that to illumine the truth.
Prologue
The 
fervent wish of sailors, as their journey nears its end, is to reach port 
safely. So amidst surging billows and tempestuous winds they spur on their 
steeds made of wood and iron and held together by nails. They fly over the 
mounting waves until, finally escaping the troubled waters, they race to their 
homelands. They tell their loved ones how they braved the fearful tumult of the 
sea in order to come back home with the spoils of their perilous sea journey. 
With their profits they settle debts, free their families from servitude to 
kings and overlords, and make a name for themselves as being generous and 
rich.
Such 
people risk their lives not because they are greedy, but because they really 
want to make their lives better. Some of them then use their wealth for their 
country's good. They give the king treasures of every description. They create 
jobs for the poor; from their sea journeys they bring back new and wonderful 
things such as herbs that are beneficial to health. And for this they are 
willing to put themselves at the mercy of the sea, and allow the tumultuous 
winds to plot their course.
Like 
them, the one who writes this history now sets sail on the perilous sea of 
wisdom. Like them, the writer is at the mercy of another power  that of the 
princes who command that an account of past events should be written. It is 
impossible to oppose royal commands, so here is the history, written to show 
forth the glory of God's workers, the saints. They shine like the priceless 
pearls, adorning the crowns of kings and consoling, refreshing, enlightening 
even the poorest in the kingdoms. They give rest and hope to the work-worn, and 
enrich the land by their prayers. They are guideposts on the road to God's 
Kingdom. They were tortured and died for God, and they gained life, leaving the 
fruits of their triumph for us to enjoy. They fed the hungry, clothed the naked, 
and opened the gates of Christ's compassion to all of us.
They 
battled through the sea of sin, and when they reached the heavenly port they 
offered the King of Light their prayers for us. Through their intercession we 
receive God's mercy and love. And what can we offer to be worthy of such a gift? 
Only a heart ready to hear God's word. If we bow our heads we will receive the 
spiritual crown. If we merely wash ourselves of sin, we will be clothed with an 
everlasting shining garment that makes us more splendid than the lily. If we 
just let ourselves be thirsty for His love, a living spring will satisfy us 
eternally.
From 
these historical writings, readers may gain some spiritual wisdom. Therefore I 
have set them down, I, Agathangelos from the great city of Rome and trained in the 
art of the ancients, proficient in Latin and Greek, a not unskilled literary 
practitioner.
And 
so we come to the Arsacid court during the reign of Drtad, who has ordered me to 
narrate not a false account of his brave deeds, but what really happened in the 
battles, the plundering of provinces, the capture of towns, the struggles of men 
for renown or revenge. Here are the deeds of the brave King Khosrov, and the 
equally valorous exploits of his son Drtad, and the works of God's beloved 
martyrs who rose like stars to scatter the mist of darkness from this land of Armenia. These martyrs died for God's 
truth, and He had mercy on the land, showing miracles through one man who 
endured countless afflictions and then triumphed for Christ, even making the 
mighty Drtad accept a salvation he had known nothing about.
This 
history will tell how the teaching of the Gospel came to be honored in 
Armenia, by the king and then by all 
his subjects. We shall see how they undertook to destroy the pagan temples and 
establish the foundations of the Holy Church, and how they appointed a man as 
shepherd of the land and benefited by his teaching. We shall see how Drtad 
visited and made a covenant with Emperor Constantine, and returned to glory and 
honor, dedicating many places to God.
All 
this we shall relate in detail, with the teaching of St. Gregory who became 
bishop and inherited the patriarchal title as a champion of virtue  who he 
was, and from what descent and family he came.
Then, 
when future generations look to their past, they will open this book and come to 
know what happened. They will read how the Gospel was preached in 
Armenia, and how a man appointed by 
divine grace did teach and endure tortures, and how by his love for God the 
cults were crushed. They will read how the first churches were built, and how 
the people were pulled from the treacherous sea of sin by his 
preaching.
                                                                      Part 
1
Artashir, 
a Sassanian prince from the province of Stahr, put an end to the Parthian kingdom 
when he murdered the Parthian ruler Artavan. He had united the Persian forces, 
and now they rejected Parthian sovereignty and chose him as their 
leader.
Khosrov, 
king of the Armenians, was greatly distressed by this news and soon took up arms 
to avenge Artavan's death. He gathered Albanian and Georgian forces, and called 
on the Huns to invade Persian territory. Khosrov and his armies ravaged the 
land, destroying towns and cities, trying to overthrow the Persian kingdom and 
wipe out its civilization. Even though the Parthians refused to help him, having 
attached themselves to Artashir, Khosrov was able to inflict devastating losses 
on the Persians.
Then 
Khosrov returned victoriously to the Armenian city of Vagharshapat to celebrate 
his conquests and reward his soldiers, whom he showered with gifts and sent 
home. He also honored his family's ancestral worship sites, with white oxen, 
white rams, white horses and mules, and he gave a fifth of all his plundered 
booty to the priests. He similarly honored the temples of the idol-worshipping 
cults throughout the land.
The 
following year, still full of his intoxicating victory, Khosrov called his 
armies together again, and for the next ten years they freely plundered all the 
far-reaching lands under Persian rule. So completely did they scatter the 
enemy's forces that finally the Persian king could stand it no longer. He called 
together all the governors, princes, generals, and nobles of his kingdom, and 
said to them: "If a man can be found to take vengeance against this bloody 
Khosrov, I will elevate him to the second rank in the kingdom. Only I will be 
above him, no matter how humble or honorable his origin. I will bestow gifts and 
rewards without measure upon him  if only he will avenge 
me!"
Among 
the king's council was a leading Parthian chieftain named Anak. He stood up, 
strode forward, and offered to carry out the king's wish. And the king said to 
him: "If you can manage this, Anak, I shall honor you with a crown." Anak agreed 
to the plan, asking only that the king look after the rest of his family during 
his absence.
Then 
he and his brother, along with their wives and children, made their way to 
Armenia. Anak presented himself to 
King Khosrov at the winter quarters in Khalkhal, saying he was emigrating to 
Armenia in revolt against the Persian 
king. Khosrov received him gladly, honored him, and passed the long winter days 
with him in good cheer and happiness.
But 
when spring came, thoughts of the Persian king's promises stirred in Anak's 
mind. He began to yearn for his own country of Pahlav. So he made a plan with 
his brother, and together they got Khosrov alone as if they wanted to speak with 
him. Then they raised their swords and struck the king dead.
When 
the Armenian princes realized what had happened, they split into groups to scour 
the countryside and find the killers. This they did, and cast them from a bridge 
into the swollen waters of the Araxes River. An then, according to the king's 
deathbed decree, they slaughtered the murderers' families. But two infant sons 
were saved by their nurses, one of whom fled with her charge to Persian and the 
other to Greek territory.
The 
Persian king rejoiced at his enemy's death. He took the opportunity to invade 
Armenia, correctly surmising that the 
stunned and grieving people would not offer much resistance. One of Khosrov's 
sons, Drtad, survived this terrible raid; his tutors took him to the emperor's 
court in Greek territory. Meanwhile, the Persian king imposed his own name on 
Armenia, sending the Greek army in 
retreat back to its own borders. He drove out the inhabitants of the land he had 
conquered and made it his own.
Drtad 
was raised and educated in the house of a count named Licinius. The other exile, 
Gregory, was raised as a devout Christian in Caesarea, capital of Cappadocia. In an effort to make amends for what his 
father had done, he offered himself to Drtad as a servant, without ever 
revealing his parentage. But Drtad had been taught to hate and persecute the 
Christian Church, and when he heard that Gregory belonged to it he made 
frightening threats, even imprisoning and tormenting Gregory in order to get him 
to renounce the worship of Christ, and worship instead the pagan gods of 
Armenia.
At 
about the same time, the king of the Goths sent a message to the Greek emperor. 
It said: "Why should both our countries suffer the devastation of war? Instead, 
let you and I come forth as the single champions of our armies, and fight. If I 
win, your Greeks will submit to my rule. And if you win, my people shall become 
your subjects."
The 
Greek king, not a physically strong man, was terrified by this proposal. He 
called all his troops and their commanders in from the fields of battle to meet 
with him. Among those answering the summons were the count, Licinius, and his 
soldiers, including Drtad. At a place where they camped overnight there was no 
forage available for the hungry horses. But there was a vast pile of hay locked 
in a pen with a wall so high that no one though it could be breached. No one, 
that is, except Drtad, who climbed over and tossed back heaps of hay until there 
was plenty for all the horses.
Licinius, 
amazed by this feat, hastened to meet with the emperor as soon as they reached 
him the next morning. He told the king what Drtad had done, and together they 
agreed that his young man from the family of the Armenian king must be the one 
to meet the challenge of the Goths. Drtad was called into the emperor's 
presence, and everything was explained to him. Having obtained his consent, the 
emperor arranged a duel for the very next morning.
So 
the "false emperor," dressed in royal purple and wearing the royal emblem, went 
out to meet the king of the Goths. He beat the king handily, and was duly 
honored by the Emperor. Drtad returned to Armenia with a 
great army. He beat back the Persians who had subdued his native land, and 
brought it under his own rule.
During 
the first year of his reign, Drtad and his courtiers visited a provincial town 
to sacrifice to the goddess Anahid in her temple there. He ordered Gregory to 
venerate her statue, and when Gregory refused Drtad asked him: "You have served 
me well these many years. Why in this one matter do you refuse to do my 
will?"
Gregory 
answered: "You speak truly. I have served you as God commands us to serve our 
earthly lords. But He alone is the creator of angels and men, of heaven and 
earth. We can worship only Him."
Drtad 
frowned and said: "By saying this you render all your service to me completely 
worthless. I shall punish rather than reward you as I had planned. It will be 
prison and bondage for you unless you honor the goddess Anahid."
Gregory 
replied: "My service to you is not worthless; God values it as He promised 
always to value our efforts for Him. It is He I seek to please. And if you 
punish me, I rejoice, for my lord Christ suffered affliction and death, and I 
will gladly follow Him into death so that I can be with Him in everlasting life. 
You speak of Anahit, and perhaps demons did once bedazzle men into building 
temples for them and worshipping them. But I will not worship lifeless objects 
of stone. We must worship the One who lives and gives life."
Drtad 
then asked Gregory to tell him more about this living One. Gregory proceeded to 
explain that Christ is the Lord of creation and the true light for those in the 
darkness of idolatry. He exhorted the king to use his intelligence and put away 
the mulishly stupid devotion to mere images.
Drtad 
exploded in anger. He shouted: "You have insulted the gods and insulted me by 
calling me stupid for worshipping them. You had the audacity to speak to me as 
if you were my equal. You said I was stupid as a mule; now you shall feel the 
burden of such words."
With 
that he ordered Gregory to be bound and strung up, with a muzzle over his mouth 
and a heavy block of salt hung on his back. After a week of this torture Gregory 
was brought before the kin, who said: "Now like a mule you have carried a load. 
But worse things can happen to you if you further insult our 
deities."
Gregory, 
however, had not been subdued by his suffering. He told the king that he did not 
mind tortures, and that only those who worship idols need fear the Lord's 
wrath.
So 
Drtad tortured him further, hanging him by one foot for seven days. But Gregory 
passed the time in prayer. He recalled in his prayer how God had prepared 
mankind for eternal life, a gift which we threw away with our disobedience. Yet 
God did not abandon us  rather He sent the prophets, and finally His own 
Son, to show us His will. Christ became the image of God so that we, who love to 
worship images, might finally worship the Truth. He gave us a wooden cross 
rather than wooden idols. He called us to sacrifice as Christ had sacrificed, 
and to partake of His body and blood as we had once eaten sacrificial 
animals.
After 
recalling these wonderful acts of God, Gregory asked Him for strength and grace 
to endure torments and to fight for the truth, receiving the crown promised to 
those who are steadfast. Then Gregory praised God's creation of the light and 
the darkness, with the sun and moon as their rulers. Finally, he prayed that his 
tormentors might be shown the truth, and turn from false worship, so that they 
could live everlastingly in God's Kingdom, along with those whose faith was 
always true.
Even 
this terrible torture, which broke his body, did not sway Gregory. After a week 
of it, he was again brought before Drtad, who asked him once more to pay homage 
to the idols. Gregory again refused, and Drtad submitted him to many more 
hideous tortures. But Gregory withstood them all and told the king: "I can 
endure all this not through my own power but by the Lord's grace. Now you will 
see that nothing can separate us from His love."
It 
was about this time that a prince of the court told Drtad that Gregory was the 
murderer Anak's son. Upon hearing this, Drtad ordered Gregory to be put in a 
deep pit until he died. As it turned out, Gregory would be there for thirteen 
years.
Part 2
King 
Drtad spent much of his reign devastating the Persian kingdom. One of the 
proverbial sayings of the Armenians was: "Like the haughty Drtad, who in his 
pride devastated the dikes of rivers and in his arrogance dried up the currents 
of seas." He was exceedingly brave and daring, and also very proud. While Drtad 
was thus flourishing, Gregory continued to survive, though still in a pit that 
had killed all others condemned to it because of the filth, the snakes, and the 
stench. But Gregory was secretly fed by a widow who had heard God command her in 
a dream to toss a loaf of bread into the pit each day. So the two men, each in 
his own way, were moving toward the day when they would meet 
again.
Drtad, 
still devoted to idol worship, remained an implacable foe of the Christian 
faith. He issued two edicts, one commanding his people to pay proper homage to 
the gods to insure that they would make Armenia prosper. The other edict 
instructed all citizens to reveal any members of the cult of Christians, because 
this cult was an insuperable obstacle to the proper worship of the gods. Drtad 
even threatened those who dared to hide Christians, and reminded his subjects of 
the severe way he had dealt with Gregory, a member of his own court. With 
Christians, there could be no leniency.
During 
these days the Emperor Diocletian was seeking a wife. He sent portrait painters 
out into the kingdom to find lovely women and bring back portraits of them, so 
that from these pictures he could choose a beautiful wife for 
himself.
The 
painters found, in the city, a group of nuns living a monastic life of constant 
prayer and ascetic fasting. Their abbess was named Gayane, and one of them, 
Hripsime, was very beautiful. The painters were quite taken with her, and rushed 
to complete her portrait to show to the king. He was so smitten that he 
immediately wanted to arrange a grand wedding. His arrogance and vanity led him 
to persecute the Christian churches in order to show his power over 
them.
This 
was all terribly upsetting to the nuns. They were saddened by the persecution of 
their fellow Christians, and worried by the king's unseemly interest in 
Hripsime. They prayed fervently to God that he would enable them, like the 
virgins in the parable, to keep their lamps filled with oil and that worldly 
cares would not distract them from His service. They asked for His protection 
against the pagan powers assailing them.
The 
women decided to flee, and that was how they came to be in Vagharshapat, the 
residence of the Armenian kings. They lived by selling the glass pearls which 
one of them made. But in the very same city, King Drtad received an emissary 
from Diocletian. He brought a royal edict which said: "Let my brother Drtad know 
of the evils that constantly beset us because of this error-ridden sect, the 
Christians. For they worship a dead man, adore a cross because he was crucified, 
and consider their own death on his behalf to be glory and honor. They teach 
dishonor for kings and hold as nothing the power of the sun and moon and stars. 
Everywhere among our people they discourage the worship of the gods, and our 
threats and punishments against hem are to no avail.
"I 
happened to see among them a lovely young girl, and wanted to have her as my 
wife. But she and her companions have insulted my majesty by fleeing to the 
regions of your kingdom.
"So, 
my brother, find them for me and take vengeance. Send her back to me  
unless you wish to keep her for yourself. And may you be well by the worship of 
the gods."
Drtad 
immediately ordered a search, and the nuns were soon found. For it was ordained 
by God that their light should not be hidden under a bushel, but shine out over 
the world. And since word of the emperor's edict had spread across the land, 
there were soon crowds of people straining to catch a glimpse of Hripsime's 
now-famous beauty. The nuns, whose only wish was to have a holy and solitary 
life, offered up constant prayers and lamentations to God.
Drtad, 
having heard from those who saw her that she was indeed a great beauty, sent a 
golden litter with attendants and filled with magnificent robes so that Hripsime 
could adorn herself and come to meet him in the palace. Seeing all this, the 
abbess Gayane told the younger woman: "Remember, my child, that you have 
abandoned your father's throne (for Hripsime was of royal lineage) and longed 
instead for the never-ending life of the Kingdom of Christ. Do not give up your choice now, 
and rish your holy virtue with these infidels."
Inspired 
by her abbess' words, Hripsime prayed intently, asking God to protect her as He 
had protected all the Old Testament people who faced danger. Her sisters prayed 
with her, and soon they heard a voice like thunder, assuring them of God's love 
and care. The thunderous sound caused panic among the throngs of people looking 
on  they trampled each other in their confusion. But when King Drtad was 
told what had happened, he was not at all frightened. He was furious that 
Hripsime would not come to him, and ordered that she be brought to the palace by 
force. So she was dragged along, with a great crowd following, and as she went 
she prayed that like Daniel and Susanna, she would be saved from her 
tormentors.
Drtad, 
seeing her at last, was enthralled by her beauty and tried with all his great 
strength to seduce her. But Hripsime, delicate as she was, struggled against him 
so hard that he could not overcome her. Exhausted by his efforts, he ordered the 
abbess Gayane to intercede with the young nun and tell her to accede. But Gayane 
took the opportunity instead to strengthen Hripsime in her resistance to the 
king. Drtad's attendants beat and threatened her, but she persisted in 
encouraging the younger woman to stand firm and trust in God.
Hripsime 
did so for many hours, and then finally escaped from the palace. She ran through 
the city to the nuns' dwelling place to tell them what had happened. Then she 
went out from the city to a high, sandy point near the main road to Artashat. 
There she thanked God for keeping her safe. She prayed that soon she might be 
allowed to leave the temptations of the world behind and enter, by His mercy, 
the heavenly realm. She thanked Him for the certainty that if torments were to 
come, He would be there with her. Hripsime ended her prayer with these words: 
"Let the light of the Lord God be over us."
That 
very night, Drtad's men came and tortured Hripsime to death. Other followers of 
Christ were also killed, and so were many of those who came to wrap and bury 
their bodies. But all of them prayed to God and thanked Him for making them 
worthy of martyrdom. The king's men dragged their bodies out and threw them as 
food for the prowling dogs.
Drtad 
was unashamed of what he had done. Indeed his heart was more inflamed against 
the Christians and especially against Gayane, who had counseled his wonderful 
Hripsime not to yield to him. He commanded that the abbess should be killed, and 
so she was taken to the place used for criminals' executions. But like her 
companions, Gayane was unafraid, and expressed her wish to join her sisters 
speedily. She died as they had, with a prayer on her lips.
King 
Drtad was not an introspective man, and after a week of grieving over Hripsime's 
death, he had to have some strenuous activity. He arranged to go hunting, and 
when the hounds and nets and traps and beaters were all ready, he climbed into 
his chariot to leave the city for the plain where he loved to 
hunt.
Suddenly, 
Drtad fell from the chariot, as if struck down by a demon. He began to rave and 
grunt, like an animal. As their king was crazed, so all the people suddenly 
seemed to be, and there was chaos and ruin throughout the city and from the 
highest to the lowest of the king's household.
But 
one person had a solution. The king's sister, Khosrovitookht, had a heavenly 
vision which told her that only the prisoner in the pit, Gregory, could end the 
terrible nightmare. At first people said she too was mad; Gregory must be dead 
after so many years in the awful place. But the vision came to her again and 
again, and each time it disturbed her more. So it was finally decided to send 
one of the young princes to Artashat. When he arrived, the prince convinced some 
people there to lower long ropes into the pit, and he called out: "Gregory, if 
you are down there, let us know!" They felt a tug on the rope, and pulled it up 
out of the pit. There was Gregory, his body blackened by dirt to the color of 
coal. The people helped him get clean, and brought clean clothing for him, and 
he was taken to Vagharshapat with joy and high hopes that he could remedy the 
situation there.
A 
pitiful sight greeted him in the great city  the people, raving and foaming 
at the mouth, rushed toward him like wild dogs. He knelt and prayed, and at once 
the people regained at least enough of their senses to listen to him. The king 
knelt before him and begged forgiveness. But Gregory pulled Drtad to his feet 
and said: "I am just a man like you. The One who has had mercy on you is your 
creator, the Lord and Creator of all things."
Gregory 
gathered up the remains of those who had been martyred  no dog had touched 
the bodies, and they were not decomposed  and he enshrouded them and took 
them to the nuns' former dwelling place. He spent that night praying for the 
salvation and repentance of the Armenian populace.
The 
next morning, Drtad and a great crowd of people came to see Gregory, and asked 
him: "Intercede with your God to save us, and not let us perish for all the 
crimes we have committed against you." For they realized that whenever he left 
them for a moment, the demons assailed them again.
Gregory 
answered: "You say 'your God,' but the One you speak of created all things and 
is your creator. Recognize Him, as Father, Son and Holy Spirit, and you will 
have everlasting life with Him. Do not be like those who, even though they are 
His creatures, fail to recognize Him.
"You 
see how much He loves those who believe in Him. He kept firm the maiden Hripsime 
so that she could fulfill her vow of chastity. Even to such an unworthy one as 
myself He gave the great privilege of suffering for His sake, and He granted me 
the endurance to survive.
"Now 
recognize Him, and throw off the yoke of evil. What you did to Hripsime and the 
others you did in ignorance. Ask them to pray to God for His mercy on you. Know 
God; put away your idols. He is long-suffering, pardoning, and nourishing in His 
mercy, and He cares for you all.
"God 
calls you; that is why He sent the martyrs to shine their light among you. They 
were witnesses to the majesty of the Trinity, and sealed their faith with 
martyrs' deaths. Recognize what they were showing you  that the Son of God 
humbled Himself in death so that we might be exalted. You tortured me, but my 
sufferings did not kill me; they exalted me instead. I endured so that, by His 
will, I could offer you spiritual healing. Now will you hear the teachings of 
the Lord?"
All 
the people fell down, and tore their clothes, and said that they did want to 
hear God's word so that they might live and be pardoned for the things they had 
done to Gregory. He began to teach them.
"You 
have seen the power of God. For who but the One who made all things could change 
their character as He wishes to? Yet God changed the poisonous snakes in the pit 
into harmless creatures for your sake  so that I, his unworthy servant, 
would be saved and you would see the power of His miracles. And you saw a young 
girl defeat a powerful giant of a man, your king. She was martyred so that you 
might be healed. These are God's mighty works, done for your 
sake.
            
"And if you will turn to Him, then I shall gladly tell you how He made the world 
and showed Himself in it. For even though we cannot know Him, being only 
creatures, still He sent men called prophets to tell of eternal and divine life. 
They were men of the pious race of Hebrews, the seed of Abraham who is called 
the father of all races. Among these luminous men who spread God's words was one 
called Moses. He handed down tru knowledge through the generations. So by the 
grace of the Spirit will I also try to teach you, trusting that He will place 
the proper words in my mouth. Let us begin."
Part 3
So 
Gregory taught the people about God and His desires for our salvation. Then he 
urged the people to build chapels for the martyrs, as a way of showing reverence 
for God and in order that the saints' intercessory prayers would enlighten them. 
He encouraged them to fast, study, and pray to become ready for baptism, and 
become worthy partakers in God's life and His eternal Kingdom. Having said all 
this, he sent them home to get a good night's rest before beginning the work of 
building the martyrs' sanctuaries.
But 
King Drtad and the nobles would not leave Gregory's side because they were still 
fearful and tormented. Day and night they fasted and sat on ashes, dressed in 
hair shirts. Gregory used the time  for they were like this for sixty-five 
days  to tell them the whole long history of God's salvation for mankind. 
Many other people also came to hear Gregory's tales of the saints and his 
explanations of the word of God. They were a huge crowd, attentive and filled 
with wonder at what they were hearing.
On 
the morning of the sixty-sixth day, the king and nobles and the crowd with them 
approached Gregory and begged him to free them entirely from the torments which 
had beset them all this time. The king especially was eager for this, because 
his form was still more like a beast's than a man's. But it was God's will not 
yet to heal them completely, and to give them only enough understanding to 
comprehend Gregory's teaching. One way he taught them was by describing a 
wonderful vision which had come to him, concerning the chapels for the 
martyrs.
Gregory 
said: "One night I heard a fearful thunderous sound like roaring sea waves. The 
firmament of heaven opened, and a man descended in the form of light. He called 
my name; I looked up and saw him and fell to the ground, struck by terror. But 
he commanded me to look up and see great wonders.
"I 
did look up, and saw the firmament opened with the waters above it divided as is 
the firmament itself. The waters were like valleys and mountaintops, with 
infinite expanses that went far out of sight. Light flowed down to the earth, 
and the light was filled with shining two-winged creatures, human in appearance 
and with wings like fire. Their leader was a tall and fearful man who carried a 
golden hammer. He flew down near the ground in the middle of the city, and 
struck the earth. The rumbling sounded even in the depths of hell, and as far as 
the eye could see the earth was struck as level as a plain.
"I 
saw him in the middle of the city, near the palace, a circular base of gold as 
big as a hill, with a column of fire on it. On top of the column was a capital 
of clouds, and above that a cross of light. There were three other bases at the 
sites where St. Gayane and St. Hripsime were martyred, and one near the wine 
press where the nuns lived. These bases were blood-red, and they had columns of 
clouds and capitals of fire. From the columns, marvelous vaults fitted into one 
another and above this was a dome-shaped canopy of clouds. Under the canopy were 
thirty-seven holy martyrs in shining light  I cannot even describe 
them.
"At 
the summit of all this was a wonderful throne of fire with the Lord's cross 
above it. Light spread out in every direction from it. And an abundant spring 
gushed forth, flowing over and filling the plains as far as one could see. They 
made a vast bluish sea, the color of heaven. There were numerous fiery altars 
shining like stars, with a column on each altar and a cross on each 
column.
"There 
were herds of black goats, which when they passed through the water became 
sparkling white sheep. They gave birth to more sheep, filling the land. But some 
of these crossed to the other side of the water and became brown wolves which 
attacked the flocks. But the flocks grew wings and flew up to join the shining 
host, and a torrent of fire carried away the wolves.
"I 
stood amazed at this sight. And the man who had earlier called my name and said: 
"Why do you stand gaping? Pay attention to what is being revealed to you. The 
heavens have been opened! Here is what the vision means. The voice like thunder 
is the beginning of God's mercy raining down upon mankind. The gates of heaven 
are opened, and also the waters above them. There is nothing to keep us mortals 
from rising up, for those who were martyred here have made a path for 
others.
"'The 
light filling the land is the preaching of the Gospel, and the fearsome man is 
the providence of God, who looks on the earth and it trembles, who touches the 
mountains and they smoke, as the psalm tells us. This fear of God has flattened 
and destroyed error on the earth.
"'The 
golden base is God's true Church, gathering all His people, and the shining 
cross above it is Christ Himself. The three blood-red bases are the martyrs' 
torments. But the columns of cloud show how quickly they will rise to heaven at 
the universal resurrection. The capital is fiery because they will love in the 
fire of divine light. And the crosses show that they are fellow sufferers with 
their lord Christ.
"'The 
vaults joining the columns show the unity of the Church, and the cloud canopy 
above shows the gathering place of all believers, the celestial city. The 
throne, above which the whole structure is held together, is almighty God, the 
head of the Church. The shining light around the throne is the Holy Spirit, who 
glorifies the Son. The spreading waters are the grace of the Spirit, which will 
save many through baptism and make earth like heaven (that is why the plains 
became the color of heaven.) The herds of goats are sinners, washed clean by 
God's mercy, and worthy of His Kingdom. The flocks of sheep give birth because 
many generations will hear the preaching of the Word; but the flocks that became 
wolves are like those who depart from the truth. They lead sheep astray with 
their falsehoods. But the sheep that endure will rise to Christ's Kingdom, and 
the wolves will be handed over to eternal fire.'"
Gregory 
continued: "And when he had told me the vision's meaning, he said to be strong 
because I had a great task. I was to build a temple to God on the place where 
the gold base had been shown to me, and the martyrs' chapels in the places where 
they suffered and died. After he told me all this, there was an earthquake, and 
I could see him no more.
"God 
showed me this vision of the future so that I could do His will among you. Let 
us go now and build the chapels, giving the martyrs rest."
"So 
all the people took up tools, and gathered materials, and set to work. Gregory 
himself took the architect's measuring line and laid out the foundations. They 
built three chapels, and made a casket for each saint's body. After Gregory had 
sealed the caskets, the king and people brought sweet oils and incense and rich 
robes. But Gregory said: "I am glad to see you honor these saints. But do not 
offer gifts to the holy ones until you have been purified by baptism. One day, 
we shall use all these beautiful things to adorn God's altar. But until true 
worship is established in this land, let them remain in the royal 
treasury."
The 
time had come for the king and all the people to be completely freed from their 
tormenting demons. Gregory knelt by the saints' caskets and prayed for Drtad and 
all the rest. Then he turned to the king, and by Christ's grace cured his hands 
and feet enough so that he was able with his own hands to dig graves and bury 
the caskets in them. His wife Ashkhen and sister Khosrovitookht helped him to 
arrange the places. With his prodigious strength Drtad carried stones from 
Mount 
Massis to make thresholds 
for the chapels.
When 
the chapels were ready, the martyrs were laid to rest in them. Gregory placed a 
cross in front of each, and told the people that the proper place for worship 
was in front of that saving sign of Jesus Christ. Then he took them to build a 
high wall around the place where the golden base had been revealed, for that was 
to be the site of the Lord's house. There too, a cross was placed so that people 
could worship God truly.
Gregory 
could see that the people were willing to heed his words, give up idol worship, 
and give themselves to study, fasting, and prayer. He gathered them to pray 
together for healing, and as they all prayed the king was fully restored to his 
human appearance, and the people were freed from their various afflictions. The 
news of this wonder spread through the land, inspiring people everywhere to come 
to Ayrarat and hear about Jesus Christ, and learn how to live as He calls us to 
do.
Gregory 
then asked the king for permission to overthrow and detroy the pagan shrines and 
temples. Drtad readily issued an edict entrusting Gregory with this task, and 
himself set out from the city to destroy shrines along the highways. Together 
the men worked feverishly, and they distributed the temple treasures among the 
poor. In all the cities he visited, Gregory marked sites for Christian churches, 
but because he did not hold the rank of priest he did not erect any altars. At 
each place he set a cross, and he also placed crosses along roads and at squares 
and intersections.
Drtad 
and his family members were then thoroughly instructed in the faith by Gregory. 
When they had all been convinced to worship the only true God, Gregory and Drtad 
began traveling to other parts of the country to instruct the people and to 
destroy the altars of the false gods. In many of the provincial towns, demons in 
the form of armed soldiers fought against the evangelist's efforts. They were 
put to flight each time, and then Gregory would tell the people not to be 
afraid, but to drive out their own personal demons of false worship, and follow 
Christ. He performed miracles to show the people how loving and powerful God is. 
And the king gave testimony about his sinful acts, and the miracles and mercy of 
healing which God had shown him.
So 
they traveled through the provinces and everywhere they spread the light of the 
Gospel and destroyed the dark pagan superstitions which had held the people 
captive.
After 
they returned to Vagharshapat, Drtad called together all his courtiers and the 
leaders from every corner of the land. The king wanted to make Gregory their 
pastor, so that everyone could be baptized and begin in earnest to live the new 
life in Christ. Gregory protested his unworthiness, but Drtad had a wonderful 
vision from God urging him to carry out his plan, and the angelic vision also 
appeared to Gregory, telling him not to thwart it. So Gregory said: "Let God's 
will be done."
Drtad 
then chose some of the leading princes to take Gregory to Caesarea, in 
Cappadocia, with an edict for the bishop 
Leontius. The edict gave the whole history of Armenia's pagan worship, the suffering of the 
nuns, Gregory's witness and work among the people, and the king's own desire to 
have Gregory be the spiritual leader of Armenia.
The 
group set off with Gregory in a royal carriage, taking along gifts for each of 
the churches they would pass. They were welcomed heartily in the land of the 
Greeks, who rejoiced to hear of God's miracles and the great conversion which 
had taken place. When the men reached Caesarea, 
Gregory was duly ordained, and the bishops laid their hands on him and prayed 
for him. He, too, was now consecrated as a bishop for God's 
church.
With 
joyous and loving farewells, the nobles and Gregory set out for home, and as 
they stopped at various towns, Gregory persuaded some good Christian men to 
return with him and be ordained to serve the people. In all the towns, crowds of 
people gathered to see the new bishop pass, and to receive his 
blessing.
Part 4
Back 
within the borders of Armenia, Gregory heard that in a 
certain region there was a large, richly-appointed temple devoted to the cult of 
Vahagn. It was on a mountain peak near the Euphrates, and contained three altars, one for Vahagn, one 
for his mother, and one for his spouse Astghig who corresponded to the Greek 
Aphrodite. People still made sacrifices at these pagan altars.
Gregory 
had brought from Cappadocia some relics of John 
the Baptist and the martyr Athenogenes. He intended to take these up to the 
mountain, destroy the pagan temples, and build chapels for the relics there. But 
as his carriage neared a small valley, the horses halted and would not go any 
farther. An angel appeared and said: "It has pleased God that the saints should 
dwell here." So the entourage set to work and made a chapel for the 
relics.
While 
they were doing so, Gregory took some of the men with him to destroy the pagan 
altars. Pound as they might, they could not batter down the gates. So Gregory 
took the cross and held it up saying: "Let your angel drive the demons away, 
Lord." And a wind like a hurricane blew from the cross and leveled the altars so 
that later not a trace of them could be found. Many people seeing this cam to 
believe in Jesus Christ, for as Gregory told them: "See, your stumbling blocks 
have been removed." It was on that spot that Gregory first laid the foundations 
of a church and erected an altar to the glory of God, and then arranged a 
baptismal font. He was with the people for twenty days, and more than one 
hundred and ninety thousand of them were baptized. This was the beginning of 
Gregory's effort to fill the land with church buildings and priests. And in each 
place he left a tiny portion of the saints' relics so they could be 
venerated.
King 
Drtad, informed that Gregory was back in the country, set out from Vagharshapat 
to meet him. He had to wait a month, because Gregory was traveling far and wide 
to provide every region with churches and priests to do services in them, and 
was also baptizing scores of people.
Finally 
Gregory did arrive, and the king went out to greet him on the banks of the 
Euphrates. Everyone was filled with joy, and 
the nobles who had gone with Gregory presented Drtad with Bishop Leontius' reply 
to his edict. In it, the bishop praied God's loving mercy in showing the 
Armenian people His will for them through the efforts of Gregory, whom they at 
first had despised but who became their spiritual champion. The bishop quoted 
Scripture: "The stone which the builders rejected has become the head of the 
corner" (Matthew 21:42). He asked the new Christians to remember him in their 
prayers, and wished them well.
When 
the welcoming festivities were over, Gregory once again settled down to the task 
of instructing the people, and ever more of them came to learn how to live in a 
new way. Then he and the men he had recruited began a period of fasting and 
prayer, vigils and tearful repentance. The royal camp also prayed and fasted for 
a full month. Gregory built a church and placed in it the last of the relics he 
had brought to Armenia. When all this was dome the 
month of preparation was completed, the whole royal camp went down to the 
Euphrates one morning at dawn, and he baptized 
them in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. As this was being done, a 
bright light appeared over the water, with the cross above it. The people were 
amazed and blessed God's glory. That evening they went forth, more than one 
hundred fifty thousand new Christians, with lighted candles and in their white 
garments, praising god with psalms and prayers. They received Holy Communion in 
the new church which Gregory had built.
During 
the next week, Gregory baptized more multitudes of people, and he fixed a date 
for commemorating the martyrs. This date was the same as that of a former pagan 
festival  New Year's Day. He then continued to travel around the land to 
give instruction and blessings to all the people, urging them to give up their 
old worship and pagan feasts, and come instead to know and worship the one true 
God.
Gregory 
was especially concerned with leadership and education. He made sure that each 
church had a priest and each region had a bishop. Then he persuaded the king to 
gather peasant children from all over the country so that they, too, might learn 
from him and the men he had chosen. The king was willing also to have some 
children taught to read and become better acquainted with the Scriptures and 
other sacred writings. Some learned Syriac and some Greek, but all found new and 
precious knowledge in the word of God.
So 
Gregory's work continued. He spread the gospel message everywhere; he helped 
many in distress and despair, and established monastic orders in the populous 
plains and the isolated mountain caves. He educated many of the pagan priests' 
children and when they were ready he made them bishops of the 
Church.
The 
first of these, Albianos, was often left in charge of the court so that Gregory 
could retreat to a lonely place and live austerely with pupils from the 
monasteries. They would give themselves to prayer and works of humility, 
proclaiming god's strength by their own weakness. They did the worship services 
together, studied the Bible, sang spiritual songs, and encouraged each other to 
live according to God's way rather than the world's. But Gregory was always 
ready to visit a city to work with the people in churches there, and met often 
with priests and bishops. He was their best example of how to live and do their 
work as the Lord would want, and constantly reminded them to teach others as 
Christ had done.
Armenia's 
light shone so brightly in the world in this wonderful time that other lands 
truly admired her and felt she was blessed. Everything was flowering, and the 
king continued to travel around the land to urge his people to follow Christ. 
But Gregory no longer went with him; instead he lived in the desert where he 
could pray and fast.
King 
Drtad lamented Gregory's absence very much, but at about this time he learned 
that from a youthful marriage Gregory had two sons, Vertanes and Aristakes. Both 
had been raised to be priests, but Vertanes was living a secular life. 
Aristakes, on the other hand, was living a stringently ascetical life of prayer 
as a monk. Elated by the news, Drtad sent for them both. Aristakes was at first 
reluctant to leave his desert hermitage, but fellow Christians persuaded him to 
go and do whatever God called him to.
As 
soon as they arrived at court, Drtad went out with them to seek their father. 
They found him on the mountain called the Caves of Mane, in the province of Daranalik. Drtad asked Gregory to make 
Aristakes a bishop, so he could carry on his father's work. This was done, and 
Gregory himself visited some of the churches he had established.
Drtad 
was also a tireless servant of the Lord, both in his witness to others and his 
personal spiritual life. He kept the feasts and fasts, asked forgiveness for his 
sins, and strove to do God's will. He used his royal authority to promote the 
teaching of the Gospel everywhere, and tried to be a living example of it for 
his people.
While 
all this was going on in Armenia, Constantine became emperor in Spain and Gaul. 
He was a Christian and made a covenant with his large and mighty army that they 
would work together to glorify God.
So 
with his soldiers, Constantine marched against the heathen kings 
Diocletian, marcianos, Macimianos, Licinius and Maxentius. He rebuilt the 
Christian churches they had destroyed during the persecutions, and built chapels 
for those they had martyred. He destroyed the temples of idols and took the 
cross as his sign. Constantine greatly fortified his rule over a 
large part of the known world, honoring all who worshipped the true God and 
fighting vigorously against all others.
King 
Drtad was eager to pay his respects to another monarch who believed as he did. 
He set out with Gregory, the bishops Aristakes and Albianos, and some of the 
highest-ranking members of his own court. As they traveled from Vagharshapat 
through Greek territory they were honorably received along the way, and when 
they arrived in Rome the emperor and the great Patriarch 
Eusebius greeted them warmly. After the lavish ceremonies, Constantine pressed them to tell about the miracles that 
had come to pass in Armenia.
So 
Drtad told his spiritual brother all that had happened, not even keeping back 
the details of his own bestial transformation. He spoke about the brave 
sacrifice of the martyrs, and introduced Gregory to the emperor as the man 
through whom God's will had been done. Constantine was amazed by the story, and humbly 
asked Gregory's blessing. The emperor was also able to tell Drtad more about the 
martyrs, whom he had known of while they were still in his land. He spoke of how 
he himself had come to know God, and made an alliance with his fellow king to 
keep the love of Christ as a bond between their kingdoms.
When 
they returned to Armenia, Drtad offered all the gold 
and silver gifts they had received to the service of the Church, and placed 
several precious articles in the martyrs' chapels. Gregory and Aristakes 
continued their travels and teaching across the land. It was Aristakes, too, who 
journeyed to the city of Nicaea when Constantine convened all 
the Christian bishops there for an ecumenical council. At that council, 
doctrines were expounded and canons were formed. Aristakes made these known when 
he came back to Armenia, further strengthening the 
Church and insuring good practices among the people.
Gregory 
continued his teaching and writing to make the faithful think about things of 
the Kingdom by his stories about things of this world. With fasting and prayers, 
taking only minimal rest, Gregory spread forth the word of the Lord until the 
end of his days. He had taught his students well, and they too spent time in 
reading Scripture and urging each other to follow the words of Saint Paul: "Take care for 
yourself and your teaching, and persevere in the same. If you do this you will 
save yourself and those who hear you." (Timothy 4:13-16).
Thus 
it was that Gregory spent the days of his life in acts like those of the 
Apostles, following God's commands until he died. And immersed in the love of 
Christ, he shone forth to all.
Now 
according to your command, King Drtad, we have written all this down as a 
chronicle in the literary style of the Greeks. Like the Old Testament prophets 
and rulers, we have put down these events for future generations everywhere to 
read and learn from; we have not set them down from old tales but according to 
what we ourselves saw and heard.
An 
like the writer Luke, we have put down the main points, not including each small 
detail but passing over some things and describing only those that are most 
important and illuminating. We have made our story not to honor those who have 
already pleased God with their service, but to inspire their children and all 
those in every land who will receive these words. May they come, one day, to say 
to Him, "You are our God," and hear His life-giving answer, "You are my 
people."
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