Archbishop Iakovos was a strong force
for social justice and human dignity. His efforts to revive
Orthodoxy in North America and his dedication to promoting
human and civil rights exemplify his extraordinary leadership
and integrity. His legacy will be honored and remembered
long into the future as he rests at peace with God.
Hillary and I hope you will find comfort
in the knowledge that the goodness of his life will continue
to inspire and strengthen people all over the world. We
are keeping you in our thoughts and prayers.
Archbishop Iakovos was my friend,
and he taught me a lot about faith and love of Christ.
He lived a full life in which he demonstrated, among other
things, that true service to God and to the faithful is
noble and wonderful.
I shall miss this good man, and
I know that all his Hellenic friends will especially miss
him too.
George Herbert Walker Bush
Forty-First President of the United States
April 12, 2005
Rosalynn and I are deeply saddened
by the loss of His Eminence Archbishop Iakovos. We share
the sorrow of the Greek Orthodox community and indeed
people throughout the world who mourn the passing of a
great man.
Archbishop Iakovos’ progressive
leadership and concern for human rights provided spiritual
and moral guidance to his followers for nearly four decades.
It was my privilege in 1980 to award him the Presidential
Medal of Freedom. And when The Carter Center opened in
1986, he honored us with his presence and eloquent dedication
address.
My family is proud to be among those
who have been touched by his warmth and friendship. Like
so many others whose lives he has blessed, we will take
comfort in our warm memories of this man of God.
Jimmy Carter
Thirty-Ninth President
of the United States
I
was deeply saddened to hear about the loss of His Eminence
Archbishop Iakovos. I join all Greek Orthodox faithful
in mourning the passing of this dynamic spiritual leader.
Archbishop Iakovos will be remembered
as one of the great figures of Orthodoxy who for 37 years
led the Greek Church in America with great distinction.
Throughout his life, His Eminence exemplified an unwavering
dedication and steadfast commitment to promoting Christian
unity and advocating for civil rights, having even marched
in Alabama in 1965 with the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King,
Jr.
As we mourn the loss of Archbishop
Iakovos, we will remember this beloved and admirable leader’s
strength, courage, and commitment to God.
George Pataki
Governor of New York
I
join the Greek Orthodox community in mourning the loss
of Archbishop Iakovos. During his nearly four decade tenure
as Primate of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese, he broke
down religious barriers and embraced the causes of justice
and equality. Archbishop Iakovos was the first Orthodox
leader to meet with a Pope in 350 years; he marched with
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in Selma, Alabama and was awarded
the Medal of Freedom by President Jimmy Carter.
We have lost a powerful voice for peace and religious
tolerance.
Michael R. Bloomberg
Mayor of New York
I
was deeply saddened to learn of the death of His Eminence
Archbishop Iakovos. I regret that a previous commitment
makes it impossible for me to attend Archbishop Iakovos'
funeral. On behalf of the King family, however, I write
to express our heartfelt condolences to you and all of
the members of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America
on the loss of this great spiritual leader.
I shared with my husband, Martin
Luther King, Jr. a profound respect for Archbishop Iakovos
and a belief that he was surely one of the most righteous
religious leaders in America. At a time when many of the
nation's most prominent clergy were silent, Archbishop
Iakovos courageously supported our Freedom Movement and
marched alongside my husband, and he continued to support
the nonviolent movement against poverty, racism and violence
throughout his life. I remain deeply inspired by his courageous
leadership, his character and compassion and the enduring
spirit of love and brotherhood he brought to the cause
of Christ.
Archbishop Iakovos will be sorely
missed. But he has bequeathed to us all a vibrant example
of a true servant of God who stood for justice, equality
and human dignity. Though we join in mourning your loss,
we also share in celebrating a magnificent, well-lived
life, and a wonderful human being whose shining example
will live on in our hearts
Coretta Scott King
On behalf of the Anti-Defamation
League we express our profound condolences on the loss
of Archbishop Iakovos to you and to the entire Orthodox
community he so ably led for 37 years.
We know of the remarkable stewardship
he had of your church, and the way that he helped to shape
the Orthodox Church in America. We cannot forget the impact
Archbishop Iakovos had on the Jewish community. Through
his efforts, dialogue and understanding began between
our communities. Under his leadership we saw the orthodox
community no longer cloistered, but a part of the fabric
of American society.
His efforts during the struggle
for civil rights and the interfaith relationships that
struggle fostered are noted with gratitude. Indeed, the
relationship between the Orthodox community and the Jewish
community has been bettered due to his influence.
Please convey our sympathy to your
community. While we have lost a giant in interfaith cooperation,
it is our hope that in his memory and honor we can build
upon the legacy that he left.
Abraham H. Foxman
National Director
Rabbi Gary Bretton-Granatoor
Director, Interfaith Affairs
Anti-Defamation League
Statements from Religious Leaders
on the Passing of Archbishop Iakovos
Replete
with sentiments of sincere grief, our Holy Great Mother
Church of Christ announces that yesterday, April 10, His
Eminence, the venerable former Archbishop Iakovos of America
passed away in the Lord. He was 94 years old.
This man, who like an oak tree that
offered its shade to the devout flock of the Greek Orthodox
community in America, was born on Imvros, the island of
the Aegean Sea from where many great men have come. He
gained international recognition and became a vehicle
through which the centuries-long tradition of the Orthodox
spirit was expressed in the New World. It was in the New
World where he sincerely and very fruitfully ministered
to Orthodoxy and to the Nation in many capacities, a diakonia
for which the Mother Church will remember him with great
gratitude, praying that his memory be eternal.
This hierarch of blessed memory,
Archbishop Iakovos, was a genuine bearer of the spirit
of martyrdom of the Ecumenical Throne. He duly honored
the Mother Church, which honored him. He devoted himself
to the ministry of the Mother Church through his final
days.
Archbishop Iakovos was the spiritual
leader of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America for
thirty-seven consecutive years, and through the authority
of his personality by words and deeds he advanced the
faith and culture of the Nation. He made sure that Orthodoxy
was accorded her due respect every time he represented
the Mother Church in meetings with religious and political
persons, and he enjoyed the esteem and respect of all.
As a ship at dock, he retired in
1996, but he incessantly continued to occupy himself with
honorable concerns and was always making efforts to promote
the general welfare of matters pertaining to the Church
and the Nation.
The blessed soul of our revered
Elder and most precious member of our Ecumenical Patriarchate
is already in the hands of the Lord. We fervently pray
for the repose of his soul and for his worthiness to behold
the face of the Great High Priest, our Lord Jesus Christ.
We, also, express our condolences to the most devout flock
of the Holy Archdiocese of America, which sincerely and
deeply loved this Hierarch of blessed memory.
May the memory of our departed brother,
Archbishop Iakovos, be eternal and blessed.
Ecumenical Patriarchate Announcement
on the Passing of Archbishop Iakovos Announcement
At the Patriarchate, April
11, 2005
Chief Secretariat of the Holy and Sacred Synod
To
the Most Reverend Hierarchs, the Reverend Priests and
Deacons, the Monks and Nuns, the Presidents and Members
of the Parish Councils of the Greek Orthodox Communities,
the Day, Afternoon, and Church Schools, the Philoptochos
Sisterhoods, the Youth, the Hellenic Organizations, and
the entire Greek Orthodox Family in America
Beloved Brothers and Sisters in
Christ,
On behalf of our Holy Eparchial
Synod, I write to you in order to announce the passing
on Sunday, April 10 of our deeply respected and beloved
spiritual leader Archbishop Iakovos, who served as Archbishop
of North and South America from 1959 to 1996. As we mourn
his departure, we remember a servant of God whose example
of courage and inspiration greatly influenced both our
Church and our nation.
For thirty-seven years Archbishop
Iakovos guided the Greek Orthodox faithful and parishes
throughout the Americas in a continuous growth of ministry
and witness. He promoted and solidified the unity of our
Archdiocese by establishing new national programs that
continue to offer service and resources in the name of
Christ. Certainly the vitality of our Church today is
a fitting honor to his lifetime of service, and for this
we give thanks to God.
Archbishop Iakovos was a believer
in the uniting and healing power of the love of God. Throughout
his ministry he brought together people of faith, establishing
helpful dialogues with the Roman Catholic, Protestant,
and Jewish communities. He was also sensitive to the truth
that God created humankind in His own image and likeness.
He vigorously supported Civil Rights legislation, and
he marched in 1965 with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in
Selma, Alabama, affirming the necessity of equality for
all Americans. His commitment to human rights and religious
freedom was demonstrated by his response to the needs
of Greek Cypriot refugees following the invasion of Cyprus
in 1974 and his leadership in supporting our beloved Ecumenical
Patriarchate in Constantinople. He was an ecumenical leader,
a friend of presidents, and a tremendous contributor to
the global witness of our Orthodox faith.
These are only a few examples of
the legacy of faith and service that Archbishop Iakovos
has given to us, a legacy that will be remembered for
many generations to come. It is in honor of his life and
leadership that our Archdiocese will officially observe
a period of mourning for nine days from April 10, the
day of his passing. During this time I ask that our parishes
suspend all non-liturgical functions. Each parish of our
Archdiocese should conduct Trisagion services for the
repose of Archbishop Iakovos. On the day of his funeral,
Thursday April 14, all of our parochial schools should
conduct a Trisagion service at 9:00 a.m., and all parishes
are instructed to ring their bells in a solemn mode from
11:00 a.m. until 1:00 p.m. EDT.
As we faithfully complete the Great
Fast and prepare our souls for the glorious Feast of Pascha,
may we remember and honor Archbishop Iakovos for his many
years of service and his faithfulness to God and His Church.
May his memory be eternal.
With paternal love in Christ,
+DEMETRIOS
Archbishop of America
With
hope and love, our hearts are touched by sorrow with the
news of the repose of His Eminence Archbishop Iakovos,
the former Archbishop of North and South America, for
so long the beloved elder hierarch of the Orthodox faithful
of our nation, spiritual father to so many dedicated clergy
and hierarchs, and a tireless worker in the vineyard of
our Lord Jesus Christ. On behalf of all the faithful of
the Holy Metropolis of Chicago, we pray for his everlasting
repose where the righteous rest and that his memory be
eternal!
We have all been blessed to have
been touched by his grand presence as the leader of our
Greek Orthodox Archdiocese for thirty-seven years and
even in his retirement where his wisdom and devotion continued
to inspire the faithful clergy and laity of our nation
in service to the Holy Church. As a hierarch of the Church,
we personally were blessed to have received our ordination
to the rank of bishop on the Feast of the Nativity, 1969,
by the hand of Archbishop Iakovos, a gift for which we
are forever grateful. We have been honored and privileged
to have served him as an assistant bishop, and to have
later served with him on the Holy Eparchial Synod when
we were elected to serve the Lord’s Flock in the
city of Chicago.
Always our inspiration, always the
model of spiritual fatherhood, always our guide in the
pastoral responsibility for Christian souls, we will always
remember his manifold accomplishments that benefited our
Mother Church, our Holy Archdiocese and our nation. We
will never forget our indebtedness to his persevering
love for all of us, and while we mourn his passing, we
rejoice that His Eminence Archbishop Iakovos has “passed
from death to life,” resting with the saints in
the heavenly Kingdom. He has returned to his first and
true homeland, and for this we may be comforted knowing
that in Christ he continually intercedes on our behalf.
Again, may his memory be eternal!
Statement of Metropolitan Iakovos
of Chicago on the Repose of Archishop Iakovos (Formerly)
of North and South America
BROOKLINE---Metropolitan
Methodios of Boston has announced that the burial of Archbishop
Iakovos who passed away April 10 at the age of 93, will
take place on Friday, April 15 11 a.m. in the Chapel of
the Holy Cross on the campus of Hellenic College-Holy
Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology, 50 Goddard Avenue
in Brookline. The body of Archbishop Iakovos will lie
in state at the Chapel of the Holy Cross in Brookline
beginning at 7 p.m. on Thursday, April 14.
Upon learning of the death of Archbishop
Iakovos, Metropolitan Methodios who served as Archdeacon
to Archbishop Iakovos, issued the following statement:
“The death of Archbishop Iakovos
brings to an end a significant chapter in the history
of Orthodoxy in America and the western hemisphere. He
was truly a unique individual, “an icon of the ineffable
glory of God.” He was well educated, extremely intelligent,
charismatic, visionary and pastoral. He was born to lead.
I believe he was the last of the great ecclesiastical
figures of the 21st century who “let his light so
shine among men that they saw his good works and glorified
our Father Who is in heaven” (Matthew 5, 15). I,
like his other deacons, had the opportunity to accompany
him throughout the world. What impressed me was his ability
to relate to kings and heads of government with the same
ease as he did when he embraced young and old alike---especially
little children in parishes throughout North and South
America. It just isn’t the same without him. May
God open His arms and embrace our beloved Archbishop Iakovos
in His loving bosom.”
Statement of Metropolitan Methodios
of Boston on the Repose of Archishop Iakovos (Formerly)
of North and South America
All
of the hierarchs, clergy, and faithful of the Antiochian
Orthodox Christian Archdiocese of North America join in
mourning the loss of this most special leader of Orthodox
Christians in this Hemisphere. At the same time, we rejoice
in the legacy that he leaves to us, and we feel challenged
to continue his good work for the Glory of God. It can
be said that his ministry has put Orthodoxy on the map
in North America.
His Eminence Metropolitan PHILIP worked very closely with
Archbishop IAKOVOS for many years, and together they were
instrumental in the establishment of such important organizations
as SCOBA (The Standing Conference of Canonical Orthodox
Bishops in America), and the IOCC (International Orthodox
Christian Charities).
In 1995, Metropolitan
PHILIP said the following in his commencement address
at Holy Cross Seminary, Brookline, MA:
“I am indeed delighted to share this podium with
my beloved Brother in Christ, Archbishop IAKOVOS, Primate
of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of North and South America.
During the past twenty-nine years, I have had the distinct
honor and pleasure of working with him as Vice-Chairman
of SCOBA. Throughout the years, he has lead SCOBA with
much patience, wisdom and vision, despite the monumental
difficulties which we face. I do not know of any other
Orthodox hierarch who has sacrificed more of his time,
energy, and health for our Church in this hemisphere than
Archbishop IAKOVOS.”
Today, His Eminence Metropolitan
PHILIP said:
“The passing of Archbishop IAKOVOS marks the end
of an era. He has left his footprints on the sands of
time as he worked tirelessly to develop the Greek Orthodox
Archdiocese and her institutions. He was the much respected
and loved dean of the Orthodox clergy, and he was not
afraid to fight for the rights of the oppressed in America
and abroad. Through all of the years that we worked together,
we never had a single misunderstanding. I have lost a
very dear brother and friend. May his memory be ever eternal!”
It is clear that the words of our Lord apply to His Eminence
Archbishop IAKOVOS:
“Well done, good and faithful servant; you have
been faithful over a few things, I will make you ruler
over many things. Enter into the joy of your Lord”
(Matthew 25:23).
May our Lord grant rest to the soul of His servant Archbishop
IAKOVOS, and may his memory be eternal!!
Statement on the Falling Asleep
of Archbishop Iakovos
From the Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese of
North America
April 11, 2005
It
is with great sadness that we have learned of the falling-asleep
in the Lord of the ever-memorable Servant of God, His
Eminence, The Most Reverend Iakovos, former Archbishop
of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of North and South America.
Throughout his life, Archbishop Iakovos served Christ
and His Holy Church with deep faith and great devotion.
We are confident that the Lord will now reward him for
his dedicated archpastoral service by granting him eternal
life in the Kingdom of Heaven.
In expressing our sadness at this
loss, I ask that you please accept the heartfelt condolences
and prayerful support of the Hierarchs, Clergy Monastics,
and Faithful of the Orthodox Church in America. May Christ
Himself comfort you as you mourn the loss of a dearly-beloved
archpastor who served his flock in imitation of the One
True Shepherd, who came “not to be served, but to
serve” (Matthew 20:28).
Be assured of our fervent prayer
that the Lord will grant rest with the saints to His newly-departed
servant, Archbishop Iakovos, and make his memory to be
eternal!
With love in Christ,
+HERMAN
Archbishop of Washington
Metropolitan of All America and Canada
Orthodox Church of America
I
take this opportunity, in behalf of the clergy and faithful
of this Diocese, to offer my deepest condolences on the
deep loss the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America is
experiencing in the falling-asleep of His Eminence, Archbishop
Iakovos of thrice-blessed memory.
In the United States, for thirty-seven
years, Archbishop Iakovos led the parishes of the Greek
Orthodox Archdiocese through a period of continuous growth.
In addition to the immense progress witnessed by the Archdiocese,
he was respected by non-Orthodox as an ecumenical leader,
a dignified churchman of the highest caliber, and a champion
of human rights and religious freedom.
His eminence was always responsive
to the needs of the Carpatho-Russian Diocese, and for
this we shall be forever grateful. His absence leaves
a personal sense of loss for me, as I treasured his paternal
advice over they years and enjoyed the fatherly meetings
we had. I will always be grateful for his personal sponsorship
of my education at Halki, and I will always remember him
in prayer as the chief consecrator in 1983 when I was
elevated to the episcopacy.
May our good and merciful God, Who
has triumphed over death, be kind and merciful to him,
and grant to him one of the many mansions. He has promised
to all who love Him and do His will.
Metropolitan Nicholas of Amissos
The American Carpatho-Russian Orthodox Diocese of the
U.S.A.
With
great sadness I received and read your information that
his Eminence the venerable former Archbishop IAKOVOS of
America passed away in the Lord.
We, Bulgarians are in mourning for
him. We know and love him. He was a great church-man,
phenomenal servant of God, dear friend of Bulgaria, admirer
of our former Patriarch Kiril and protopresviter prof.
Stefan Tzankov, my favourite leader.
As a representative of his Holiness
Patriarch Maxim of Bulgaria and on behalf of the entire
Bulgarian Eastern Orthodox Diocese of the USA, Canada,
and Australia I share with you our warm sympathy and deep
prayers for our beloved Archbishop Iakovos.
My inner belief is that the Lord
will continue to pour out His abundant blessing upon his
soul.
May the memory of Archbishop Iakovos
be eternal. Vechnaia Pamiat!
With love in the Lord,
+Metropolitan JOSEPH
Bulgarian Eastern Orthodox Diocese
of the U.S.A., Canada, and Australia
Archbishop Iakovos,
former Archbishop of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of
North and South America from 1959 to 1996, fell asleep
in the Lord on April 10, 2005 at the age of 93 years old.
His Eminence will be remembered for many achievements
during his fruitful ministry, including his encouragement,
support, and establishment of the Orthodox Christian Mission
Center (OCMC).
His involvement began in 1966 when
Archbishop Iakovos supported a landmark proposal submitted
to the 17th Biennial Clergy-Laity Congress. The proposal
requested the establishment of the first “Greek
Orthodox Archdiocesan Standing Committee of Missions,”
which the Congress passed unanimously. From 1967, this
Missions Committee began to function for the next 17 years
with 20 volunteer clergy and lay Board members. The Archbishop
appointed Bishop Silas as the Episcopal Head of the Committee
and me as the coordinator.
The Missions Committee had two main
objectives. The first was to raise awareness about Orthodox
foreign missions through writings, lectures and sermons.
The second was to raise funds for scholarship assistance
to young men and women from Uganda, Kenya, Korea and Mexico
to study at St. Basil’s Academy and at Hellenic
College/Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology.
Upon completion of their studies, these students returned
to their respective countries to serve as priests and
teachers of Orthodoxy.
In 1984, at the 27th Clergy-Laity
Congress of New York, Archbishop Iakovos again played
a role in opening wide the door for the growth of mission
activity in the Church. The program had grown too large
for volunteers to handle the ministry and the Missions
Committee requested a salaried Executive Director and
a permanent office. Archbishop Iakovos again supported
the decision wholeheartedly and appointed Fr. Dimitrios
Couchell (now Bishop of Xanthos) as the first Executive
Director. The Missions Committee became the Archdiocesan
Mission Center with an office at the St. Photios Shrine
in St. Augustine, Florida.
Ten years later, in 1994 Archbishop
Iakovos’ pastoral guidance and vision supported
another crucial step in the establishment of the Orthodox
Christian Mission Center as it is today. His Eminence
received very favorably the proposal to broaden the Mission
Center’s ministry by becoming pan-Orthodox under
the aegis of SCOBA (Standing Conference of Canonical Orthodox
Bishops in America). The proposal received the unanimous
approval of the 32nd Greek Orthodox Clergy-Laity Congress
and of SCOBA. Archbishop Iakovos served as the long-time
chairman of SCOBA and the new name given to the ministry
was the Orthodox Christian Mission Center (OCMC).
Since its humble beginnings OCMC,
which Archbishop Iakovos helped to bring into existence,
has grown into a missionary outreach impacting thousands
of lives in the name of Christ. Since 1985, the Mission
Center has sent 70 long-term missionaries to Africa, Eastern
Europe, South East Asia, and Latin America and 762 short-term
Mission Team volunteers on 95 teams to 22 countries. The
OCMC has conducted 41 building and restoration projects
of churches, schools and medical clinics, and financially
supported 272 indigenous Orthodox clergy in 16 countries
on an annual basis.
The Mission Center is grateful for
all of Archbishop Iakovos’ support over the years.
May his memory be eternal!
Father Alexander Veronis,
OCMC Board President Emeritus on
Archbishop Iakovos and the Establishment of the Orthodox
Christian Mission Center
The
Anglican Church of Canada would like to express its prayers
and sympathy to its sisters and brothers in the Greek
Orthodox community on the death of Archbishop Iakovos
who led the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of North and South
America from 1959 until 1996.
Archbishop Iakovos was a champion
of many Christian values and causes to which our two churches
share a common commitment, particularly human rights and
ecumenism. His visible presence in marching with the Rev.
Martin Luther King Jr. in Selma, Ala showed his love and
care for social justice for all of humanity and his courage
in being a witness for God's truth in the face of secular
power. Ecumenically he showed outstanding leadership in
meeting with Pope John XXIII, becoming the first Greek
Orthodox archbishop in 350 years to meet with a Roman
Catholic pope. He spent nine years as a president of the
World Council of Churches and committed his church to
participation in the Canadian Council of Churches. He
once said, "Ecumenism is the hope for international
understanding, for humanitarian allegiance, for true peace
based on justice and dignity, and for God's continued
presence and involvement in modern history." How
prophetic to proclaim this in 1960!
Archbishop Iakovos was committed
to making the Greek Orthodox understanding of the Christian
faith a living reality in the day to day life of North
and South America, and we have all been enriched by his
contribution to our common life and witness.
The Greek Orthodox Church is preparing
to celebrate Easter. The hope and prayer of the Anglican
Church of Canada is that the Greek Orthodox community
we find strength and peace from the Easter Gospel knowing
that Archbishop Iakovos has died in light of Christ's
death and resurrection.
Archbishop Andrew Hutchison
Primate of Canada
Anglican Church of Canada
We
in the Episcopal Church join with our brothers and sisters
Christians everywhere in mourning the loss of Archbishop
Iakovos who led the Greek Orthodox Church in the Americas
for some 37 ears and who departed this life on April 10,
2005.
He was a champion of ecumenism how
fostered dialogue with other Orthodox churches, Episcopalians,
Lutherans, Southern Baptists, and other denominations,
as well as standing always for human rights and the dignity
of every human being.
As the Greek Orthodox prepare to
celebrate the Easter Feast, may they be comforted by the
assurance that Christ is risen from the dead, trampling
down death by death, and giving life to those in the tomb.
The Most Reverend Frank T.
Griswald
Presiding Bishop and Primate
The Episcopal Church, USA
It
is with great sorrow that we received news today of the
falling asleep in the Lord of His Eminence Iakovos, former
Archbishop of the Greek Orhodox diocese of North and South
America, and first patriarchal representative to the World
Council of Churches.
Archbishop Iakovos had the unique
qualities of being at once a remarkable spiritual guide
for the Greek Orthodox Christians in the Western Hemisphere,
and an outstanding ecumenical and civil rights leader
who marked his era. During his service as the first permanent
representative of the Ecumenical Patriarchate to the WCC,
and subsequently as one of the WCC presidents, Archbishop
Iakovos actively participated in the formative period
of the modern ecumenical movement. A visionary Christian
leader, he became known as a prophetic voice on issues
of social justice at a time when much of the Orthodox
world was silenced, and which was symbolized by his courageous
public accompaniment of Dr. Martin Luther King in 1965.
We are grateful for his many gifts
to the church and to the ecumenical movement, and express
our heartfelt sympathy with Your All Holiness, the faithful
of the Archdiocese and of the broader Orthodox and Christian
world at the loss of this spiritual leader, and share
in your prayer for the eternal repose of his soul.
Rev. Dr. Samuel Kobia
General Secretary
World Council of Churches
Generations
of Americans were inspired by the presence of Archbishop
Iakovos on all the frontlines of our history. Born on
the small island of Imvros in the Aegean Sea, as the Archbishop
and spiritual leader of his American flock he continuously
celebrated its gifts and encouraged it to fulfill its
full potential in the landscape of America.
He marched with Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr., in 1965 in Selma, Ala., and was a fervent and
outspoken champion for the cause of civil rights. His
commitment to that cause was exemplified in the 1990's
when he lent his support to a National Council of Churches
USA campaign to raise funds for burned African American
churches.
Under his leadership, the Greek
Orthodox Archdiocese grew from a small ethnic church community
into a strong and vibrant church with a powerful voice
for Christian ethics and values.
Archbishop Iakovos stood with Christians
from many cultures and backgrounds to further the ideal
of Christian unity. His deep belief in ecumenism was demonstrated
by his strong support of ecumenical councils as well as
his historic challenges to them. He was a president of
the World Council of Churches and introduced Elenie K.
Huszagh, Esq., immediate past president of the NCC, to
ecumenism. He established dialogues with Protestant and
Roman Catholics and carried his witness into the oval
offices of nine U.S. presidents. All who knew him were
gratified when he received the nation's highest civilian
honor in 1980 when President Jimmy Carter bestowed upon
him the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
His Eminence, Archbishop Iakovos
was a tireless servant of God who leaves a towering legacy
of faith, justice and unity not only for all who knew
and worked with him -- but for all who will benefit from
his endeavors. May his memory be eternal!
A statement by General Secretary
Bob Edgar
On behalf of the National Council of Churches USA
On the death of Archbishop Iakovos