Armenian liturgical services, such as the "Blessing of the Fields," make a link between community and place explicit. The embodied, sensorial experience of liturgy makes a particular Christian community present in a specific place. It also presents the fullest expression of that community's theology. This paper explores a handful of Armenian Apostolic Christian liturgical services that focus on blessings of fields, crops, and cultivated land in order to argue that they connect community and land in a distinctive liturgical vision that is both ecological and indigenous. The paper argues that the liturgical practice of the Armenian Apostolic Church can, in the instances described, function as an indigenous ecotheology. It does so, the paper suggests, in ways that can advance discussions both of ecotheology and global indigeneity.
Attached Paper
Online June Annual Meeting 2025
Blessing the Fields: Ecology and Indigeneity in the Armenian Liturgical Experience
Papers Session: Liturgy in the Life of Middle Eastern Christians
Abstract for Online Program Book (maximum 150 words)