翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Maitland Club
・ Maitland Estate
・ Maitland FC
・ Maitland Gaol
・ Maitland Glacier
・ Maitland Grossmann High School
・ Maitland Group
・ Maitland Hathorn
・ Maitland High School
・ Maitland Historical Museum
・ Maitland Jones, Jr.
・ Maitland Mackie
・ Maitland Manuscripts
・ Maitland McDonagh
・ Maitland Mercury
Maitland Moir
・ Maitland Pickers
・ Maitland Plan
・ Maitland Pollock
・ Maitland railway station
・ Maitland River
・ Maitland River (disambiguation)
・ Maitland River (Western Australia)
・ Maitland River mine
・ Maitland Secondary School
・ Maitland station
・ Maitland Steinkopf
・ Maitland Stewart McCarthy
・ Maitland Telephone Museum
・ Maitland Volcano


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Maitland Moir : ウィキペディア英語版
Maitland Moir
Father ’’’John Maitland Moir’’’ (1924-2013) was a priest and creator of the Orthodox Church of St Andrew in Edinburgh and founder of several Orthodox communities in Scotland. He was Orthodox Chaplain to the University of Edinburgh.〔Scotsman newspaper:Obituaries:27 April 2013〕
==Life==

He was born in Currie in the south-west outskirts of Edinburgh, Scotland, 18 June 1924, the son of a local doctor Henry Maitland Moir and his wealthy wife, Rose Ochterlony.〔http://www.thyateira.org.uk/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1179&Itemid=1〕 He was an only child. He suffered from a weakness of the knees his whole life which meant he was isolated from other children by his parents.
He attended Edinburgh Academy in the north of Edinburgh before going on to study Classics at Edinburgh University. He was not fit enough to serve during the Second World War. After the war he briefly served as Classics Master at Cargilfield School before deciding to return to studies at Christ Church, Oxford and Cuddeston Theological College, having sparked at interest in the Eastern Orthodox Church whilst in Oxford. From 1950-51 he took this interest further, travelling to study at the Halki Theological College in Istanbul, where he studied the orthodox church. During this period he also travelled to the Holy Land and other sites of religious significance in the Middle East.〔Scotsman newspaper:Obituaries:27 April 2013〕
He returned to Scotland in 1952, but adopted a role in the Episcopalian Church, being ordained at the age of 27,〔http://www.deadlinenews.co.uk/2013/04/26/priest-dies-just-weeks-after-completing-his-lifes-work/〕 serving as honorary chaplain in St Marys Episcopalian Cathedral in western Edinburgh. In 1967 he moved to Moray as chaplain to the Bishop of Moray, and then to St Andrews Cathedral, Inverness, serving as Canon. Here he famously won the chastisement of the Bishop for wearing a kilt beneath cassock.
In 1981 he resigned from the Scottish Episcopalian Church, desiring a purer form of devotion and travelled to Mount Athos home of some of the roots of Christianity. This was greatly aided by his being fluent in Greek.〔http://reidandwrite.com/?p=1999〕 He was received into the Orthodox Church and stayed at the monastery at Simonopetra. He returned to Britain in 1982 to serve as an Orthodox Priest in the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of Thyateira and Great Britain. He initially spent three years in Coventry before returning to Scotland. In Edinburgh he united two small Orthodox communities, one Slavonic and one Greek, into a single community, named the Orthodox Community of St Andrew. He travelled across Scotland serving other small groups of Orthodox Christians. To break down barriers in the often multi-cultural groups, English was established as the language of worship.〔 Scotsman newspaper:Obituaries:27 April 2013〕
A parallel service was given to Edinburgh University for its many Orthodox Christian students, who had previously gone unserved. This found a home in the former Buccleuch Parish School on The Meadows. His new church was served by two further priests: Father Avraamy and Father Raphael.
In private life he followed a regime of prayer and fasting. He ate only once per day. He would often be found sheltering or feeding the homeless. He avidly wrote in opposition to torture and imprisonment on religious grounds. He was an early advocate of recycling.〔http://www.orthodoxscotland.co.uk/frjohn/〕
In 2001 he hit the national newspaper headlines, when (against a court ruling) he aided an 8 year old child and her mother escape a violent father, finding them secret accommodation in Greece.〔http://www.deadlinenews.co.uk/2013/04/26/priest-dies-just-weeks-after-completing-his-lifes-work/〕
He rose to the role of Archmandrite, the highest position within the Greek Orthodox Church.
In his final year he went blind and almost totally deaf but continued to pray.
He died peacefully at Edinburgh Royal Infirmary on 17 April 2013. On the day he died the Orthodox Church secured the purchase of the former Buccleuch Parish Church (used as storage by the university) to convert into a bespoke Orthodox Church. This was an objective which he had worked towards for several years.〔http://www.thyateira.org.uk/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1179&Itemid=1〕〔http://glasgowchurches.org.uk/obituary-archimandrite-john-maitland-moir-priest/〕
The Dean of Gibraltar, Canon W. Gordon Reid, described him as “a great man, though so humble that he kept it hidden”.〔Scotsman newspaper:Obituaries:27 April 2013〕
The funeral service was conducted on 24th April at St Peter’s Episcopal Church on Lutton Place, the Orthodox Chapel being too small for the purpose.〔http://orthodox-parish-aberdeen.blogspot.co.uk/2013/04/fr-john-maitland-moirs-funeral.html〕
Although there was discussion of his being buried in Dean Cemetery, he is buried by the edge of the western path in Currie churchyard, close to his original home.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Maitland Moir」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.