Funeral services for Archbishop Kyrill announced

Funeral arrangements for His Eminence, Archbishop Kyrill of Pittsburgh, Western Pennsylvania, and the Bulgarian Diocese, fell asleep in the Lord on Sunday morning, June 17, 2007, have been finalized.

Archbishop Kyrill will lie in state at Saint George Cathedral, 738 Glenwood Rd., Rossford, OH, Rossford, OH, from 2:00 until 9:00 p.m. on Wednesday, June 20, 2007. A Memorial will be celebrated at 7:00 p.m. The cathedral is the see of the Bulgarian Diocese of the Orthodox Church in America. For more information on the services at Saint George Cathedral, please contact the cathedral at 419/662-3922

He will lie in state at Saint Alexander Nevsky Cathedral, corner of Red Coach Rd and Thompson Run Rd, Allison Park, PA, from 2:00 p.m. until 9:00 p.m. on Thursday, June 21. At 7:00 p.m., the Rite of Burial of a Hierarch will be celebrated.

The Hierarchical Divine Liturgy will be celebrated on Friday, June 22, at 10:00 a.m., followed by a repast in the cathedral hall. Interment will follow at Holy Transfiguration Monastery, Ellwood City, PA.

For more information on the services at Saint Alexander Nevsky Cathedral, please contact the cathedral at 412/366-4647.

His Beatitude, Metropolitan Herman, will concelebrate the services with other members of the Holy Synod of Bishops.

Archbishop Kyrill, who had been in failing health for the past year, had been admitted to the hospital for treatment during the week of June 10, 2007.

Archbishop Kyrill was born Ilia Yonchev, the son of Mancho and Anna Yonchev, on February 26, 1920 in the historic city of Panaguriste, Bulgaria. He graduated from the Saint John of Rila Theological Seminary in Sofia in 1940.

On January 19, 1941, he was tonsured to monastic orders and given the name Kyrill. The following day, he was ordained to the diaconate. In April 1943, he was ordained to the holy priesthood.

Father Kyrill graduated from the Saint Clement of Ochrid School of Theology in 1944, and was appointed instructor of theology in the seminary in Plovdiv, Bulgaria. In the same year, he was named abbot of the Bachkovo Monastery where, during World War II, he and other leading civic and religious leaders helped protect Bulgaria’s Jewish population from extermination at the hands of the Nazi occupiers.

In 1946, Father Kyrill was sent to Bern, Switzerland, for advanced studies in theology and philosophy. In 1950, following the communist takeover of Bulgaria, he emigrated to the United States. A short time later, he was assigned pastor of Saint George Bulgarian Orthodox Church, Toledo, OH.

On December 6, 1959, Father Kyrill was elevated to the rank of archimandrite, and in 1963, he was named administrator of the Bulgarian Diocese in the United States. On August 9, 1964, he was consecrated Bishop of Toledo and Toronto and the Bulgarian Diocese of the United States of America and Canada.

On December 20, 1976, Bishop Kyrill united the Bulgarian Diocese to the Autocephalous Orthodox Church in America. In October of the following year, he was appointed locum tenens of the Pittsburgh Archdiocese, and in 1978, he was chosen ruling hierarch of the Archdiocese of Pittsburgh and Western Pennsylvania, a position he held for 29 years. He also continued to serve as the ruling hierarch of the OCA’s Toledo-based Bulgarian Diocese. In 1992, he was elevated to the dignity of Archbishop by the Holy Synod of Bishops of the Orthodox Church in America.

Archbishop Kyrill was the senior hierarch of the Holy Synod of the Orthodox Church in America. He was a member of the Lesser Synod of Bishops and served on numerous Church committees, including the Canonization Commission and the Board of Theological Education. He also was a trustee of Saint Vladimir?s Orthodox Theological Seminary, Crestwood, NY, and a member of the executive council of the Christian Associates of Southwestern Pennsylvania.

He was preceded in death by his parents and his brother, Stefan. He is survived by his sister, Ophelia Dinkov, and two nephews, Kyrill Yonchev and Michael Dinkov.

“The clergy and faithful of both the Bulgarian Diocese and the Archdiocese of Pittsburgh and Western Pennsylvania have loved and respected him as their spiritual father,” said the Very Rev. Paul Ziatyk, archdiocesan chancellor. “He has been a faithful example as an archpastor and true leader, exemplifying the virtues of humility, patience, and long-suffering. He will be greatly missed by his beloved people.”

In lieu of flowers, donations in Archbishop Kyrill’s memory may be made to the Archdiocese of Pittsburgh and Western Pennsylvania, PO Box 1769, Cranberry Township, PA 16066-1769, and/or the Bulgarian Diocese of the Orthodox Church in America, 519 Brynhaven Dr., Oregon, OH 43616.

May Archbishop Kyrill’s memory be eternal!