Tensions are rising in Armenia between Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan's government and the Armenian Apostolic Church. The government says it is pursuing lawful investigations into senior clerics over alleged misconduct and risks of political destabilization, while church leaders contend they are facing political pressure. The dispute, which has intensified since June, is sharpening debates over religious freedom and national identity.
Armenia, widely recognized in historical and church tradition as the world’s first officially Christian nation, is experiencing a significant clash between its government and the Armenian Apostolic Church, an institution that many Armenians view as a custodian of national identity through genocide, exile, and Soviet repression.
Since early summer, particularly from June onward, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s administration has taken steps against senior clerics. According to a December 14, 2025 commentary by Bishop Dr. Paul Murray in The Daily Wire, the government maintains that these are lawful investigations tied to alleged criminal conduct and concerns about political destabilization during a sensitive period for Armenia’s security and peace negotiations.
Church leaders, including Catholicos Karekin II, and their supporters argue that these moves amount to political pressure aimed at silencing a sacred institution that has helped preserve Armenian identity through repeated episodes of persecution. As Murray notes, they contend that recent arrests and legal actions — among them the detention of Archbishop Arshak Khachatryan on revived drug-related charges, as reported by Reuters and cited in The Daily Wire piece — raise serious questions about religious freedom and potential state overreach.
The underlying accusations and their motivations remain disputed. The controversy is intertwined with contemporary political tensions, historical memory, and national trauma, leaving Armenians divided over whether the state is defending the rule of law or encroaching on religious life.
The confrontation also raises broader questions about the place of faith in a modern state and whether long‑standing religious institutions can continue to claim moral authority in a skeptical age. The Armenian Apostolic Church has survived empires, invasions, massacres, and the pressures of hostile ideologies, including Soviet‑era monitoring, restrictions, and infiltration that made open criticism risky or impossible.
In today’s independent Armenia, citizens can openly question both political and church authorities. Commentators such as Murray argue that this sometimes loud and painful scrutiny is itself a sign of democratic life, even as it exposes deep disagreements. They suggest that both sides face serious responsibilities: the church to confront any harmful practices with honesty, and the state to ensure that the language of justice is not used to justify political retaliation.
Murray, who serves as CEO of Save Armenia and as an adjunct professor at Indiana Wesleyan University, writes that the current crisis could ultimately foster renewal within Armenia’s religious and civic life. He argues that the endurance of Christian faith, in Armenia and elsewhere, has never depended on perfect leadership but on the resolve of communities to seek accountability, integrity, and reform when institutions fall short.
The article also points to lessons for Western societies marked by distrust of institutions. It suggests that Armenia’s experience offers a reminder that institutional imperfection need not lead to cynicism or collapse, and that periods of tension between church and state can, if approached with restraint and honesty, become moments for strengthening both democratic norms and spiritual life.