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Kyrill (Yonchev) of Pittsburgh

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His Eminence, the Most Reverend Archbishop '''Kyrill (Yonchev) of Pittsburgh''' (1920-2007) was the ruling [[bishop]] of the [[OCA]] bishop [[Diocese of Western Pennsylvania (OCA)|Diocese of Western Pennsylvania ]] and its of the OCA [[Bulgarian Diocese (OCA)|Bulgarian Diocese]] (1976. Prior to his service in the OCA, he was the sole hierarch of the [[ROCOR]]'s [[Bulgarian Diocese in Exile]] during its twelve-2007)year existence.
He ==Life==Abp. Kyrill was born Ilia Yonchev on [[consecration of a bishop|consecratedFebruary 26]] , 1920, in 1964 as Panaguriste, Bulgaria, the [[ROCOR]] bishop son of Mancho and Anna Yonchev. He attended the St.[[Bulgarian Diocese in ExileJohn of Rila]]Theological Seminary in Sofia, a Bulgaria, graduating in 1940. He was [[schismtonsure]] from the d to [[Church of Bulgariamonk|monastic]]'s orders on [[Bulgarian Eastern Orthodox Diocese of the USAJanuary 19]], 1941, Canada and Australiagiven the name Kyrill. On the next day he was [[ordination|American jurisdictionordained]] a [[deacon]]. In 1976, Kyrill and his diocese broke from the ROCOR and joined He was ordained to the [[Orthodox Church in Americapriest]] (OCA)hood in April 1943.
As Fr. Kyrill attended the St. Clement of Ochrid School of Theology. After graduating in 1944, he was appointed instructor of his repose on theology in the [[June 17seminary]]in Plovdiv, 2007Bulgaria and also was appointed [[abbot]] of the Bachkovo [[Monastery]]. As the abbot, Archbishop Kyrill was he participated with other Bulgarian leaders helping protect the Jewish population of Bulgaria from actions of the Nazi occupation against the longest serving Orthodox hierarch in AmericaJews during World War II.
Following World War II, Fr. Kyrill attended advanced studies in theology and philosophy in Bern, Switzerland. With the communist takeover of Bulgaria, Fr. Kyrill, in 1950, immigrated to the United States where he was soon assigned as pastor of St. George Bulgarian Orthodox Church in Toledo, Ohio, as part of the [[Bulgarian Eastern Orthodox Diocese of the USA, Canada and Australia|Bulgarian Eastern Diocese of North and South America and Australia]]. Fr. Kyrill was elevated to the rank of [[archimandrite]] on [[December 6]], 1959.  In 1964, Metr. Andrei of the Bulgarian Diocese petitioned the [[Holy Synod]] of the [[Church of Bulgaria]] for his return to the Bulgarian episcopacy and to continue to lead the [[diocese]] in America. With the return of Metr. Andrei and his diocese to the Church of Bulgaria, a group under Fr. Kyrill broke with Metr. Andrei and joined the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia ([[ROCOR]]) as the [[Bulgarian Diocese in Exile]]. On [[August 9]], 1964, Kyrill was [[consecration of a bishop|consecrated]] by ROCOR as Bishop of Toledo and Toronto of the Bulgarian Diocese in Exile. On [[December 20]], 1976, Bp. Kyrill and his diocese broke from the ROCOR and joined the [[Orthodox Church in America]] (OCA), with Kyrill appointed as the ruling bishop of a Bulgarian diocese under the OCA. In October 1977, Bp. Kyrill was appointed ''[[locum tenens]]'' of the [[Diocese of Western Pennsylvania (OCA)|Diocese of Western Pennsylvania]]. In 1978, Bp. Kyrill was elected the ruling bishop of the Pittsburgh diocese, which he led for the next 29 years. He also continued to lead the OCA's Bulgarian Diocese. In 1992, he was raised to the dignity of [[archbishop]]. During his tenure as head of the Pittsburgh diocese, Abp. Kyrill served as a member of the OCA Lesser [[Synod]] of Bishops, the [[Canonization]] Commission, and the Board of Theological Education. He was also a trustee of [[St. Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary (Crestwood, New York)|St. Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary]]. Abp. Kyrill reposed on [[June 17]], 2007, after a period of failing health. His funeral services were conducted on [[June 21]] and [[June 22|22]], 2007, at the St. Alexander Nevsky [[Cathedral]] in Allison Park, Pennsylvania. At the time of his death Abp. Kyrill was the longest-serving Orthodox hierarch in America. {{stubstart box}}{{succession|before=[[Andrei (Petkov) of New York|Andrei (Petkov)]]|title=Bishop of Toledo and Toronto<br>[[Bulgarian Diocese in Exile]] (ROCOR)|years=1964-1976|after=[[Michael (Donskoff) of Geneva|Michael (Donskoff)]]}}{{succession|before=''see created''|title=Bishop of Bulgarian Diocese<br>(OCA)|years=1976-2007|after= [[Alexander (Golitzin)]]}}{{succession|before= [[Theodosius (Lazor) of Washington|Theodosius (Lazor)]]|title=[[Diocese of Western Pennsylvania (OCA)|Archbishop of Pittsburgh]]<br>(OCA)|years=1978-2007|after= [[Melchisedek (Pleska) of Pittsburgh|Melchisedek (Pleska)]]}}{{end box}} ==Source==*''The Orthodox Church'', Vol 43/No 3, Summer 2007, p. 30.
==External link==
[[Category:Bishops]]
[[Category:20th-21st-century bishops]]
[[Category:Bishops of Pittsburgh]]
[[Category:Bishops of Toledo]]
[[Category:Bishops of Toronto]]
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