Allan Amoguis | |
Appointed: | --> |
Retired: | --> |
Ordination: | 22 July 2012 |
Consecration: | 3 February 2013 |
Birth Name: | Allan Hinautan Amoguis |
Birth Date: | 25 February 1973 |
Birth Place: | Butuan, Philippines |
Tomb: | --> |
Nationality: | Italian / Filipino |
Religion: | Roman Catholicism (until 2005) Orthodox Christianity (since 2005) |
Partner: | --> |
Previous Post: | --> |
Motto: | Fac alteri ut tibi vis |
Coat Of Arms: | CoatOfArmsOfMonsignorAmoguis.png |
Allan Amoguis (born Allan Hinautan Amoguis on 25 February 1973 in the Philippines) is an Italian bishop, serving as the head prelate of The Christian Patriarchate of East Asia.[1]
He graduated with a bachelor's degree in education from Don Bosco College-Seminary (which, later, became Don Bosco College)[2] in the Philippines, where he, at the same time, was discerning for his vocation to the priesthood in the Roman Catholic Church.
After his college graduation in 1996, he worked at the Office of the Philippine President in Malacanang Palace, in the Department of Budget and Management. With his professional Civil Service Eligibility, he got a permanent position in that department.[3]
During his seminary years at the Immaculate Conception Major Seminary, a Roman Catholic seminary in the Philippines, he served as the Editor-in-Chief of the Insight, the seminary's official English magazine.[4] He also contributed articles to the United Catholic Asian News (UCAN) and the Philippine Daily Inquirer, fighting against labor law violations and social injustice.
He converted to the Orthodox faith in 2005, and in 2016 was awarded a master's degree in Management and Development of Education Services (with the title of Doctor) by LUMSA University in Rome, Italy.[5]
He is the titular head of the Monastery of the Catholic Orthodox Church of the Holy Trinity in the Philippines[6] and the Chiesa Cattolica Ortodossa della Santa Trinita in Italy.[7]
Apostle Andrew, Tradition sustains, established the Church in the See of Byzantium (later Constantinople and Istanbul), followed by a line of bishops and patriarchs.[8]
Patriarch Joachim III of Constantinople[9]
Metropolitans Chrysostom and Germanos[10]
Matthew of Bresthena
Metropolitan Callistus of Corinth[11]
Cyprian Koutsoumbas of Oropos and Fili
Metropolitan Antonio De Rosso of Florence, Mets. Evloghios (Hessler) and Vigile
Metropolitan Basilio Grillo Miceli of Ravenna and L'Aquila[12]
Monsignor Chrysostomos of Sicily and Monsignor Dionysios of Rome[13]
Monsignor Allan (Irenaeus) Amoguis of Frosinone
Amoguis, Allan H. The Economics of Education and the Future of Societies. Frosinone: Savvy Publishing Company, 2017. .
Amoguis, Allan H. The Role of Montessori in Educating Children of this Generation and Beyond. Frosinone: Savvy Publishing Company, 2016. .
Amoguis, Allan H. The Death of Education. Frosinone: Savvy Publishing Company, 2015. .
Amoguis, Allan H. Surviving in the Seminary. Frosinone: Savvy Publishing Company, 2008. .
Amoguis, Allan H. English Grammar: A teaching guide for elementary and advanced learners of English. Frosinone: Savvy Publishing Company, 2006. .