(By Dr. Jackie Ascott, Ph.D.)
The Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria is a very conservative
Church,which preserves
most carefully the Christian Faith, in its earliest and purest form,
passed on from generation to generation, unaltered
and true to the Apostolic doctrine and patterns of worship. It is
a deeply spiritual and even
mystical Church,
with an emphasis upon holiness, and the Mysteries of Faith,
but at the same time
it is a strongly doctrinal Church, holding faithfully to
the canons of
the Holy Scripture and the Apostolic and Orthodox Creeds
and
Teachings of the Church
Fathers of the first three Ecumenical Councils.
The Coptic Church is one of the most ancient
Churches in the World
(along side the Churches
of Jerusalem, Antioch, and Rome), having been founded
by Saint Mark the
Apostle, during the first century A.D. (traditionally,
in
43 A.D. or 61 A.D.).
Eusebius states, in his Ecclesiastic History, that Saint
Mark came to
Egypt during the first or third year of
the Roman Emperor
Claudius (i.e. in
41-42 A.D. or 43-44 A.D.) and he visited Alexandria again,
to preach and evangelize,
between 61 and 68 A.D.
Saint Mark's first convert was a shoemaker of Alexandria, Anianus,
who
was consecrated a
bishop, and later succeeded him as Patriarch. Saint Mark was
the first Patriarch
of the Coptic Church, and he received his martyrdom in
Alexandria on
the Feast of Resurrection (Easter) in 68 A.D. at the hands of
Pagan Egyptians
who were celebrating the feast of Serapis in the great temple
of Serapium.
The Patriarchs of the Coptic Orthodox Church have continued in a
line of unbroken succession
from Saint Mark until the present day. The current
Patriarch, Pope Shenouda
III, is the one hundred and seventeenth Patriarch to
occupy the Chair
of Saint Mark in the See of Alexandria. The full official
title of the Patriarch
of the Coptic Orthodox Church is "Pope and Patriarch of
the great city
of Alexandria, the Middle East, Ethiopia, Nubia,
and the
Pentapolis (*).
Throughout the years the Coptic Orthodox Church has stood firm and
has
remained faithful
to her Apostolic Traditions and Orthodox Faith, despite
waves of fearful persecutions
under pagan Roman Emperors, and to lesser extent
under Byzantine and
Arab rulers, and in the face of serious heresies
that
attacked the very
fiber and essence of the Christian Faith and threatened to
split the Church and
all of Christendom.
The Egyptians were a deeply religious race by nature and they responded
gladly to the
preaching of Christian Faith, having been left
with a deep
spiritual vacuum
following the final dethronement of their Pharaoh and god,
and the decline of
the ancient Egyptian Religion, with its symbol of Ankh, the
triads of gods,
the eminence of the gods in the land of Egypt, the national
devotion to the goddess
Isis and her son Horus, the death and the resurrection
of a god, and the
concepts of future judgement and immortality, had done much
to prepare the people
for the coming of Christianity.
The Egyptians were naturally proud of the fact that Christ has hallowed
their land with
His presence, during His earthly life. Egypt
was indeed
blessed by God, as
His people (Isaiah 19:25; Hosea 11:1).
In 30 B.C., after the defeat of Mark Anthony at the battle
of Actium,
Egypt has been incorporated
into the Roman Empire, bringing an end to the rule
of Ptolemies and sounding
the final death knoll for the great 3,000 year long
Ancient Egyptian
Civilization. Egypt now became the granary of Rome, and a
source of personal
wealth for the Emperor, which resulted in a serious drain
upon the resources
of the land and the people. However, the external Roman
imperial conflicts
and troubles over succession to the throne did not directly
affect Egypt,
and she enjoyed a period of little political change, in which
the major event and
development was the spread of Christianity throughout the
land.
By the end of the Second Century, Christianity was well established
in
Egypt, although
there were still pockets of paganism existing side by
side
with the new Faith.
By 190 A.D., the great Church of Alexandria was exchanging
Paschal epistles
with the Churches of Jerusalem and Antioch, concerning the
date of Easter, and
there were about forty Bishoprics, under the Patriarch of
Alexandria,
in the North of the country (in the Delta area).
By 202 A.D.
Eusebius mentioned
that there were Christians in the whole Thebaid, in Upper
Egypt, 800 km
up the Nile Valley. Saint Athanasius states, in
his Festal
letters, that there
were Christians in the small and large oases, in the heart
of the desert, by
329 A.D.
During the first centuries of the Christian
Church, the famous
Catechetical
School of Alexandria was an important
light and means of
instruction in
the Christian Faith and the study of theology, as well as of
knowledge in the
Sciences, and the need to discuss and interpret their faith
within the philosophical
and intellectual milieu of Alexandria scholarship
and learning.
The pre-Christian school had been founded by Ptolemy Soter in 323 B.C.,
and during the region
of Ptolemy Philadelphus in 288 B.C., it was developed to
include, not only
Greek philosopher, but also other nationalities, such as the
70 Jewish Rabbis who
worked on the Septuagint Greek translation of the
Old
Testament in Alexandria.
The School of Alexandria contained the world famous
Library and Museum
(the Pagan School), and it became the major set of learning
and philosophy for
the whole of the Ancient Hellenistic World.
The Christian School of Alexandria
(called Didascalium) offered
instruction in the
Christian faith and theology, along side study of the civil
science, such as philosophy,
medicine, physics, chemistry, anatomy, physiology,
mathematics,
geometry, astronomy, history, geography, music, and ancient and
modern languages.
It was open for Catechumens (pagans who believed in Christ
but who had not yet
been baptized), and for Deacons or Christian students who
desired a deeper knowledge
and understanding of Christian Doctrine and Faith,
as well as for pagans
students who were still searching for the Truth.
According to Tradition, St. Mark had opened
the first Christian
Catechetical School
in Alexandria for the instruction of the new converts, and
during the following
two centuries, the Didascalium developed and expanded
under the
Deanship of great philosophers and doctors of theology,
such as
Athenagoras, Pantaenus,
St. Clement of Alexandria, Origen, St. Athanasius and,
St. Didymus the Blind.
Under the supervision of St. Pantaenus and
St. Clement, the New
Testament was translated
from Greek into Coptic, a translation which is still
highly respected
and used to this day in the Coptic Orthodox Church.
The
Catechetical
School of Alexandria has also the Canon
of Holy Scripture.
Several of the
early Deans of the School also became Patriarchs, like Abba
Justus, the
first dean of the School, who became the 6th Patriarch (132-143
A.D.); Abba
Eumanius, 7th Patriarch (143-154 A.D.); Abba Markianos,
8th
Patriarch (154-163
A.D.); Abba Heraclus, 13th Patriarch (232-249 A.D.); Abba
Dionysius, 14th
Patriarch (249-270 A.D.); Abba Petros, the "Seal
of the
Martyrs", 17th Patriarch
(293-303 A.D.), and Abba Archelaus, 18th Patriarch
(303 A.D.). Other
distinguished teachers or graduates of the school
became
Patriarchs of
the Coptic Church, among whom were
Abba Alexandros, 19th
Patriarch (303-326
A.D); St. Athanasius the Apostolic, 20th Patriarch (378-384
A.D.); Abba
Kyrillos "The Pillar of Faith", 24th Patriarch (412-443 A.D.) and
Abba Dioscorus,
"The Interpid Hero", 25th Patriarch (444-456 A.D.).
These
early Patriarchs
were considered the "Guardians of Orthodoxy" and
their
learning earned
them the reputation of "Universal Teachers".
Graduates from other theological schools,
in other parts of the
Christian World, later
came to study at the school of Alexandria, including
St. Gregory the Theologian
(329-389 A.D.); St. Basil the Great (330-379 A.D.);
St. John Chrysostom
(347-407 A.D.); St. Jerome (342-420 A.D.) and St. Rufinus
(345-410 A.D.).
Thus the School of Alexandria became
the Lighthouse of
Christianity, for
a span of five centuries, until the reign of Justinian (529
A.D.). After
451 A.D. and the Council of Chalcedon,
the Emperors of
Constantinople, in
their persecution against the Copts, closed the school and
carried away
most of the books, The main center of learning for the
Coptic
Church was
then transferred to the Monastery of St. Macarius, in the
Wadi
El-Natroun desert,
where it continued for several centuries.
The Church of Egypt enjoyed peace for almost the first two centuries of
her existence,
until A.D. 203, when the Emperor Septimus Severus issued an
edict forbidding
conversions to both Christianity and Judaism.
Torture,
martyrdom, and the
temporary closure of the School at Alexandria resulted.
Great persecutions
were suffered under Emperor Decius (249-251 A.D.) and in
250 A.D., an imperial
edict decreed the enforced offering of worship of idols
by every Roman subject,
upon the penalty of execution. Cruel persecutions of
the Christians
continued under Emperor Gaius (251-253 A.D.) and under Emperor
Valerian (253-260
A.D.), until the Edict of Tolerance, issued by his successor,
Gallienus (260-268
AD), which brought a temporary end to the persecution and
allowed churches to
be built.
However, this period of peace was only a short respite,
for with the
acceptance to the
imperial throne of "Diocletian" in A.D. 284, the most severe
and bloodiest
period of persecution of the Coptic Church began. In A.D. 303,
"Diocletian" issued
a decree that ordered all churches to be demolished, all
Scriptures and
sacred books be burnt and all Christians,
who were not
officials, to be made
slaves. This intense period of persecution resulted in
the widespread
of torture and the martyrdom of thousands
of Christians,
because of their
courageous testimony for Christ. So many Coptic Christians
lost their lives during
this period, for their faith, that the Coptic Church
dates her calendar
from A.D. 284, the year of accession to the imperial throne
of Diocletian, and
the beginning of the Era of Martyrs (Anno Martyri or A.M.).
After the Abdication of Diocletian and the succession
of Galerius
(305-311 A.D.) and
Maximinus Daia (311-313 A.D.), there was a brief respite
for Egyptian Christians,
but it was not long before a new Edict of Persecution
was issued by
these two rulers. Only after the accession to the
imperial
throne of Constantine
the Great, his conversion to Christianity and the Edict
of Tolerance in A.D.
313, after the Battle of Milan, did Christianity become
the recognized
religion