РефератыИностранный языкA A History Of Christianity In Egypt Essay

A History Of Christianity In Egypt Essay

, Research Paper


The history of Christianity in Egypt dates


back verily to the beginnings of Christianity itself. Many Christians hold


that Christianity was brought to Egypt by the Apostle Saint Mark in the


early part of the first century AD. Eusebius, Bishop of Caesarea, in his


Ecclesiastic History states that Saint Mark first came to Egypt between


the first and third year of the reign of Emperor Claudius, which would


make it sometime between AD 41 and 44, and that he returned to Alexandria


some twenty years later to preach and evangelize. Saint Mark’s first convert


in Alexandria was Anianus, a shoemaker who later was consecrated a bishop


and became Patriarch of Alexandria after Saint Mark’s martyrdom. This succession


of Patriarchs has remained unbroken down to the present day, making the


Egyptian Christian, or Coptic, Church one of the oldest Christian churches


in existence. Evidence for this age comes in the form of the oldest Biblical


papyri discovered in remote regions of Upper Egypt. These papyri are written


in the Coptic script and are older than even the oldest Greek copies of


the Bible ordered by Constantine in AD 312.


The Egyptians before Christianity had always


been a deeply religious people, and many readily embraced the young religion,


having had their old beliefs effectively destroyed by the coming of the


Roman Empire and the final dethroning of the god-king Pharaohs. Many of


the concepts of Christianity were already familiar to the Egyptians from


their ancient religion, such as the death and resurrection of a god, the


idea of the judgement of souls and a paradisiacal afterlife for the faithful.


The ankh too, the Egyptian symbol for eternal life, is very similar to


that of the cross revered by Christians (especially in the form of the


Coptic cross, seen at right), itself also a symbol for eternal life. Furthermore,


the belief that God had chosen Egypt as a safe place for His infant son


to hide him from Herod was a great source of pride to the Egyptian Christians.


It was through Christianity that the Egyptian culture survived the Roman


Dominion.


The Church Suffering and Victorious


Yet these formative years were not without


problems. Throughout this time Christianity in Egypt was locked in an often


deadly struggle against the polytheistic religions of the Greco-Roman culture


as well as the Hellenistic movement that began in Alexandria spread to


other large cities. To counter Hellenistic philosophy that often criticized


the young religion the Christian leaders in Egypt established a catechetical


school in Alexandria, the Didascalia, founded in the late second century


AD. This school became the heart of what can only be called Christian philosophy,


and great teachers and orators such as Clement and Origen were able to


battle the Hellenistic philosophers on their own ground and advocate Christianity


in an orderly and intellectual manner. It was also in this great university


of Christian learning that Christianity first underwent rigorous studies


that created its first theology and dogma, as well as making the new faith


accessible to all. Pantaenus, the founder and first dean of the Didascalia,


helped the Egyptian people bridge the gap between Dynastic Egypt and the


new era by promoting the use of the Greek alphabet instead of the Demotic


(”cursive” hieroglyphics) in translations of the Bible as well as in the


writing of religious theses and letters. Additionally, the school educated


everyone who came to it in Greek, opening the study of religion to just


about everyone, and making as many people as possible literate.


Yet the greatest persecutions on the young


religion came at the hands of the Roman government. Emperor Nero had set


the precedent in AD 64, about the same time as the martyrdom of Saint Peter.


It was unusual, for the actual offense was simply to be a Christian or


to profess the Christian faith, rather than any kind of criminal acts that


might go along with it (such as those later falsely attributed to Medieval


heretics). An arrested Christian could receive a pardon simply by offering


incense on a Roman altar, but many refused to do so, citing scripture passages


urging faith in the one God. Thus the true “crime” of the persecuted Christians


was their refusal to do homage to the Roman gods, including the emperor.


Those who did refuse to bow to the Roman religion were imprisoned, often


tortured, thrown to the wild animals in the coliseum, or suffered execution


by any number of other means. Rather than discouraging the Christians,


these actions encouraged them and reinforced their faith, echoing the words


of Jesus that those who suffered persecution because of his name were truly


blessed. These heroes of the Christians were called “martyrs,” a word that


means “witnesses.” In the first century this persecution was largely done


by the government, though after a few decades they seem to have lost interest


(or become fearful of the sect) and in the second and early third centuries


the mobs took over the persecutions. Decius and Diocletian, in the 250s


and early 300s respectively, brought the imperium back into the persecution,


but it was clear by this time it was a losing battle as Christianity had


penetrated even into the highest levels of society.


It was in Egypt that some of the greatest


defiances of the Romans by Christians were done. While their Roman counterparts


worshipped in catacombs and underground vaults, the Egyptian Christians


built their churches openly and performed their ceremonies in full view


of the Empire. And for every one that the Empire struck down, more would


be converted by the example of the martyr. Diocletian was particularly


brutal, executing so many Christians in 284 alone that the Coptic Church


dates its calendar, the Calendar of the Martyrs (Anno Martyri) from that


time. Despite these persecutions, Christianity seems to have grown rapidly


in Egypt, spreading to Fayoum in 257 via Anba Dionysius, and in 260 even


down into the Thebaid. But in 306 something happened that would change


the destiny of Christianity forever: Constantine became emperor.


Constantine


Actually, he became one of the emperors.


The Roman Empire of the time used the Tetrarchy, or Rule of Four. There


was one Augustus and one Caesar each for the eastern and western parts


of the Empire. One of Constantine’s first acts as Augustus was to end the


persecution of Christians where he had been campaigning in Gaul (France),


Spain, and Britain. It is unknown where Constantine got his initial respect


for Christianity, but it is thought that his mother was a Christian. Shortly


afterwards Galerius, the Eastern Augustus, issued an edict of toleration


for Christianity, ending persecutions in Greece and the surrounding area.


Maximinus Daia (not to be confused with Maximinus the Thracian) however,


responded by increasing persecu

tions in his territory of Egypt.


The story is told that once before the


Battle of Milvian Bridge (by which Constantine took complete control of


the Western Empire) when the odds were greatly against him, Constantine


beseeched God for help, praying in the Christian fashion, and won the day.


He later adopted the Chi-Rho, a stylized monogram of the first letters


of “Christus,” as his standard, and led his armies to victory after victory.


Because of this, Constantine was even more well-disposed towards the Christians,


though he himself was not baptized a Christian until his deathbed. In 313


together with Licinius, the eastern Augustus, he developed a policy of


religious tolerance throughout the Empire and for the first time in many


many decades there was a social peace. People were free to worship as they


pleased and the Christian Church was allowed to own property, making it


much easier to build permanent churches. Additionally, Christianity was


made the official state religion, freeing it at least from persecution


by the Imperium. Constantine’s order giving religious freedom to all under


his rule is known as the Edict of Milan or more properly, the Edit of Tolerance,


and was the forerunner of other religious laws such as those found in the


American Constitution and the Lateran Treaty of 1949, part of which created


Vatican City.


Feeling that his power in Egypt was threatened,


Maximinus, still carrying out his persecutions against the Christians there,


marched an army across Asia Minor into Europe and confronted Licinius.


Licinius, following Constantine’s example, prayed in the Christian fashion


with his army before the battle and defeated Maximinus. With this, Licinius


brought the new Roman policy of religious tolerance to Egypt and ended


the persecution of the Egyptian Christians.


After this, Constantine became more and


more involved in the workings of Christianity. His dream was to travel


to the Holy Land and be baptized in the Jordan River, but this was abandoned


when he discovered that the eastern churches were in upheaval, mostly due


to the stir caused by the beliefs of Arius, now called the Arian Heresy.


In 325, in response to this disharmony, Constantine ordered the Council


of Nicaea. This council was the largest gathering of Christian bishops


in the history of the Church so far, and though the majority of those present


were representing the eastern churches of Egypt and Greece, there were


delegates from Rome, and thus the sobriquet “ecumenical” (meaning “of the


whole world”) was attached. Constantine attended as well, describing himself


as “bishop of external things,” and kept a secular position on the issues,


but it was clear that he wanted Christianity to be united and harmonious.


The Nicene Creed, the great contribution of the Council and a prayer still


used by Christians to this day, was composed by Saint Athanasius, a young


Egyptian deacon who would later follow Alexandros as patriarch of Alexandria.


The Foundations of Monasticism


Egypt is regarded by many Christians,


regardless of denomination, as the home of Christian monasticism, and it


is very easy to see why. The sheer number of Christian monasteries scattered


about the East is astounding, from the 300 that were in Constantinople


alone to the isolated Saint Catherine’s at Mount Sinai. Yet it was Egypt


that was seen as the heart of the monastic idea. The anonymous work, History


of the Monks in Egypt, written at some time in the fourth century, says


of Egypt:


There is no town or village in Egypt


or the Thebaid that is not surrounded by hermitages as if by walls, and


the people depend on their prayers as if on God Himself…Through them


the world is kept in being.


Christian monasticism emerged as a genuine


movement during the early fourth century, but the spirit of monasticism


was already present in Christianity with its ideas of asceticism and moderation.


For the Christian East, the monk was by definition a solitary role, and


there have been more Christian hermits in this area than in any other in


the world.


It is Saint Anthony of Egypt who is credited


with the founding of monasticism, along with his fellow countryman Saint


Pachomius. Yet even they were only expanding on an idea that had already


existed. After the death of his parents in the 270’s, Anthony had entrusted


his younger sister to a parthenon, or convent of women. Thus priories of


what are today called nuns were already established long before Saints


Anthony and Pachomius even began their work. Indeed, it is women who are


to be truly credited with the origin of the monastic vocation. Yet Anthony


still deserves the praise due to him, for his true innovation was to move


the monastic community away from the distractions of society and the city


and into the wilderness, which he did, founding his first hermitage in


AD 305.


Unlike monasteries in the West, the monasteries


of Egypt and the surrounding area had no centralized orders, rather, each


one was an autonomous unit. Many of the early monasteries in the East were


founded and maintained by the rulers and nobility, others by groups of


the citizenry wishing to have prayers said for themselves and their families.


The size of the monasteries also varied greatly. Some were highly organized


enterprises, owning large amounts of land and commercial interests, while


others were hermitages of only three or four members. After Saint Anthony,


there were two basic types of monasticism in Egypt, and later on, the world.


There was the eremetical, or hermit, style and the cenobitic, monasteries


in which the residents led a communal life.


These Egyptian ascetics each lived very


similar lives to the others of their type. They took vows of chastity and


poverty, and if part of a monastic community, obedience to the abbot. They


practiced long and frequent fasts, some abstained from alcohol and meat,


and they supported themselves by doing services for the lay people nearby,


such as helping with labor or the selling of some small handicrafts. The


largest monasteries were often self-sufficient, owning farms and herds,


as well as making everything they needed, from the clothes they wore to


the bread that was on their table. If they did make any money for anything


they did, they kept only what they needed to subsist and gave the rest


to the poor. While crowds of the poor often joined monasteries (vows of


poverty being nothing new to them, and at least they would have food, clothing,


and shelter), later on many of the upper class joined as Christianity spread


across class and caste. Quite a number of the latter were educated and


were employed by the Church in various intellectual occupations such as


catechists, clerks and doctors. From the very beginning, the early Christian


Church had a place and a task for everyone.


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