Coptic Orthodox Church in Africa

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

This article, dealing with the Coptic Orthodox Church in Africa, is about the

Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria in African countries other than Egypt
.

The Apostolic Throne of the

Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria is based in the ancient Alexandria, Egypt, which is in Africa. The jurisdiction of the Church of Alexandria extended, as per Canon law of the First and Second Ecumenical Councils, to the Province of Egypt, Nubia and Pentapolis. Later on in expanded south to encompass all of what is now known as the Sudan
.

Since the demise of the Latin (Roman) North African Archiepiscopate of Carthage (which covered all of North and West Africa, apart from Egypt, Pentapolis and Libya) in the 8th century, Alexandria became the sole Apostolic Throne in the entire continent of Africa (or what was known of it at that time). The historical evangelization of the Apostolic Throne of Alexandria in Africa, apart from Egypt, Pentapolis, Libya, Nubia and the Sudan, does extend to:

Ethiopia

An Ethiopian orthodox Church in Gondar, Ethiopia.

Ethiopian Church
. By 1929, the Alexandrine Throne allowed the Ethiopian clergy to participate in the governing of their own Church, and the first native Ethiopian archbishop was enthroned in 1930 (thus becoming an autonomous church).

In 1959, an agreement was reached between the Ethiopian Holy Synod and the Alexandrine Throne to have their own

Pope of Alexandria Joseph II in Cairo and enthroned in Addis Ababa by the members of the Ethiopian Holy Synod and an Alexandrine delegation. The first Prelate, Abuna Basilius I (1959-1971), Patriarch-Catholicos of Addis Ababa and all Ethiopia, was ordained and enthroned in 1959, by Pope Cyril VI of Alexandria
.

The Patriarchate of Ethiopia is now vacant with the death in August 2012 of its 5th Patriarch, Abuna Paulos I (1992- 2012). This is after the Patriarchates of Abuna Theophilus I (1971-1979) (Deposed in a non-canonical way in 1976, sent to prison and murdered in prison in 1979), Abuna Tekle Haimanot I (1976-1988) (who was elected in a non canonical manner by pressure of the then Communist Government to replace his predecessor.) and Abuna Mercurios I (1988-1991), (who resigned under pressure, due to the accusation of collaborating with the (Dereg) Menghistu Communist Regime, On 1 August 2018, Abune Merkorios entered Ethiopia for the first time in 26 years, flying together with Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed and they passed away on 3 March 2022 at the aged 83 ).

Recently, the relation between the two churches improved significantly upon the signing of common declaration by the two patriarchs and the visit of Abuna Paulos to Egypt and the visit of Pope Shenouda to Ethiopia.

Eritrea

Whose own Prelate, Abuna Philipos I (1998-2002), Patriarch of

Eritrean Orthodox Church). The Current Prelate, Abune Antonios I (2004-2022),[1] is the third Patriarch of Asmara and all Eritrea, who succeeded Yacob I (2003-2004) the second Patriarch of Asmara and all Eritrea. However, he was deposed non-canonically in January 2006, and replaced by Abuna Discoros I. This action is however not approved by the Alexandrine Throne and is still under debate. Prior to gaining autonomy in 1994 and then autocephaly in 1998, it constituted a major archdiocese within the Patriarchate of Addis Ababa and all Ethiopia
.

Both the Patriarchate of

Saint Mark the Apostle is the founder of their Churches through the heritage and Apostolic evangelization of the Fathers of Alexandria
.

In other words, the Patriarchate of

Patriarchate of Alexandria
.

The Sudan

This country, who had both Egyptian expatriates and native adherents, is divided into two eparchies and whose prelates are:

The number of Coptic Sudanese is estimated around 200,000.

Libya, Tunisia, Algeria and Morocco

Pope of the Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria to this day includes the Pentapolis in his title as an area within his jurisdiction.[3]

The Coptic congregations in these countries were under the ancient Eparchy of the

Western Pentapolis, which was part of the Coptic Orthodox Church for centuries until the thirteenth century[4]

In 1971

Arsinoe
).

This was one among a chain of many restructuring of several eparchies by

Pope Shenouda III
, while some of them were incorporated into the jurisdiction of others, especially those who were within an uncovered region or which were part of a Metropolis that became extinct, or by dividing large eparchies into smaller more manageable eparchies. This was part of the restructuring of the Church as a whole.

Sub-Saharan Africa

Although The Coptic Orthodox Church had a bishop for missionary affairs in Africa in the 1950s this was not continued after the death of that bishop.[5]

There are two bishops dealing with Sub-Saharan Africa:

  • Currently the oldest serving Bishop in this area is Antonius Markos (Anthony Mark), General Bishop for
    Pope Shenouda III
    .
  • In the 1990s and as the service area had expanded,
    Pope Shenouda III consecrated Paul (Boulos) as General Bishop for Evangelism and Mission and Patriarchal Exarch in East and Central Africa
    .

Bishop Paul was originally a deacon then a celibate priest, he was then tonsured as a hieromonk before he was consecrated as a bishop. Both bishops were physicians before becoming full-time clergymen.

Here is a summary of the countries/churches under the jurisdiction of Bishop Antonius Markos according to his book "Come Across and Help Us, Book three", 2003[6] and under the jurisdiction of Bishop Paul according to the Mission Bishopric website:[7]

Coptic Orthodoxy in Sub-Saharan Africa[8]
Country Region in Africa Diocesan Bishop Number of Churches/Institutions Number of Clergy Members Coptic Population
Kenya Eastern Africa Bishop Paul +50 churches + 2 monasteries + 1 hospital 8 priests + 160 deacons ~2000 families (or 8000+ people)
South Africa Southern Africa Bishop Antonios Markos 12 churches + 1 school + 1 vocational training center 11 priests + ~120 deacons ~4500 families (or 15000+ people)
Democratic Rep. of Congo (Zaire) Central Africa Bishop Paul 8 churches + 3 schools 4 priests + 80 deacons 200 families (or ~1000 people)
Zambia Southern Africa Bishop Paul 4 churches + 1 hospital 3 priests + ~20 deacons 220 families (or ~1000 people)
Nigeria West-central Africa Bishop Paul 4 churches temporary priest + 5 deacons 160 families (or 600+ people)
Tanzania Southeastern Africa Bishop Paul 4 churches + 1 medical center 1 priest + 12 deacons 45 families (or 150+ people)
Zimbabwe Southern Africa Bishop Antonios Markos 2 churches + 1 monastery + 1 vocational training center 1 priest N/A
Namibia Southern Africa Bishop Antonios Markos 1 church + 1 vocational training center 1 priest N/A
Ghana West Africa Bishop Antonios Markos 1 church + 1 vocational training center 1 priest N/A
Ivory Coast West Africa Bishop Antonios Markos 1 church N/A
Togo West Africa Bishop Antonios Markos 1 church N/A
Botswana Southern Africa Bishop Antonios Markos 1 church temporary priest N/A
Lesotho Southern Africa Bishop Antonios Markos 1 church temporary priest N/A
Swaziland Southern Africa Bishop Antonios Markos 1 church temporary priest N/A
Total Africa 1 Bishop Markos and Bishop Paul 2 65 churches + 3 monasteries + 2 hospitals + 4 schools + 4 vocational training centers + 1 medical center 28 priests + ~500 deacons 400,000+ people

Notes:

1: The region of "Africa", in this case, does not include
autocephalous
status. Therefore, this table's data is solely on Sub-Saharan African countries.
2: Bishop Antonios Markos serves Southern and Western Africa, while Bishop Paul serves Eastern and Central Africa.

In 1984 a

Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria and mounted on the top of the All Africa Conference of Churches building as the Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria is considered to be the Mother church in Africa.[9]

See also

References

  1. ^ Eritrean Orthodox Diocese of North America (20 February 2022). "OBITUARY: H.H. Abune Antonios, the Third Patriarch of the Eritrean Orthodox Church".
  2. ^ Britannica
  3. ^ Coptic.net
  4. ^ History of the Coptic Church, by Father Menassa Youhanna
  5. ^ History of the Coptic Church, Iris Habib Elmasry
  6. ^ Come Across And Help Us Book 2 Archived October 8, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ CopticMission Archived January 31, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ The table on Churches is based on the following sources:
  9. ^ Coptic Africa Archived 2011-07-22 at the Wayback Machine

External links

  1. ^ "Bishopric of African Affairs". Bishopric of African Affairs. Retrieved 2021-10-20.
  2. ^ "Coptic Bishopric of African Affairs 2021". Retrieved 2021-10-20.