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  • The Christian religion(s) of the Middle East

    Hellenic News of America
    Oct 3 2004


    THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION(S) OF THE MIDDLE EAST

    A question of Belief


    Rev. Dr. Miltiades B. Efthimiou, Protopresbyter
    Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople


    PROLOGUE


    The recent bombings of Christian Churches in Iraq prompts us to ask,
    is there a Christian religion or even a Christian minority in Iraq
    and even in the Middle East? The following study is an overview of
    these Christian religions in this troubled area following a trip to
    this area along with members of the National Council of Churches
    several years ago.

    In my capacity as Ecumenical Officer for both the Greek Orthodox
    Archdiocese of North and South America and the Standing Conference of
    Canonical Orthodox Bishops in the Americas (SCOBA), it was apparent
    that western peoples must begin to understand the religious
    complexities of the Middle East at a time when religious
    confrontation and extremism become increasingly a mark of our times.
    Christian, Muslim and Jewish peoples are confronting one another at
    an alarming rate.

    The purpose of this article is to provide an overview of Christians,
    Moslems and Jews, as well as an overview of the Christian Churches of
    the Middle East. This is a tentative undertaking, since momentous
    changes on a daily basis, further complicate a critical understanding
    by most Americans of the Middle East and its religious orientation,
    because of their unfamiliarity with religions and cultures that are
    not western or Christian. For example, sectarian identities have
    often been subjected to the manipulation of clerical as well as
    political leaders, all in the name of power and/or a Supreme Being.
    And these leaders, (Jewish, Moslem Shiite, Moslem Sunni or Kurdish,)
    are subject to their national identities. For Moslems, though,
    `national identities are not fixed', said professor S. Kransner of
    Stanford University. Indeed, it is rightfully suggested that Shia,
    Iraqi, Arab Muslims, choose identities depending on circumstances and
    which will benefit them in the long run. Jews are in this mix. The
    Christians of the Middle East, a distinct minority, are in this mix.
    (See the second part of this article for a thorough discussion of the
    Christian churches of the Middle East.)

    To understand the complexities of this issue, one needs to understand
    the three non-Jewish main ethnic groups:

    SUNNI MUSLIMS: This sect is comprised of about 85% of the
    worldʼs Muslims.37% are Iraqi. They believe that the first four
    Caliphs, (highest religious rulers), were the rightful successors to
    the prophet Mohammed. Saddam Hussein is Sunni.

    SHIITE MUSLIMS; They represent about 60% of the Iraqi population,
    and, therefore, are the dominant religious sect of this region. They
    reject the authority of the first three caliphs and claim that the
    true leaders of Islam descend from Ali, the fourth caliph, son-in-law
    of Mohammed.

    KURDS; a non-Arabic people, they are the largest ethnic group in the
    world without their own homeland. Kurds are concentrated to the north
    of Iraq and to the south of Turkey. Kurds are made up of Sunnis and
    Shiites.

    Would an alliance of all Moslems help in the peace process in the
    Middle East? It would depend, as professor Krasner suggests, not so
    much on a sense of nationalism, but the ability to work out a
    power-sharing arrangement which would be beneficial to everyone,
    including Jews.

    For all concerned, efforts to bring all groups together in a serious
    way, could reduce the spread of Middle East nationalism and tensions.
    Understanding the religions of the Middle East will help speed the
    process.

    I am indebted to the Middle East Council of Churches and to Fr.
    Ronald G. Robersonʼs work The Eastern Christian Churches - A
    Brief Survey (1993 edition). I would also recommend Dialogue With
    People of Other Christian Faiths, prepared by the Division of
    Overseas Ministries of the National Council of Churches of Christ,
    U.S.A. I would also recommend the book, God is One, by R. Marston
    Speight, second edition.


    THE CHRISTIANS OF THE MIDDLE EAST*





    The churches of the Middle East can be grouped into 5 families
    representing about 15 million Christians (approximately 9 million
    residing in the Middle East). The largest is the family of Oriental
    Orthodox Churches - the Coptic Orthodox Church in Egypt, the Armenian
    Apostolic Church living in various Arab countries in addition to the
    Armenians of the Republic of Armenia; and the Syrian Orthodox Church.
    Each is fully self-governing, though they are in communion with one
    another.
    The second family of churches is the Byzantine Orthodox Churches.
    They are often referred to as Eastern or Greek Orthodox. They
    constitute three sell-governing churches, linked by doctrine, liturgy
    and canon law with the Ecumenical Patriarchate in Istanbul (formerly
    Byzantium or Constantinople), and belong, therefore, to that wider
    family of Orthodox churches in Russia, eastern Europe and elsewhere.
    The third family comprises the Catholic churches of the Middle East.
    These churches all accept the supreme ecclesiastical authority of the
    Pope and the doctrine of the Catholic Church. But only a small
    percentage of them are Roman, or Latin-Catholic. Most of them can be
    grouped together as the Eastern-rite Catholic Churches - the word
    `rite' denoting their forms of liturgy and canon law which differ
    from the western Latin rite of the Roman Catholics. The largest of
    these churches is the Maronite Church in Lebanon.
    The fourth family is in terms of independent history, one of the
    oldest and most self-contained in the Middle Eastern churches: the
    Assyrian Church of the East. Sometimes identified by its historical
    tradition as the Church of the `East Syrians' or the Church of
    Persia. It exists in Iran, Iraq, Syria and Lebanon.
    The fifth family comprises the Anglican, Lutheran and Protestant
    Churches, like the Eastern-rite Catholic Churches (possibly excepting
    the Maronite Church), these churches came into being as a result of
    western missionary activity in the Middle East. Whereas the
    Eastern-rite Catholic Churches mostly go back several centuries, this
    family of churches dates in the Middle East from as recently as the
    19th century.

    The Apostles and their churches

    In the earliest years of Christian history churches were founded in
    various parts of the Middle East and the Mediterranean world where
    the Apostles travelled as missionaries of the Gospel. In the West we
    attribute the foundation of the Church of Rome to St. Peter and St.
    Paul, and in the New Testament we read the letters of St. Paul to
    several of the early Christian communities with which he was linked
    in Greece and western Turkey. We also read of the Church in
    Jerusalem, led by St. James the brother of John, and the Church in
    Antioch, in the north-western corner of Syria where St. Peter and St.
    Paul are said to have created a community of Christians which soon
    became one of the flourishing centers of Christianity. St. Thomas is
    also associated by tradition with Antioch, though his missionary
    travels took him eastward through Central Asia and India. So also St.
    Bartholomew who travelled northward through eastern Turkey and
    Armenia. Another important Christian center was at Alexandria in
    Egypt where St. Mark is said to have preached among his kinsmen, the
    Copts, from whose name we derive the words `Egypt' and `Egyptian'.
    Further south in Africa, St. Matthew is believed to have founded the
    Church in Ethiopia.
    While it may be difficult to verify all these traditions by
    historical criteria, they have been and remain fundamental to the
    self-understanding of the eastern churches throughout the ages. It is
    for this reason that they speak of themselves as being truly
    `apostolic'.
    These 15 million Christians represent only a tiny minority of the
    total population of the Middle East (about 10%), the great majority
    of whom are Muslim. The churches vary from one another, historically,
    doctrinally, and culturally, and this produces sometimes different
    views of the Arab Muslim world in which they live. But the quality of
    their living traditions is not to be measured in terms of their
    numbers, nor is their significance to be belittled because of their
    differences. In our ecumenical age of deepening fellowship between
    all parts of the Christian Church, and of growing dialogue with
    Muslims, these churches demand to be understood in their own terms,
    no longer under the prejudicial stereotypes of `ancient', or
    `schismatic', or `younger' (i.e. recently converted), or foreign'.

    THE FIVE `CHURCH' FAMILIES IN THE MIDDLE EAST

    The following survey of the churches of the Middle East, groups them
    into five ʽfamiliesʼ: Oriental Orthodox, Eastern Orthodox,
    Catholic and Protestant churches, and the Assyrian Church of the
    East.

    The Oriental (non-Chalcedonian) Orthodox
    Churches
    The greatest number of Christians in the Middle East Belong to the
    churches of the Oriental Orthodox family. The largest of these is the
    Coptic Orthodox Church in Egypt. The others are: The Armenian
    Apostolic Church. seated in the Lebanese coastal town of Antilias,
    north of Beirut, and the Syrian Orthodox Church, seated in Damascus.
    Ethnically and culturally these three churches are in many ways
    different, each being identified with its own people or nation. The
    Armenian Church traces its origins to the missionary Apostles
    Thadaeus and Bartholomew. It has since remained the central
    institution of Armenian nationhood and nationalism.
    The Copts trace their descent from the Pharaonic Egyptians. Their
    conversion to Christianity began with the North African preaching of
    St. Mark whom they recognize as the first Patriarch of Alexandria.
    But it took three centuries of persecution before the Coptic Church
    established itself in Egypt. The desert monasticism, following the
    rules of St. Antony and St. Pachomeus, attracted many other
    Christians to visit Egypt. Their missionary activity in Africa led to
    the Christianization of much of Nubia, the Sudan and Ethiopia.
    Weakened by the withdrawal eastwards of the Assyrian Church, the
    remaining `Western Syrians' felt themselves abused by the Council of
    Chalcedon and raffled to the anti-Chalcedonian teaching of the 6th
    century Jacob (Yaqub) alBaradaʼi after whom the Syrian Orthodox
    Church is sometimes labeled `Jacobite'.
    Notwithstanding such differences, however, these three Oriental
    Orthodox Churches have in the early centuries struggled to uphold
    their nationsʼ interests against the imperial presence of the
    Byzantine and the Persian Empires. With the rise of the Islamic
    Empire in the 7th century A.D. they fell under a new form of
    religio-political power which, for the next five centuries, largely
    improved their situation. The Muslims treated the Christians as a
    single group, irrespective of the doctrinal differences between
    Assyrian, Oriental and Byzantine Orthodox Churches, and looked to
    them to provide the cadre of the `civil service' in the Islamic
    Caliphate.
    This situation was imperiled, however, by the intrusion of the
    western Christian Crusaders from the 11th to the 13th centuries, and
    led to periodic persecution and social marginalization of all the
    eastern Christians as the Mongol dynasties seized control of the
    Caliphate. From the 14th to the early 20th centuries, therefore, the
    eastern churches lived as `closed communities', isolated within
    Islamic society and cut off from the church in the West.
    The breach between these churches and the Byzantine family of
    churches occurred in 451 at the Council of Chalcedon, and thus they
    accept the authority of only the first three ecumenical councils.
    For many centuries the non-Chalcedonian churches lived more or less
    in isolation from the rest of Christendom and, for political and
    geographical reasons, even from one another. However, for the first
    time since the 6th century they held a conference of the Heads of the
    Oriental Orthodox Churches in Addis Ababa in 1965. Since then they
    have drawn closer together in fellowship and joint planning. They are
    presently in official negotiation with the `Chalcedonian' Eastern
    Orthodox family of churches on Christology and `Chalcedonian' unity
    and are active members of the World Council of Churches (WCC) and the
    Middle East Council of Churches (MECC).

    The Armenian Apostolic Church
    Catholicosate of Cilicia

    The Armenian Apostolic Church, known also as Armenian Orthodox, has a
    distinctive ethnical, cultural and historical background from the
    churches referred to in this issue.
    Diaspora has been a permanent aspect of Armenian history. Since the
    dawn of their history, the Armenians, for one reason or another, have
    emigrated. However, forced and massive emigration only began in the
    10th century, with the successive occupation of Armenia by
    Byzantines, Seljuk Turks, Persians, Ottomans and Russians.
    Deportation and migration continued in succeeding centuries. But none
    of the mass deportations of earlier years equaled those that took
    place in the period 1915-1922. Over one and a half million Armenians
    were massacred in Turkey and the rest deported to the Syrian deserts.
    At present they are about two million and can be found almost
    anywhere on the globe, mostly in Middle Eastern countries, the USA
    and Canada, South America, southern and western Europe and Australia.
    The church in diaspora has three centers: 1. The Catholicosate of
    Cilicia, reestablished and reorganized in Antelias, Lebanon in 1930.
    With its diocesan administrative organization, theological seminary
    and world-wide ecumenical relations, it is the de facto spiritual
    centers of the Armenian diaspora. It also plays a significant role in
    the cultural, social and political life of the nation. Its
    jurisdiction now covers Lebanon, Syria (Aleppo, Qamishli), Cyprus,
    Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates, Iran, Greece and half of the
    Armenian communities in North America. 2. The Patriarchate of
    Constantinople; and 3. the Patriarchate of Jerusalem, both of them
    related to the Catholicosate of Etchmiadzin, in the former Soviet
    Republic of Armenia.
    The Armenian Apostolic Church in Lebanon is a strong community of
    150,000 members who are now fully integrated into the Lebanese
    society. The school of theology at Bikfaya, founded in 1930, provides
    new clergy and also furnishes priests to serve the diaspora
    communities falling under its jurisdiction.
    The Armenian Orthodox are the third largest Christian community in
    Syria, after the Greek Orthodox and Greek Catholic churches. They
    number 100,000.
    The Armenian Apostolic Church is the largest Christian community in
    Iran. Armenians were established in Iran mainly in 1605 when Shah
    Abbas forced hundreds of thousands of Armenians to leave their
    homeland and migrate to Iran. Presently the church has three dioceses
    with a total of 170,000 membersThe Armenian Church has 3,500 members
    in Cyprus. Armenians have lived on the island since the 11th century.
    The Armenian Apostolic Church in Kuwait and the Emirate has about
    12,000 members. Large communities of Armenians live in Europe (in
    France there are 350,000 members), in
    the USA and Canada 600,000.

    The Catholicosate of Etchmiadzin

    Located in Armenia, the Catholicosate of Etchmiadzin is the spiritual
    center for the Armenians living there. It also has jurisdiction on
    communities in the Middle East (Iraq and Egypt), France, USA, South
    America and Australia.
    The existence of two Catholicosates with the Armenian Church: the
    Catholicosate of Etchmiadzin (Catholicosate of All Armenians in
    former Soviet Armenia) and the Catholicosate of Cilicia, Antelias,
    Lebanon is due to historical circumstances. The diocese of Baghdad,
    Iraq, is related to the Catholicosate of Etchmiadzin and counts
    15,000 members. The diocese of Egypt is related also the
    Catholicosate of Etchmiadzin and has 20,000 members.

    The Armenian Patriarchate of Constantinople
    The Armenian Patriarchate of Constantinople with its See at Istanbul,
    Turkey, is dependent on the Catholicosate of Etchmiadzin. The
    faithful (80,000) are concentrated in Istanbul, where 35 of the
    Patriarchateʼs parishes are located. The Patriarchate was
    recognized in 1461 by the Ottoman authorities as the sole legal
    representative of all Armenians in the Empire, including those within
    the jurisdiction of the Silesian Catholic sate.

    The Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem

    This church is the largest among the four oriental Orthodox churches
    in Palestine: Armenian, Coptic, Syrian, Ethiopian. Armenian churches
    existed in Jerusalem since the 5th century. Spiritually the
    Patriarchate depends on the Catholic sate of Etchmiadzin. A very good
    relationship exists with the Catholic sate of Cilicia. The
    Patriarchate occupies the entire summit of Mt. Zion. It has 1,500
    members. Between 1950 and 1973 almost 90% of the members emigrated.
    The related church in Amman, Jordan, has 1,500 members.

    The Coptic Orthodox Church
    .
    The Coptic Church is the largest Christian community in the Middle
    East. It counts about 6,000,000 believers. It has some 45 dioceses in
    Egypt, Africa, Middle East, Europe and the USA. 40 of these dioceses
    are functioning in Egypt. There are Coptic churches in Kuwait,
    Jordan, Jerusalem, Lebanon and Iraq. Jerusalem has an archdiocese
    (established in the 9th century) with two congregations in Jaffa and
    Nazareth. The churches in the other countries are related directly to
    the Patriarchate. The diocese of the USA and Canada was founded in
    the 1960ʼs. Twenty-four congregations in the USA and three in
    Canada are formed mainly from Egyptian immigrants. Five parishes are
    found in London, Paris, Vienna, Geneva and Frankfurt.

    The Syrian Orthodox Church

    This Church has its center in the Patriarchate of Antioch (at present
    in Damascus, Syria) and counts about 160,000 believers. It is a
    church which has contributed much to the blossoming of early
    Christian literature and to the treasure of theological thinking,
    spreading Christianity from the Byzantine Empire to the regions of
    the Far East. An outstanding bishop was St. Jacob Baradaʼi
    (500-578) (after whom the Syrian Orthodox were called `Jacobites').
    He revived the ritual life of the church in Syria, Egypt and Persia.
    During the Mongol invasions of the 14th century, the church suffered
    greatly. At the end of the 18th century its strength was further
    reduced due to the establishment of a separate Uniate Syrian
    Patriarchate (Syrian Catholics). At the turn of the present century
    (1915-1920) the church was affected by Turko-Kurdish persecutions and
    in the 1970ʼs by mass emigrations. The Seat of the Patriarchate,
    after many moves over the centuries, was finally established in
    Damascus, Syria, in 1954.
    The Syrian Orthodox Catholic sate of the East was reestablished in
    1964, after being vacant for centuries. Twelve dioceses are under its
    jurisdiction. In the 1970ʼs a jurisdiction division occurred in
    the church. One branch continues to recognize the spiritual supremacy
    of the Patriarch of Antioch in Damascus and another branch installed
    its independent Catholicose in Malabar.
    There are now twelve dioceses related directly to the Patriarchate:
    four in Syria, two in Iraq, two in Turkey, two in Lebanon, and one in
    Jordan. Syrian Orthodox dioceses are found today in Europe (Holland
    and Sweden), the USA and Canada, and two patriarchal vicariates in
    Brazil and Argentina.

    The Eastern (Byzantine) Orthodox Churches

    The Eastern Orthodox Patriarchates of Constantinople (now Istanbul),
    Alexandria, Antioch (now centered in Damascus) and Jerusalem belong
    to the Byzantine tradition of Orthodoxy which also includes eleven
    other autocephalous or self-governing churches: Russia, Romania,
    Serbia, Greece, Bulgaria, Georgia, Cyprus, Czechoslovakia, Poland,
    Albania and Sinai.
    To distinguish them from the Oriental Orthodox Churches, the Eastern
    Orthodox are also called Byzantine Orthodox, by reference to their
    use of the Byzantine-rite liturgy of St. John Chrysostom; or
    Chalcedonian Orthodox, be reference to the Ecumenical Council of
    Chalcedon in 451 which condemned ʽmonophysitism'.
    Others sometimes still describe them as Melkite-Orthodox, a reference
    to their political allegiance to the Byzantine Emperor (`melik' -
    king) until the fall of Constantinople to Muslim conquest in 1453,
    and their subordination to the authority of the Patriarch in
    Constantinople during the Ottoman period. Another term, Greek
    Orthodox, tends to be rather misleading as it wrongly suggests them
    to be part of the Church of Greece, and draws attention away from the
    fact that, in the Middle East, the great majority are Arab or
    Arabized.
    Eastern Orthodox Churches in the Middle East, as elsewhere, are
    different from the Oriental (non-Chalcedonian) Orthodox in two
    important respects. First of all, the Eastern Orthodox recognize the
    authority of seven ecumenical councils: Nicea (325), Constantinople
    (381), Ephesus (431), Chalcedon (451), Constantinople II (553),
    Constantinople III (680), and Nicea II (787). The term ecumenical in
    its root meaning is `the inhabited world'. As used with reference to
    those councils, it means the Christian world of the fourth to the
    eighth centuries. Secondly, Eastern Orthodox Churches recognize the
    Patriarch of Constantinople as Ecumenical Patriarch. This is largely
    an honorary primacy of `first among equals' and quite different from
    the Roman Catholic concept of papal authority, because each of the
    churches in this group is entirely self-governing (autocephalous).

    Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople

    The history of Constantinople as a Patriarchate begins in 300, when
    the Emperor Constantine I decided to move the seat of government from
    Italy to the eastern region of his empire and chose this small town
    of Byzantium along the Bosporus.
    The Ecumenical Councils of Constantinople (381) conferred upon the
    bishop of the city the second rank after the bishop of Rome. The
    Ecumenical Council of Chalcedon (451) gave a definite shape to the
    organization of the Church of Constantinople. From 520 onwards the
    head of the church became known as the ecumenical patriarch.
    The patriarchate holds jurisdiction over the faithful in Europe
    (Great Britain, France, Germany, Austria, Italy, Sweden, Belgium,
    Switzerland, the autonomous Church of Finland, and the Russian
    Exarchy of Western Europe) and the Archbishoprics of Australia and
    New Zealand. The Archbishop of the Americas (New York) governs the
    Greek Orthodox Church of North and South America, also under the
    jurisdiction of the ecumenical patriarch.
    The ecumenical patriarchate was among the first to participate in the
    formation and development of modern ecumenical movement and has been
    involved in the WCC from its beginning. It has had a permanent
    representative at the headquarters of the WCC in Geneva since 1955.
    The patriarchate is currently involved in preparation for the Holy
    and Great Synod of the Orthodox churches.

    The Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Alexandria and all Africa

    The Patriarchate counts about 10,000 believers of Greek and
    Syro-Lebanese extraction divided into 4 dioceses in Egypt
    (Alexandria, Tanta, Cairo and Port Said), one in Sudan (Nubia), one
    in Ethiopia (Axum) and one for cities in North Africa (including
    Libya-Tunisia, Algeria and Morocco). The Patriarchate has received
    new impetus from the establishment of new congregations in East and
    Central Africa, which was principally brought about by the influx of
    black African bishops of East Africa. Important dioceses (called also
    `Archbishopric of the Mission of the Patriarchate') have been
    organized in Johannesburg and Cape Town in South Africa with 40,000
    members. Harare, Zimbabwe 10,000 members, Kinshasa, Zaire 20,000
    members, Nairobi, Kenya 40,000 members.
    The second Ecumenical Council of Constantinople (381) ranked the
    Patriarchate of Alexandria immediately after that of Constantinople.
    After the Council of Chalcedon (451) there was a division, and part
    of the church joined the `Cop-tic Orthodox'. The Church is governed
    by the Patriarch in conjunction with the Synod. It recognized the
    right of its members to worship in their own language, so liturgy is
    celebrated in Greek in Greek churches and in Arabic in Egyptian
    churches.


    Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Jerusalem

    The 4th Ecumenical Council of Chalcedon (451) granted this church the
    status of `independent church' and ranked it fourth after
    Constantinople, Alexandria and Antioch. It became known as the
    Patriarchate of Jerusalem. It has jurisdiction over Palestine and
    Jordan and counts some 250,000 Arab believers. Church services are
    held in Arabic and partly in Greek.

    The Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Antioch and
    All the East

    The Patriarchate saw its birth in the town in which the believers
    were called, for the first time, `Christians'. At the end of the 6th
    century, Antioch witnessed wars and political changes which continued
    til 638 A.D. when it was conquered and the See of Constantinople
    administered the church until the 15th century. In the 16th century,
    the See was transferred to Damascus. The church was affected by
    divisions occurring in the 18th century, when the Greek
    Catholic-Melkite Church was founded in Mount Lebanon, In the late
    19th century and beginning of our century, reforms were introduced in
    the church and with the successive patriarchs the renaissance of the
    church has continued to our days.
    For liturgy and prayers, the Antiochian church uses the language of
    the land: Arabic. It counts the largest number of believers rooted in
    the Arabic population of the region. While it does not fully overlap
    with the Arab nation in its entirety, the Orthodox Church of this
    Patriarchate nevertheless is markedly Arab.
    Today it counts about 1,300,000 Orthodox in the Middle East. Syria
    has six organized dioceses (Damascus, Aleppo, Horns, Hama, Latakia,
    Houran) with a total of 800,000 faithful. Lebanon also has six
    dioceses (Beirut, Tripoli and Koura, Akkar, Zahle and Baalbeck, Tyre
    and Sidon) with a total of about 400,000 members. The dioceses of
    Iraq and Kuwait number 30,000 members. The Patriarchate extends to
    the Arab-speaking Orthodox who live in the USA, Canada, Latin America
    (Mexico, Chile, Brazil and Argentina), Australia and New Zealand with
    about 1,000,000 members.

    The Church of Cyprus

    `Those who were scattered because of the persecution that arose over
    Stephen traveled as far as Phoenicia, Cyprus and Antioch' (Acts
    11:19). That was in 37 A.D. In 45 A.D., Paul and Barnabas, bringing
    Mark with them, landed at Salamis and crossed the island of Paphos
    where they con-vetted the Roman proconsul Sergius Paulus. Barnabas
    later became the first Bishop of Cyprus.
    The church grew rapidly, and Bishops from Salamis, Paphos and
    Tremithus were present at the Council of Nicea (A.D. 325). The Church
    of Cyprus received autocephalous (sell-governing) status at the
    Council of Ephesus (431 A.D.) along with the Orthodox Patriarchates
    of Antioch, Alexandria, Constantinople and Jerusalem.
    During the Byzantine era, the Church suffered occasionally as a
    result of Arab raids. Then, during the period of the crusades, while
    the island was under Frankish rulers, and later, under the Venetians,
    the Orthodox archbishops were replaced by Latin clergy. In 1571,
    Turkish rule began on the island and in 1572 the Turks expelled the
    Latin hierarchy and reinstalled the Orthodox leadership in
    recognition of their help in the war against Venice.
    Approximately 80% or more of the Cypriot minority is Byzantine
    Orthodox, and there is virtually no aspect of the islandʼs
    history and society that have not been touched by the Church of
    Cyprus. For centuries, it acted as a kind of department for social
    welfare, ministry of justice and ministry of education.
    Following the 1974 invasion of Cyprus by Turkey, nearly 200,000 Greek
    Cypriots were forced to leave their homes in the occupied areas and
    became refugees. Their fate constitutes a primary concern of the
    church. Two of the bishoprics, Kyrenia and Morphou, as well as
    Nicosia, seat of the Archbishop, are partially or wholly within the
    occupied territories.

    The Church of Mount Sinai

    The Emperor Justinian built the fortified monastery of St. Catherine
    and the splendid basilica in 527. For the defense of the monks the
    emperor sent two hundred Christian families from Romania and Egypt.
    With the revival of Islam, they all converted to the new religion and
    remained as vassals in the monastery compound coming to be known as
    Jebelieh.
    The monastery is famous with its library with more than 3,000
    incunabula, 300 manuscripts in Greek and in other oriental languages,
    Bibles, Gospels, sacred books and the picture gallery containing
    precious icons of the 6th century.

    (The conclusion in the Next (November) issue: The Catholic,
    Evangelical and Apostolic Churches in the Middle East)


    ------------------------------------------------


    THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION(S) OF THE MIDDLE EAST (Continued from the
    October issue)

    Rev. Dr. Miltiades B. Efthimiou, Protopresbyter
    Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople



    THE CATHOLIC CHURCHES

    The Catholic Church of the semitic Orient is divided into seven
    branches of different ethnic and cultural origins. About one half of
    the believers of this Church live in the Middle East and the rest in
    emigration.
    Most Westerners use the term `Catholics' and `Roman Catholics' as
    synonymous, the first being no more than a quicker form of the
    second. But this is an incorrect usage, and from the point of view of
    Catholics in the Middle East it is misleading. `Catholic' is a
    comprehensive term for all Christians who accept the spiritual
    primacy of the Pope as the head of the Church. `Roman Catholic'
    refers to those members of the Catholic Church who follow the `rite'
    - that is, the form of liturgy and canon law - of the Patriarchal
    Church of Rome. This is known as the Latin rite.
    But the Latin rite is not the only rite of the Catholic Church, which
    includes the Byzantine (or Melkite) rite, the Armenian rite, the
    Syriac rite, and the Coptic rite. These are the eastern-Catholic
    rites of that family ʽof Middle Eastern
    churches which recognizes the sovereignty of the Pope and accept
    Catholic doctrine.
    The oldest and largest of the Catholic groups is the Maronite
    Patriarchate which claims to have preserved its union with Rome since
    the age of the ancient, undivided Church. Certainly there is no
    Orthodox counterpart of the Maronites whereas the other five Eastern
    Catholic Churches all broke away from the Assyrian or the Oriental
    and Byzantine Orthodox Churches under the influence of Roman Catholic
    missions of the Middle Ages. The earliest were the Chaldean Catholics
    who broke away from the Assyrian Patriarchate in 1522, to establish
    their own Catholic Patriarchate of Babylon in Baghdad. In 1622. the
    Syrian Catholic Patriarchate of Antioch emerged, with its center
    originally in Turkey, now in Beirut. Then, in 1724, a similiar
    break-away took place within the Byzantine Orthodox Patriarchates of
    Antioch, Jerusalem and Alexandria, resulting in the creation of the
    Greek (or Melkite) Catholic Patriarchate of Antioch and all the East,
    Alexandria and Jerusalem. Later in that century, in 1773, The
    Armenian Catholic Patriarchate was created, with its center also in
    Lebanon. Lastly came the creation of the Coptic Catholic Patriarchate
    in Alexandria in 1824. These churches are in communion with the
    Church of Rome and are related to the Vatican through the Sacred
    Congregation for the Oriental Churches. This is why sometimes they
    are called uniate churches.

    The Chaldean Catholic Patriarchate of Babylon

    The Chaldeans have the distinction of being the first uniate church
    established under its own patriarchate in 1552. In that year, part of
    the Assyrian community refused to accept the election of Simeon VIII
    Denha as Patriarch of the Church of the East. They sent a monk named
    Youhannan Soulaka to Rome where he was consecrated Patriarch of
    Babylon.
    Today the Chaldeans number 242,000 mainly living in Iraq, where they
    form the largest Christian community. They are organized in 10
    dioceses in Iraq, Iran (15,000 members), Syria (7,000 members), and
    smaller communities in Egypt and the Lebanon.

    The Armenian Catholic Patriarchate of Cilicia

    The Armenian Catholic Patriarchate was established officially in
    1840. A substantial number of Armenians had been converted to the
    Latin-rite church at the beginning of the 14th century through the
    efforts of Armenian Dominican fathers known as Fratres Unitores.
    During the Turkish massacres at the turn of our century, the church
    suffered severe losses. The church was reorganized in 1928 through a
    synod held in Rome. The seat of the Patriarchate (originally in
    Constantinople) was placed in Beirut, Lebanon. It bears the name
    Armenian Catholic Patriarchate of Cilicia and has 35,000 members in
    the Middle East. The Patriarchs take the name of Peter. The recent
    Patriarch is John-Peter XVIII Kasparian.

    The Maronite Patriarchate of Antioch

    Maronite history began at the end of the 4th and beginning of the 5th
    century. In 685 they elected a Patriarch of Antioch and by the
    twelfth century united with Rome. Maronites are Eastern-rite
    Catholics but not uniates in the same sense as the Melkite Chaldean,
    Armenian and Syrian Catholic Churches whose reunion with Rome came
    after centuries of alienation.
    In the 9th century the Maronites sought refuge in the mountains of
    Lebanon. The patriarchate moved to Bkerke in 1790 from the mountains
    of Qannubin. Maronites living in Lebanon number today 1,200,000.
    Those who have emigrated from the Middle East number as many as
    6,500,000. There are 10 archdioceses and dioceses in the Middle East:
    The Maronite liturgy is in Syriac and Arabic.

    The Greek (Melkite) Catholic Patriarchate of Antioch

    The word Melkite means `Kingʼs men'. It was used from the latter
    part of the 5th century onward to designate all Christians who have
    accepted the theological definitions of the Council of Chalcedon
    which had also become the official position of the rulers in both the
    Roman and Byzantine empires.
    It is now used primarily with reference to this one Eastern-rite
    Catholic Church which separated from the Eastern Orthodox
    Patriarchates of Antioch, Alexandria and Jerusalem and was
    established in union with Rome under its own patriarch in 1724. The
    members are Arabic speaking and the liturgy is celebrated in Arabic.
    The membership of the Greek Catholic Church is concentrated in the
    Lebanon, Syria and Palestine.

    The Syrian Catholic Patriarchate of Antioch

    A part of the ancient Syrian Orthodox Church was reconstituted as an
    Eastern-rite (uniate) Catholic church in 1662 through the influence
    of Jesuit and Capuchin missionaries who had settled around Aleppo. In
    1773, the presiding bishop of this faction was given the title of
    Syrian Catholic Patriarch of Antioch. The Patriarchal See, located
    for more than a century at Mardin, Turkey, was transferred to Beirut
    in 1899. The Syrian Catholics have four dioceses in Syria and two in
    Iraq. Patriarchal vicariates are in Lebanon, Egypt, Jordan and
    Turkey. There is a widely scattered diaspora in the Americas and
    elsewhere.
    Liturgy is celebrated in the Syriac (Aramaic) language with
    increasing use of Arabic in certain parts of the service. Syriac is
    still a spoken language, particularly in some solidly Christian
    villages and towns of eastern Syria and northern Iraq.

    The Coptic Catholic Patriarchate of Alexandra

    There have been Catholic Copts since the 17th century but no
    patriarchate was established for them until 1824. This Church now has
    some 100,000 members, by far the largest Catholic community in
    present-day Egypt and the only one which is growing significantly in
    size.

    The Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem

    A Latin Patriarchate was first created in Jerusalem at the end of the
    11th century and re-established there in 1847 by the Apostolic Letter
    `Nulla Celebrior' of Pope Pius IX. Numerous Roman Catholic missionary
    orders have worked throughout the area, beginning with the
    Franciscans in the 13th century. One response to this impact was the
    emergence of Eastern-rite (Uniate) Churches. Even earlier than that,
    however, was the establishment of Latin-rite dioceses which continue
    into the present amidst the eastern churches.

    The Assyrian Church of the East

    A separate mention needs to be made concerning the Assyrian Church of
    the East which remains outside all the other families of churches on
    the alleged ground that it followed the teachings of the
    excommunicated Nestorius.

    Historical Background

    The Assyrian Church is one of the oldest churches of the East. It has
    been a missionary church as early as the first generation of
    Christianity in Mesopotamia.
    Its message went as far as India, China, Tibet and Mongolia. Its
    presence linked the Mediterranean Sea to the West and India to the
    East and due to its location East of the Roman Empire, it was called
    `Eastern Church', besides having been known by many other surnames,
    among which the Church of Fares (Persia).
    The Assyrian Eastern Church was one of the first churches to be
    established. It has given many a martyr of faith, as it gave many
    thinkers and scientists who greatly contributed to Arab culture. The
    more regrettable it is that the fate of these people today is one of
    poverty.
    It was designated by the Arabs as the Nestorian Church, because it
    was thought by some that the Assyrian Church was established by
    Nestorius, who was the Patriarch of Constantinople in the 5th
    century. In reality its See was in Salio, Katisphon (Al-Madaeʼn)
    or Babel, at that time the Patriarch of this See being Mardad Yashu.
    Thence, this church knew nothing about the theological argument that
    was debated in the western part of the Roman Empire.
    Already by the middle of the second century it was beginning to get
    its independence from the Antiochian church. This independence
    allowed its bishops the full power to consecrate patriarchs without
    reference to Antioch.

    Its Faith

    The Eastern Church goes by the `Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed'
    agreed upon in the First and Second Ecumenical Councils, calling for
    one Church, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic.
    The Eastern Church believes in the one God, the Holy Trinity, Father,
    Son, and Holy Spirit and in Jesus Christ, totally God, and totally
    Man, two natures and two hypostases in one person, and in the Virgin
    birth of Christ, in one Baptism and in the Holy Spirit proceeding
    from the Father.

    Persecutions and Sufferings

    Since its very inception, the Assyrian Church has never been able to
    settle in one specific country. Because of persecution and massacres,
    its believers were forced to emigrate every hundred years.






    The Evangelical and Episcopal Churches in the Middle East

    The complexity of the Middle East church history often seems beyond
    comprehension to western Christians, and has often been beyond their
    patience to understand. The summary given here is simplistic at many
    points, but we hope it may serve to give a generally accurate
    orientation, and that therefore it will shed some light upon the
    enormity of the challenge of inter-church relations facing Christians
    in both the Middle East and the West.
    The largest Protestant group comprises the Evangelical Reformed
    Churches which grew up amongst the Armenians, Copts and Syrians, and
    organized themselves in national synods. Most of the Baptist Churches
    are linked to the Southern Baptist Convention of the U.S.A. The
    Anglicans come under the Episcopal Archdiocese of Jerusalem and the
    Middle East. The main Lutheran Church is in Jordan. These churches
    have retained neither patriarchal structure nor affiliation.
    Today, the Evangelical and Episcopal Churches are a small minority
    (some 2.5% of the Christian minority in the Middle East),
    characterized more by their diversity than unity, which goes back to
    their varying cultural backgrounds and differing concepts of history
    of salvation. Their missionary origin has not endowed them with any
    significantly corresponding unity. At the very outset, missionaries
    did not strive to foster unity and rather tended to value
    diversification.

    The National Evangelical Union of Lebanon

    The National Evangelical Church came into being in 1847, when a small
    group of Lebanese Evangelicals decided to found a national Evangelica
    Church in Beirut by presenting a petition to this effect to the
    missionaries working in Beirut at the time. For quite some time, the
    pastors of this church were Arabic-speaking missionaries until 1890,
    when Yusul Bard, a Lebanese Presbyterian minister was installed as
    the first Lebanese pastor of the Church. In 1870 a church was built
    on a compound that was used by both the Lebanese and American
    congregations.
    The membership of the Church comes to about 6,500 persons, spread in
    and around Beirut. In the mid-sixties the National Evangelical Church
    of Beirut joined hands with about eight other congregations in the
    suburbs and mountains around Beirut and formed the National
    Evangelical Union of Lebanon.

    The National Evangelical Synod of Syria and Lebanon

    Beginning in 1819, a number of missionary representatives came to
    various parts of the Middle East. Those who responded to the Bible
    message came to be known as `injiliyyeh', a term based on the Arabic
    word for Gospel. The Protestant faith was given official recognition
    in Lebanon in 1848. In 1851, a church was organized in Hasbaya on the
    slopes of Mt. Hermon, and the following year a church was founded in
    Aleppo, Syria. In the next few years churches were established in the
    Syrian city of Horns, in South Lebanon at Sidon, and in two Lebanese
    mountain villages. In 1870, these churches reported a total of 243
    adult communicant members. The present membership is about 10,00The
    Coptic

    Evangelical Church - Synod of the Nile

    The Evangelical Church in Egypt started in 1854. It became
    independent from the Presbyterian Church, USA in 1926. The moderator
    is elected every year.
    Since 1860 the church has been active establishing schools. In 1865
    it founded the Assiut American College. The agricultural department
    of this college, established in 1928, contributed to the improvement
    of dairy farming in the country.

    The Evangelical Presbyterian Church of Iran

    The Evangelical Presbyterian Church of Iran developed out of the work
    of the American Presbyterian and congregational missionaries, the
    first of whom came to Iran in 1934. The work was begun among the
    Nestorian Assyrian Christians of the Urmia (Rezaieh) district in
    north-western Iran. In 1855, several Protestant congregations came
    into existence in and around Rezaieh. The first presbytery was
    organized in 1862, and other presbyteries later.

    The Episcopal Church in Jerusalem and the Middle East
    The Episcopal Church in Jerusalem and the Middle East was officially
    inaugurated in January 1976. It succeeded the old Jerusalem
    archbishopric and was established in accordance with principles set
    at the Anglican Consultative Council in Dublin in 1973. It consists
    of four dioceses: Jerusalem, Egypt, Iran, Cyprus and the Gulf. The
    President is elected by the Synod from among the diocesan bishops.

    Evangelical Lutheran Church in Jordan

    Protestant mission work in the Holy Land started in the middle of the
    19th century by missionary societies from England and Germany. They
    founded congregations and schools in Beit Jala, Bethlehem, Beit
    Sahour, Jerusalem. Later, congregations were established in Ramallah
    and Amman.

    Union of The Armenian Evangelical Churches in the Near East

    Beginning in the second decade of the 19th century as an indigenous
    reform movement with the Armenian Orthodox Church, it developed into
    an independent community in 1846 in Istanbul, and in subsequent
    decades registered a membership of 60,000 throughout the Ottoman
    Empire. After the First World War, when the Armenian population was
    decimated and the remnants deported from its historical homeland in
    what is now called Turkey, the Union was reorganized in Syria and the
    Lebanon. The Union is composed of 24 autonomous congregations (about
    10,000 faithful). It provides also a ministry for a number of
    Assyrian Protestant congregations.

    Evangelical Church in Sudan

    The Evangelical Church in Sudan was founded by missionaries of the
    United Presbyterian Church, popularly known `American Mission'. In
    1965, the mission decided to transfer responsibility for Evangelical
    work in the Sudan to the Sudanese themselves. Thus the Council of the
    Evangelical Church in the Sudan was created and took charge of the
    management of the schools and institutions belonging to the American
    Mission .

    Episcopal Church in Sudan

    The first successful attempt by Protestants to establish a church in
    Khartoum is to be credited to the Anglican Bishop Llewellyn Gwynne.
    In 1899, he started to work in Qmdurman. The year 1904 saw the laying
    of the foundation stone of the first Anglican Church in Khartoum.
    This church was considered as a diocese of the Jerusalem
    Archbishopric until 1974, when it reverted to the sole jurisdiction
    of the Archbishop of Canterbury as an extra-provincial diocese while
    awaiting the setting up of the new province of Sudan.

    Presbyterian Church in the Sudan

    The Presbyterian Church in the Sudan is the fruit of missionary
    activity in Sudan by Presbyterian and Reformed Churches in the USA.
    It achieved autonomy in 1956 . This Church is the third largest
    church in the country after the Roman Catholic Church and the
    Episcopal Church. It maintains close relations with the United
    Presbyterian Church of East Africa.

    Denominational and non-Denominational
    Protestant Churches

    The following churches do not take part in the ecumenical movement,
    nor are they member churches of the Middle East Council of Churches.

    Baptist Churches in the Middle East

    These churches have a small but growing membership with a wide
    variety of missionary origins. Those related to the Southern Baptist
    Convention, USA, are located primarily in Lebanon and Jordan, with
    smaller groups in Egypt, Palestine and elsewhere.

    Armenian Evangelical Spiritual Brotherhood

    The Church was established in Beirut in the early 1920ʼs. It is
    related to the Armenian Evangelical Brotherhood Churches in the
    world, which have three main branches: South America, North America,
    Europe & Middle East.

    The Evangelical Assemblies of God

    The Evangelical Assemblies of God in Lebanon is related to the
    Assemblies of God in the USA. It was granted the right of
    establishing churches, schools, orphanages, etc. by a presidential
    decree in 1956 in Lebanon.

    Seventh Day Adventists - Middle East Division

    The church has existed in Beirut since 1904. Adventist congregations
    are found in Jordan, Turkey, Cyprus, Iraq and Iran..

    The Church of Nazarene

    This church has a total of some twenty small congregations and three
    schools in Lebanon, Syria, Jordan and Palestine.

    The Church of Christ

    This church began missionary activity in Lebanon in 1961 and now has
    three organized congregations along with a Bible training school in
    Beirut

    The Church in the Gulf

    Today many churches in the Middle East have congregations or dioceses
    in the Gulf. The Orthodox Church of Antioch has the diocese of
    Baghdad and the Gulf. The Armenian Church has the Prelature of Kuwait
    and the Gulf, the Coptic Orthodox Church has a diocese based in
    Kuwait.
    The Anglican Church has developed from a variety of sources. The
    British Forces were served by chaplains who also encourage the
    formation of congregations for other expatriates. The Gull
    Archdeaconry was formed in 1970 and this led to the establishment of
    the Anglican Diocese in Cyprus and the Gulf in 1976.
    The Roman Catholic Churches in the Gulf came mainly from India and
    East Africa. Capuchin Fathers, centered on Aden, began church
    buildings alter the end of World War II in Bahrain and elsewhere. In
    Kuwait there is a Roman Catholic church and a cathedral. Today there
    is another cathedral at Abu Dhabi, the center of the Diocese of
    Arabia.
    In the last few years the Syrian Orthodox Church, the Mar Thoma
    Church of India, the Church of South India and the Urdu-speaking
    Church of Pakistan have established parishes or congregations in
    several centers, usually sharing Evangelical or Anglican church
    facilities.



    Co-Existence and Peace

    The sad example of the division which religion can stir up is
    exemplified by the term `Holy Land'. The phrase today conjures up
    several contrasting views. Some read it and picture soft brown hills,
    dotted here and there with ancient olive groves and slowly shifting
    herds of sheep. Others feel a stirring within as they imagine the
    ancient prophets who appeared in that region to change the destinies
    of so many. Then too, there are those who follow the footsteps of
    Jesus Christ in and around Galilee, Jerusalem, Capernaum, etc. Then
    there are those who cannot help but shake their heads at the irony in
    the phrase as they consider the war and destruction that strained the
    history of that `Holy Land'.


    Although there is cause and Justification for despair, the three
    great Monotheistic religions which developed successively there -
    Judaism, Christianity, and Islam - share much more than is generally
    known or suspected. That sprang from the same basic geographical area
    and, thus, are all semitically rooted. And due largely to their
    common ancestor, Abraham, the teachings of each were originally
    written and spoken in closely related languages (Hebrew, Aramaic, and
    Arabic).


    Many of the teachings are similar and several of the same incidences
    and characters are mentioned in the scriptural writings of all three
    religions. The Jewish Torah is included in the Christian Bible, and
    both, Jews and Christians are respected by Muslims as ` People of the
    Book'.


    With so many common strands, it is not surprising, then, that
    historically Jews, Christians and Muslims have often lived side by
    side in the same communities in the Middle East.


    Perhaps this point is the key to peace for the conflicts, not
    conflicts of religious beliefs; they pertain, rather, to questions of
    economy, politics and rights of self-determination and, to a large
    extent, have been exacerbated by influence and powers outside the
    area.

    Perhaps the greatest hope for salvation is that because religion is
    never far removed from society in that part of the world, it will
    also help to bridge the differences and heal the wounds and build the
    foundation of true peace and unity.

    http://www.hellenicnews.com/readnews.html?newsid=2354&lang=US

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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