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From
the land of the great ancient Egyptian
civilization, the land visited by Our Lord and the
Holy
Family, and from the line of renowned
predecessors such as St. Mark the Apostle, St.
Athanasius the Apostolic, and St. Cyril the Great,
comes the author of the renaissance of the Coptic
Orthodox Church: H. H. Pope Shenouda III.
A
distinguished and prominent religious leader, a
profound theologian, a gifted preacher, a talented
author, a spiritual father, a man of God his
entire life.
His
Holiness was born Nazeer Gayed on August 3, 1923,
to a pious Christian family in Egypt. By the age
of 16, H. H. was active in the Sunday School
movement, which wrought to enrich Christian
Education in the Coptic Orthodox Church.
When
H. H. graduated from Cairo University, he joined
the Coptic Orthodox Seminary, and upon graduation,
joined the faculty of the seminary.
On
July 18, 1954, H. H. chose the solitude of the
Egyptian desert and the angelic life of
monasticism over everything else, taking the
example of St. Anthony the Great. As a monk, and
later a monk priest, H. H. carried the name of the
Christian monk and was know as Fr. Antonious El-Syriani.
Wishing
to live in complete solitude and devotion to our
Lord, he became a hermit and lived in a cave that
he had carved out himself for a period of six
years. On September 30, 1962, he was called by the
late Pope Cyril VI to be consecrated Bishop of
Christian Education and President of the Coptic
Orthodox Theological Seminary. He was known as His
Grace Bishop Shenouda. Through his leadership of
the seminary, the number of students tripled.
On
November 14, 1971, His Grace Bishop Shenouda was
consecrated as His Holiness Pope Shenouda III, the
117th Pope of Alexandria and Patriarch of the See
of St. Mark.
Since
that blessed day, the Coptic Orthodox Church has
witnessed a remarkable revival through the
guidance of the Holy Spirit and the pastoral care
of H. H. Pope Shenouda III. H. H. conducts a
weekly meeting, which is attended by over seven
thousand of the faithful at the Cathedral of St.
Mark in Cairo.
H.
H has been the editor-in-chief of El-Keraza
Magazine, the official publication of the
Coptic Orthodox Church, since 1962. He became the
first patriarch of Alexandria since the Fifth
Century to have been Dean of the Theological
Seminary and continues to lecture at the branches
of the Seminary in Cairo, Alexandria, and abroad
and the Higher Institute of Coptic Studies. He
also established other branches of the Seminary in
Egypt as well as in America, Australia, and the
United Kingdom.
His
Holiness is the author of 101 books on a variety
of subjects, over half of which have been
translated into English, French, German, Italian,
and other languages.
He
has ordained more than eighty Metropolitans and
Bishops and over 600 priests since 1971. He gives
special attention to the youth of the church. H.
H. has said many times, “A church without youth
is a church without a future.” And one of our
youth once replied to H. H., “And youth without
the church are youth without a future.”
H.
H. also gives special attention to the service of
women in the Coptic Orthodox Church. H. H. said,
and I quote, “We felt a great need of the work
of women and we wanted women to have a certain
order and service in the church, not only to have
girls as Sunday School teacher who give a part of
their time whenever they can, but we want girls
and women to give their whole life to God and
serve the Church.”
Despite
his many responsibilities, H. H. usually manages
to spend three days a week in the monastery. His
love of monasticism has led a monastic revival in
the Coptic Orthodox Church. He has ordained
hundreds of monks and nuns and reestablished many
monasteries and convents. He is the first pope to
establish Coptic monasteries outside of Egypt,
which presently number nine.
One
of the most remarkable things about the growth of
the Coptic Orthodox Church is her expansion
worldwide. When H. H. became pope in 1971, there
were only four churches in North America. Today,
there are over 100.
The
year 1996 witnessed the installation of the fist
two Diocesan bishops for the United States, one
for Los
Angeles and the other for the Southern
United States. There are plans to further
group the churches into regional dioceses in the
near future.
H.
H. has established mission churches in the U. S.
Virgin Islands in St. Thomas, Bermuda, and St.
Kitts. Moreover, he founded the first Coptic
Orthodox Church in South America in Sao Paolo,
Brazil, and the second in Bolivia.
Under
his leadership, the Coptic Orthodox Church has
also witnessed a growth in Australia and New
Zealand, where there are currently twenty-eight
churches. In 1999, we witnessed the enthronement
of the first bishop over Melbourne,
Australia and New Zealand. In Europe, there
are currently over fifty church and ten bishops.
Africa currently has two bishops serving in
missions in nine African countries.
His
Holiness Pope Shenouda III is well known for his
deep commitment to Christian Unity. In an address
he gave at an ecumenical forum during the
International Week of Prayer in 1974, he declared,
“The whole Christian world is anxious to see the
church unite. Christian people, being fed up with
divisions, are pushing their church leaders to do
something about church unity and I am sure that
the Holy Spirit is inspiring us.”
H.
H. has emphasized that Christian Unity must be
found upon a unity of faith and not a unity of
jurisdiction. As a result, H. H. has paid many
visits to the various sister Orthodox churches and
their patriarchs, such as those of Constantinople,
Moscow, Romania, and Antioch. A full communion of
these churches with the Oriental Orthodox Churches
is very close.
In
1973, H. H. was the first Coptic Orthodox pope to
visit the Vatican in over 1500 years. In this
visit, both H. H. Pope Shenouda III and H. H. Pope
Paul VI signed a common declaration on the issue
of Christology and agreed to establish joint
commissions for dialogue on unity. There have also
been dialogues with various Protestant churches
worldwide.
Under
the leadership of H. H., the Coptic Orthodox
Church is a full member of the World
Council of Churches, the Middle East Council
of Church, the All-African Council of Churches,
the National
Council of the Churches in Christ in the U.S.A.,
the Canadian Council of Churches, and the
Australian Council of Churches. In May 2000, he
established the first ecumenical office, in the
Archdiocese of North America.
--Biography
from St.
Mark's Church of Cleveland, Ohio.
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