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.