The Ethiopian Orthodox Church
The Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church (Amharic:
የኢትዮጵያ ኦርቶዶክስ ተዋሕዶ ቤተ ክርስቲያን?; Transliterated Amharic:
Yäityop'ya ortodoks täwahedo bétäkrestyan) is an Oriental Orthodox Christian
church in Ethiopia. The Ethiopian Church was part of the Coptic Orthodox Church
until 1959, when it was granted its own Patriarch by Coptic Orthodox Pope of
Alexandria and Patriarch of All Africa, Cyril VI. It should not be confused
with the Ethiopian Catholic Church.
One of
the few pre-colonial Christian churches of Sub-Saharan Africa, it has a
membership of about 40 million people (45 million claimed by the Patriarch),[1]
mainly in Ethiopia,[2] and is thus the largest of all Oriental Orthodox churches.
The Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church is a founding member of the World
Council of Churches.[3]
Origins:
Tewahedo
(Te-wa-hido) (Ge'ez ተዋሕዶ tawāhidō, modern pronunciation tewāhidō) is a Ge'ez word
meaning "being made one" or "unified".
Tewahedo
refers to the Oriental Orthodox belief in the one single unified Nature of
Christ; i.e., a belief that a complete, natural union of the Divine and Human
Natures into One is self-evident in order to accomplish the divine salvation of
humankind, as opposed to the "two Natures of Christ" belief (unmixed,
but unseparated Divine and Human Natures, called the Hypostatic Union) promoted
by today's Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches. According to the
Catholic Encyclopedia article on the Henotikon [2]: the Patriarchs of
Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem, and many others, all refused to accept the
"two natures" doctrine decreed by the Byzantine Emperor Marcian's
Council of Chalcedon in 451, thus separating them from the Roman Catholic and
Eastern Orthodox — who themselves separated from one another later on in the
East-West Schism (1054).
The
Oriental Orthodox Churches, which today include the Coptic Orthodox Church, the
Armenian Apostolic Church, the Syriac Orthodox Church, the Malankara Orthodox
Church of India, the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, and the Eritrean Orthodox
Tewahdo Church, are referred to as "Non-Chalcedonian", and, sometimes
by outsiders as "monophysite" (meaning "One Single Nature",
in reference to Christ). However, these Churches themselves describe their
Christology as miaphysite (meaning "One United
Nature", in reference to Christ; the translation of the word
"Tewahedo").
The
Ethiopian Church claims its earliest origins from the royal official said to
have been baptized by Philip the Evangelist (Acts of the Apostles, Chapter 8):
"Then
the angel of the Lord said to Philip, Start out and go south to the road that
leads down from Jerusalem to Gaza. So he set out and was on his way when he
caught sight of an Ethiopian. This man was a eunuch, a high official of the
Kandake (Candace) Queen of Ethiopia in charge of all her treasure." (8:27)
The passage continues by describing
how
Philip helped the Ethiopian treasurer understand a passage from Isaiah that the
Ethiopian was reading. After the Ethiopian received an explanation of the
passage, he requested that Philip baptize him, and Philip did so. Orthodox
Christianity became the established church of the Ethiopian Axumite Kingdom
under king Ezana in the 4th century through the efforts of a Syrian Greek named
Frumentius, known in Ethiopia as Abba Selama, Kesaté Birhan ("Father of
Peace, Revealer of Light"). As a youth, Frumentius had been shipwrecked
with his brother Aedesius on the Eritrean coast. The brothers managed to be
brought to the royal court, where they rose to positions of influence and
converted Emperor Ezana to Christianity, causing him to be baptised. Ezana sent
Frumentius to Alexandria to ask the Patriarch, St. Athanasius, to appoint a
bishop for Ethiopia. Athanasius appointed Frumentius himself, who returned to
Ethiopia as Bishop with the name of Abune Selama.
From
then on, until 1959, the Pope of Alexandria, as Patriarch of All Africa, always
named an Egyptian (a Copt) to be Abuna or Archbishop of the Ethiopian Church.
expected
to cover their hair with a large scarf (or shash) while in church, per 1 Cor.
11. As with Orthodox synagogues, men and women are seated separately in the
Ethiopian church, with men on the left and women on the right (when facing the
altar). (Women covering their heads and separation of the sexes in churchhouses
officially is common to some Oriental Orthodox, Eastern Orthodox and Catholic
Christians, as well as many conservative Protestant and Anabaptist traditions;
it also is the rule in some non-Christian religions, Islam among them.)
Ethiopian Orthodox worshippers remove their shoes when entering a church, in
accordance with Exodus 3:5 (in which Moses, while viewing the burning bush, is
commanded to remove his shoes while standing on holy ground). Furthermore, both
the Sabbath (Saturday), and the Lord's Day (Sunday) are observed as holy,
although more emphasis, because of the Resurrection of Christ, is laid upon
Sunday.
No comments:
Post a Comment