But it was not angels and men alone who honoured Mary and worshipped her as the Mother of God, for Christ Himself, when He rose from the dead and appeared to her and the other women at the tomb mounted on the chariot of the Father of the Universe, cried out, saying, " Mari Khar Mariath," that is to say, " Mary, the Mother of the Son of God." Then Mary, who knew the meaning of the words, said, " Hramboune Kathiathari Mioth," whereof the interpretation is, " The Son of the Almighty, and my Son." And He said unto her, " Hail, My Mother ! Hail, My holy Ark ! Hail, thou who art the Sustainer of the life of the whole world ! Hail, My holy Garment, wherein I arrayed Myself ! Hail, My Waterpot, which is full of holy water ! Hail, My Mother, My House, My Place of Abode ! Hail, My Mother, My City, My Place of Refuge ! Hail, thou who hast received into thine own composition the Seven -ӕons ! Hail, thou Table, set in the Paradise of the Seventh Heaven, the name of which is ' Khomthomakh ! ' All Paradise rejoiceth in thee. I say unto thee, O My Mother, He who loveth thee loveth Life. Hail, thou who didst sustain the Life of the Universe in thy womb ! . . . I will give My peace, which I have received from My Holy Father, to My disciples, and to every one who shall believe in My Name and in Mary, My Mother, the Virgin in very truth. My spiritual Womb, My Treasure of Pearl, the Ark of the sons of Adam, who carried the body of the Son of God, and the Blood of Him Who indeed took away the sin of the world."
And round and about Him there were standing hundreds of thousands of Archangels, and hundreds of thousands of the Cherubim, and millions of the Seraphim, and millions of the Powers, and their heads were bowed, and they made answer to the blessing, saying, "Amen, Hallelujah," to that which the Son did speak with His mouth to Mary. Then our Saviour stretched out His right hand, which was full of blessing, and He blessed the womb of Mary, His Mother. And I [Bartholomew] saw the heavens open, and the Seven Firmaments were opened together. I saw a man of light shining brightly, like unto a pearl upon which it was
impossible for any man to look. And [I saw] also a hand of fire which was of the colour of snow, and it rested upon the belly of Mary and [her] breast. Now this hand was the right hand of the Father, and the right hand of the Son, and the right hand of the Holy Ghost. And He blessed . . .(The text is mutilated.) [and said] . . . Thou shalt be called' Pearl of the Father,' and on earth men shall call thee ' Mother of God ' and ' oar Salvation.' The blessing of the Father shall be with thee always. Amen. Hallelujah. The might of the Son shall overshadow thee. Amen. Hallelujah. The joy of the Holy Spirit shall continue to remain with thee at all times. Amen. Hallelujah. And when thou shalt come forth from the body I Myself will come with My Father, and Michael, and all the angels, and thou shalt be with Us in My kingdom. And over thy body I will make the Cherubim, having a sword of fire, to keep watch, and twelve hundred angels also shall watch over it until the day of My appearance and of My [kingdom]."[I quote from the Book of the Resurrection of Christ, by Bartholomew
the Apostle (ed. Budge, Coptic Apocrypha, p. 191).]
It follows of necessity that men and women who attributed such power and glory to Mary would not fail to beseech her to help them in their daily troubles and afflictions, and to be their intercessor with Christ in heaven. That such was the case is proved by the Discourses of many eminent spiritual heads, and from those which have come down to us in Coptic the following passages are quoted :—
Epiphanius, Bishop of Cyprus, says :—" I beseech thee, O Virgin, Mother of God, to help me Epiphanius, thy worthless servant, and to make supplication to Christ on behalf of all the people of my city, nay more, of the whole world, and to be nigh unto me at all times. For unto thee more than to all the saints be-longeth the power to make supplication unto Him, so that He may fill the hungry with bread, and may heal the sick, and may lead those who have gone astray back into His holy fold.''[Budge, Miscellaneous Coptic Texts, p. 714.]
Cyril of Alexandria says :—" O wise Virgin, I beseech thee to bring the favour of God, Who is thy Son, upon us, and may He forgive us our sins, and deliver us from all the crafts of the Adversary the Devil. Take us all to thyself, lest the Devil take delight in us and draw us down into the Gehenna of fire. O Mary, do thou draw nigh unto the King, the Christ, that He may receive thy supplication on our behalf, for He is thy Son and thy Beloved, and thou didst bear Him, and He called thee ' My Mother.' Verily, O Mary the Virgin, thy honour is greater than that of all the other women in the world. He Who breathed breath into every created being called thee ' My Mother ' ! Thou art more exalted than the Cherubim and the Seraphim, thou art more blessed than the Thrones, because the Christ loved thee. He sojourned with thee because thou art Saint Mary, the perpetual Virgin." [Ibid., p. 723.]
When and by what means Egyptian Christianity entered Ethiopia is not known with certainty. Communication by caravans must always have been kept up between Syria and the more north-easterly parts of Ethiopia, or Abyssinia, and it is very probable that some knowledge of Christianity was carried into them before the time of Frumentius by caravans and traders of various nationalities. And individual travellers, like the eunuch whom St. Philip baptized, may well have carried back into Ethiopia the news of the Gospel. The Christians in Egypt were sufficiently numerous at the end of the second century to incur the wrath of the Romans, who started a general persecution of them in the reign of Severus. The persecution of the Christians continued under Decius, Valerian and Diocletian, and large numbers of them fled into Upper Egypt, Nubia and the Northern Sudan. If we may believe Bar-Hebraeus {flist. Dynast., text p. 135) Christianity had penetrated into the Sudan, Nuba and Abyssinia, as well as all Egypt, in the time of Constantine. Before the close of the Vlth century, and during the reign of Silko, the official religion of Nubia was Christian, and the capital of the new Christian kingdom was Old Dongola. In process of time Christianity spread southwards, and during the Middle Ages there were four hundred churches in the kingdom of 'Aiwa, which was probably situated near the modern town of Khartum. Alvarez talked to a certain " John of Syria " who stated that there were still in the country one hundred and fifty churches which contained crucifixes and pictures of the Virgin Mary painted on the walls, and that they all were old.[See Butler's note in Abu Salih (ed. Evetts), p. 264.] These facts justify the assumption that there were many Christians in all parts of Ethiopia at this time ; but the oldest and finest remains of early Christianity in the country were to be found in Aksum and its neighbourhood.
When the worship or cult of the Virgin began in Ethiopia cannot be stated with certainty, but there seems to be no reason for doubting that invocations were made to her as soon as her history was known and accepted by the people. Pictures of the Virgin must have been common in Egypt before the close of the third century, and it is probable that the figures of Isis and Horus suggested the form thev should take. In the fifth century pictures of Mary and the Child became commoner still, and this may have been the result of the overthrow of Nestorius and his heresy at the Council of Ephesus in 431. The Monophysites, or Christians who believed that the divine and human were blended in one incarnate Nature in Christ, were convinced that Mary was the Mother of God, and the original form of the group known as the " Madonna and Child " became once and for all the expression of the Orthodox Faith. Wherever the knowledge of the Monophysite, or Jacobite, or Eutychian Faith penetrated, there went pictures of the Virgin. Saint Augustine (born 354, died 430) did not believe that any of the existing portraits of the Virgin were authentic, but very great veneration was paid to the picture of the Virgin and Child which Eudocia Aelia (born 393, died 450), wife of Theodosius, acquired in the Holy Land and sent to her sister-in-law Pulcheria in Constantinople. It was believed to be very old, and tradition asserted that it was painted from life. Many enthusiasts assumed that St. Luke was the painter. Be this as it may, in the sixth century the churches in Syria and Egypt were full of pictures of Christ and the Virgin, and saints and martyrs. During the second half of the seventh century the Copts held under the Arabs, the new masters of Egypt, many lucrative positions, and they were able to assist materially the offshoot Christian community of Ethiopia. It was probably about this time that many Coptic books, including the great service " Theotokia," whence was derived the Ethiopic Weddase Maryam, or " Book of Praise of Mary," were translated into Arabic and Ethiopic.
Little is known of the Ethiopian Church, but its members suffered much at the hands of the Arabs when they extended their conquests in East Africa in general and in the Eastern Desert and Ethiopia in particular. Both the native pagans and the foreign Arabs attacked the Christians and burnt their churches and books, and during the rule of the eleven Zague (a.d. 914-1268) kings the Christian literature of Ethiopia was almost wiped out. When the rule of the Solomonic line of kings was restored in the second half of the thirteenth century, the monks brought from their hiding-places the few manuscripts that had escaped the fury of the Arabs, and such scribes as were available began to make copies from them. But the old Ethiopic versions of many books had been entirely destroyed, and new translations had to be made from Arabic versions. There seems to have been increased literary activity in Ethiopia during the XlVth century, and believers were greatly stimulated in their faith through the arrival there of a piece of the wood of the Cross on which Christ died ; this was in the reign of Wedem Asgari (a.d. 1380-1409), commonly known as David II. It is doubtful if any of the manuscripts written in the XlVth century have found their way into European Libraries, though some scholars have thought that the Brit. Mus. MS. No. 719 [This MS. contains the History of King Lalibala of Lasta. See Wright, Catalogue, p. 193 (No. CCXCIV).] may have been copied during the closing years of that century. All that is certain about it is that it was written by one 'Abba 'Amha, for the Church of Golgotha, before the reign of Zar'a Ya'kob, or Constantine, i.e. before a.d. 1434, the first regnal year of this king.
Under the patronage of Zar'a Ya'kob (a.d. 1434-1468) many copies of ancient works were made, for the king was religious as well as wise, and the peaceable relations that existed between him and the Khalifah of Egypt gave him time to consider other matters than fighting and war. He endowed an Abyssinian monastery at Jerusalem, and obtained permission from the Pope to establish another in Rome. He also encouraged public or semi-public discussions on religion, and on one occasion 'Abba George succeeded in overcoming in argument the European who was disputing with him. The European was probably Brancaleone, the Venetian painter, of whom more will be said presently. Zar'a Ya'kob was succeeded by his son Ba'eda Maryam (a.d. 1468-1478), who was a prudent and peaceful king, and who introduced into his Government men of honesty and high principle. But his reign was disturbed by religious quarrels among the clergy, for many of his people adopted the heresy of certain teachers who denied that Christ was very man, because His flesh was composed of some substance which was entirely different from that of ordinary men and women. A native Council condemned the heresy, and tortured its adherents, and killed many by starvation in the prisons. A more serious disturbance was caused in religious circles by a certain Niccolo Brancaleone, a Venetian painter, who was commonly called in the country " Macoreo " or " Marcoreos." The exact year of his coming to Ethiopia is unknown, but he lived there for forty years, and knew the language well, and could when necessary live like the natives and eat and drink what they did. Alvarez calls him Nicolas Brancoliam, and says that he " was a very honourable person, and a great gentleman, although a painter . . . they said that he was a friar before he came to this country."[Alvarez, F., Narrative oj the Portuguese Embassy to Abyssinia, translated by Lord Stanley of Alderley. London, 1881, p. 210.] When Alvarez performed the Mass he acted as the fugleman of the priests and canons and told them what was being done in the Mass. This painter had been employed by Zar'a Ya'kob to decorate the churches with pictures of saints and of incidents and events described in the Bible, and he was greatly favoured by Ba'eda Maryam. This king was building, or rather restoring, a church dedicated to Mary the Virgin, and he commissioned Brancaleone to paint an altar piece for it, the subject to be the Virgin and Child. Now in the native pictures of the Virgin and Child the Child was represented as being encircled by His mother's right arm, as we may see from the annexed plate which is reproduced from a fifteenth-century Book of Miracles of the Virgin in Ethiopic in the British Museum. Brancaleone painted a very fine picture, and, according to the Italian fashion and that of the Copts, represented the Child as encircled by His mother's left arm. When the clergy and the monks saw the picture they were fired with rage, partly because the picture was the work of Brancaleone, who had been mixed up with the heresy mentioned above, and partly because they thought that an insult had been offered to our Lord by him in representing the Child as encircled by Mary's left arm. As the Ethiopians used the left hand in washing the body it was regarded by them as " the hand of dishonour," and they saluted with the right hand only, and dipped the right hand only into the dish at meal times. The king admired the picture, and gave his people to understand that their objections were absurd, and when the malcontents saw that their objections were not going to be considered, they ceased to complain and quickly disappeared. The picture was placed in the church of Mary, where it remained until the first half of the XVIIIth century, when it was destroyed, together with the church, by the Gallas.
Many important manuscripts were copied in the XVth century, e.g. the Gadla Hawaryat or " Contendings of the Apostles " (Brit. Mus. MS. Orient. No. 678) ; the book of Homilies of the Jacobite Fathers, recently acquired by the British Museum (Orient. No. 8192); and the Acts of Basilides, which are attributed to Celestinus, Bishop of Rome (Brit. Mus. MS. Orient. No. 706). These Acts were translated from Coptic into Ethiopic A.M. 6889 = A.D. 1397, by 'Ab Sim'on, a monk of the Monastery of St. Anthony (Wright, Catalogue, p. 186). That the worship of Mary was restored completely is proved by the existence of the XVth century copy of the Weddase Maryam in the British Museum (Add. 18994). This book is bound up with the Psalms of David and the Canticles and prayers for the canonical hours, and it is quite clear that it formed a prominent section of the daily service-book. More instructive still is the fine manuscript Oriental No. 650, which contains the Miracles of the Blessed Virgin Mary, fifty-five in number, and a tract on her Festivals. It was written for Zar'a Ya'kob (a.d. 1434-1468) and was given by him to a church of the Virgin Mary. On the upper margins are written deeds of gifts made by various kings down to A.D. 1714, lists of church property, etc. Equally important for the study of the worship of Mary in Ethiopia is Orient. No. 652, which also contains Miracles of the Virgin Mary, 160 in number. These are for the most part translations from the Coptic of miracles that were worked by the Virgin in Greece, Italy, Rum (Byzantium), France, etc., and are evidently derived from works like the Legenda Aurea of Jacobo di Voragine. (Translations of all of them by me will be given in a forthcoming volume.) In the XVth century there came into common use the service-book called 'Arganona Dengel, i.e. the " Virgin's Organ," or the " Virgin's Lyre." It was composed by 'Abba George in the first half of the century, and was quickly adopted as a companion to the Weddase Maryam. It is highly prized for the purity of its language, and for the variety and beauty of its metaphors, and the consummate knowledge of the Scriptures displayed therein. A translation of a few pages of it will be found on pp. 297 of this volume.
The worship of the Virgin increased greatly in the XVIth century, probably as a result of the influence of the Church in Jerusalem and in Alexandria. These cities voiced the great, profound and widespread interest in Mary and her mother Hanna that sprang up in the East as a result of the Crusades, and the eager desire of the nations to know all that history, legend and tradition could tell them about these saints. Caravans left Ethiopia for Egypt and Jerusalem at regular intervals, and the merchants who conducted them brought tidings of the happenings there, and pictures of saints and the Virgin painted from Byzantine originals in Cairo, Jerusalem and Constantinople. Copies of the Apocryphal Gospels and legends of all kinds were multiplied freely, and the imaginations of devout scribes filled the lacunae which accident or wilful mutilation had made in the manuscripts from which they worked. In the XVIIth century the Ethiopians demanded from their teachers always more and more miracles, and, as though the words of the text were not sufficiently vivid or descriptive,they insisted on coloured illustrations being added. Kings and queens commissioned scribes and artists to produce large handsome manuscripts ; as specimens of these we may mention Brit. Mus. MS. Orient. No. 644, which was written for Hamalmala Wark, the mother of King Susenyos (a.d. 1607-1632), and contains 154 miracles, and Brit. Mus. MS. Orient. No. 640, written for King Theophilus (a.d. 17o8-1711),which contains 154 miracles and many pictures. Copies of pictures that illustrated the miracles were frequently painted on large skins and hung on the walls of the churches. As at this time there were hundreds of churches in Ethiopia sacred artists were always busily employed, and probably well remunerated. The festivals of the Virgin Mary were numerous. A general festival was celebrated on the 21st day of each month. Her birth was celebrated on the loth of Mas-karram (Sept. 7) and the ist of Genbot (May 1) ; her entry into the Temple on the 3rd of Takhshash (Nov. 29) ; her conception on the i6th of Takhshash (Dec. 11) ; the dedication of her temple on the 8th of Sene (June 2) ; her death on the 21st of Ter (Jan. 16) ; her ascension on the i6th of Nahasse (Aug. 9) ; the embalmment of her body for burial on the 15th of Nahasse (Aug. 8) ; and there were other festivals held in her honour locally. Some authorities state that thirty-two festivals of the Virgin were celebrated throughout the year. [Ludolf, Historia ӕthiopica, Commentarius, p. 361 (Not. XLV).] On these festivals the History of the Life of Mary was read, and the clergy found it necessary to provide large manuscripts from which the priests might read to their congregations. A complete Lectionary of this kind was in reality a Corpus of all the Mary-Literature, and a very good example of such a work is Erit. Mus. MS. Orient. No. 604.
It is very difficult to state exactly what were the views that the Ethiopians held about the Virgin Mary, but a perusal of the Books of Praise of the Virgin suggests that they were not all authorized by the Church, The " Mother of God " and the " Queen of Heaven " and the " Chieftainess of all the Saints," as she was called by her worshippers, was in reality considered by them to be a goddess, or at all events a being far superior to any woman, both materially and spiritually. In their heart of hearts large numbers of them believed that Mary and Christ were formed of a substance different from that of other men, and this heresy seems never to have been stamped out entirely. The perpetual virginity of Mary was to them a sure proof of her divine origin. They made her to share divinity with Christ, and in some praises of her of an extravagant character she is grouped with the Persons of the Trinity as an equal. In later times even her mother Hanna was regarded as semi-divine. They ascribed to Mary boundless power in heaven and upon earth, and if in furtherance of her benevolent designs she asked her Son for help which was not given, they made her appeal to God Almighty Himself, Who at once granted her petitions. Her influence over the Father and the Son was, in their opinion, so great that they thought and believed she was, to all intents and purposes, the controller of the destiny of human souls in the Day of Judgement. Many of their services consisted of nothing but prayers to God the Father and prayers to the Virgin, and the number of manuscripts of the Weddase Maryam and the Mazmura Dengel (Virgin's Psalter), and the 'Arganona Dengel (Virgin's Lyre) which have come down to us prove the universality and supremeness of her worship in Ethiopia. But the Ethiopians never lost sight of the humanity of Mary in their devotions, and they appealed to her as the great and tender-hearted woman of sorrows and the loving mother, especially in all affairs of daily life. She was to them all-knowing, all-wise and all-understanding, as far as the weaknesses and sins of men and women were concerned, and they went to her shrines in simple faith, told their troubles to the pictures of her, and trusted to her all-embracing sympathy and pity to relieve their troubles and remove their afflictions. In their pictures they represent her as one of themselves, with thick, black, woolly hair, and eyes with jet-black pupils and large whites, and with the large breasts that are the joy of all mothers in Ethiopia and the Sudan. They are never tired of extolling her physical beauty, and some of their addresses to her mere resemble the rhapsodies of a lover than the devout glorifying of the Mother of God.
From - Legends of the Virgin Mary
- Home
- The Little Office
- Meditations
- 1 Mirror of Justice
- 2 The Saviour
- 3 The First Years
- 4 In The Temple
- 5 Nazareth
- 6 The Annunciation
- 7 The Visitation
- 8 The Magnificat
- 9 The Benedictus
- 10 Christmas
- 11 The Magi
- 12 At The Manger
- 13 Nunc Dimittis
- 14 The Presentation
- 15 Flight into Egypt
- 16 The Holy Innocents
- 17 Life at Nazareth
- 18 Jesus in the Temple
- 19 Jesus at labour
- 20 Death of St. Joseph
- 21 Baptism Of Jesus
- 22 Jesus In The Desert
- 23 Calling The Apostles
- 24 Marriage at Cana
- 25 Silence Of The Gospel
- 26 Start Of The Passion
- 27 Foot Of The Cross
- 28 Jesus Laid In The Tomb
- 29 Resurrection
- 30 Ascension, Pentecost
- 31 The Assumption
Showing posts with label Coptic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Coptic. Show all posts
The Veneration Of The Virgin Mary In Egypt And Ethiopia Part 3.
But it was not angels and men alone who honoured Mary and revered her as the Mother of God, for Christ Himself, when He rose from the dead and appeared to her and the other women at the tomb mounted on the chariot of the Father of the Universe, cried out, saying, " Mari Khar Mariath," that is to say, " Mary, the Mother of the Son of God." Then Mary, who knew the meaning of the words, said, " Hramboune Kathiathari Mioth.," whereof the interpretation is, " The Son of the Almighty, and my Son." And He said unto her, " Hail, My Mother ! Hail, My holy Ark ! Hail, thou who art the Sustainer of the life of the whole world ! Hail, My holy Garment, wherein I arrayed Myself ! Hail, My Waterpot, which is full of holy water ! Hail, My Mother, My House, My Place of Abode ! Hail, My Mother, My City, My Place of Refuge ! Hail, thou who hast received into thine own composition the Seven ӕons ! Hail, thou Table, set in the Paradise of the Seventh Heaven, the name of which is ' Khomthomakh ! ' All Paradise rejoiceth in thee. I say unto thee, O My Mother, He who loveth thee loveth Life. Hail, thou who didst sustain the Life of the Universe in thy womb ! . . . I will give My peace, which I have received from My Holy Father, to My disciples, and to every one who shall believe in My Name and in Mary, My Mother, the Virgin in very truth. My spiritual Womb, My Treasure of Pearl, the Ark of the sons of Adam, who carried the body of the Son of God, and the Blood of Him Who indeed took away the sin of the world."
And round and about Him there were standing hundreds of thousands of Archangels, and hundreds of thousands of the Cherubim, and millions of the Seraphim, and millions of the Powers, and their heads were bowed, and they made answer to the blessing, saying, "Amen, Hallelujah," to that which the Son did speak with His mouth to Mary. Then our Saviour stretched out His right hand, which was full of blessing, and He blessed the womb of Mary, His Mother. And I [Bartholomew] saw the heavens open, and the Seven Firmaments were opened together. I saw a man of light shining brightly, like unto a pearl upon which it was impossible for any man to look. And [I saw] also a hand of fire which was of the colour of snow, and it rested upon the belly of Mary and [her] breast. Now this hand was the right hand of the Father, and the right hand of the Son, and the right hand of the Holy Ghost. And He blessed . . .[The text is mutilated.] [and said] . . . Thou shalt be called' Pearl of the Father,' and on earth men shall call thee ' Mother of God ' and ' oar Salvation.' The blessing of the Father shall be with thee always. Amen. Hallelujah. The might of the Son shall overshadow thee. Amen. Hallelujah. The joy of the Holy Spirit shall continue to remain with thee at all times. Amen. Hallelujah. And when thou shalt come forth from the body I Myself will come with My Father, and Michael, and all the angels, and thou shalt be with Us in My kingdom. And over thy body I will make the Cherubim, having a sword of fire, to keep watch, and twelve hundred angels also shall watch over it until the day of My appearance and of My [kingdom]."[I quote from the Book of the Resurrection of Christ, by Bartholomew the Apostle (ed. Budge, Coptic Apocrypha, p. 191).]
It follows of necessity that men and women who attributed such power and glory to Mary would not fail to beseech her to help them in their daily troubles and afflictions, and to be their intercessor with Christ in heaven. That such was the case is proved by the Discourses of many eminent spiritual heads, and from those which have come down to us in Coptic the following passages are quoted :—
Epiphanius, Bishop of Cyprus, says :—" I beseech thee, O Virgin, Mother of God, to help me Epiphanius, thy worthless servant, and to make supplication to Christ on behalf of all the people of my city, nay more, of the whole world, and to be nigh unto me at all times. For unto thee more than to all the saints be-longeth the power to make supplication unto Him, so that He may fill the hungry with bread, and may heal the sick, and may lead those who have gone astray back into His holy fold.''[Budge, Miscellaneous Coptic Texts, p. 714.]
Cyril of Alexandria says :—" O wise Virgin, I beseech thee to bring the favour of God, Who is thy Son, upon us, and may He forgive us our sins, and deliver us from all the crafts of the Adversary the Devil. Take us all to thyself, lest the Devil take delight in us and draw us down into the Gehenna of fire. O Mary, do thou draw nigh unto the King, the Christ, that He may receive thy supplication on our behalf, for He is thy Son and thy Beloved, and thou didst bear Him, and He called thee ' My Mother.' Verily, O Mary the Virgin, thy honour is greater than that of all the other women in the world. He Who breathed breath into every created being called thee ' My Mother ' ! Thou art more exalted than the Cherubim and the Seraphim, thou art more blessed than the Thrones, because the Christ loved thee. He sojourned with thee because thou art Saint Mary, the perpetual Virgin." [Ibid., p. 723.]
When and by what means Egyptian Christianity entered Ethiopia is not known with certainty. Communication by caravans must always have been kept up between Syria and the more north-easterly parts of Ethiopia, or Abyssinia, and it is very probable that some knowledge of Christianity was carried into them before the time of Frumentius by caravans and traders of various nationalities. And individual travellers, like the eunuch whom St. Philip baptized, may well have carried back into Ethiopia the news of the Gospel. The Christians in Egypt were sufficiently numerous at the end of the second century to incur the wrath of the Romans, who started a general persecution of them in the reign of Severus. The persecution of the Christians continued under Decius, Valerian and Diocletian, and large numbers of them fled into Upper Egypt, Nubia and the Northern Sudan. If we may believe Bar-Hebraeus (Hist. Dynast., text p. 135) Christianity had penetrated into the Sudan, Nuba and Abyssinia, as well as all Egypt, in the time of Constantine. Before the close of the 6th century, and during the reign of Silko, the official religion of Nubia was Christian, and the capital of the ncw Christian kingdom was Old Dongola. In process of time Christianity spread southwards, and during the Middle Ages there were four hundred churches in the kingdom of 'Aiwa, which was probably situated near the modern town of Khartum. Alvarez talked to a certain " John of Syria " who stated that there were still in the country one hundred and fifty churches which contained crucifixes and pictures of the Virgin Mary painted on the walls, and that they all were old.^ These facts justify the assumption that there were many Christians in all parts of Ethiopia at this time ; but the oldest and finest remains of early Christianity in the country were to be found in Aksum and its neighbourhood.
When the worship or cult of the Virgin began in Ethiopia cannot be stated with certainty, but there seems to be no reason for doubting that invocations were made to her as soon as her history was known and accepted by the people. Pictures of the Virgin must have been common in Egypt before the close of the third century, and it is probable that the figures of Isis and Horus suggested the form they should take. In the fifth century pictures of Mary and the Child became commoner still, and this may have been the result of the overthrow of Nestorius and his heresy at the Council of Ephesus in 431. The Monophysites, or Christians who believed that the divine and human were blended in one incarnate Nature in Christ, were convinced that Mary was the Mother of God, and the original form of the group known as the " Madonna and Child " became once and for all the expression of the Orthodox Faith. Wherever the knowledge of the Monophysite, or Jacobite, or Eutychian Faith penetrated, there went pictures of the Virgin. Saint Augustine (born 354, died 430) did not believe that any of the existing portraits of the Virgin were authentic, but very great veneration was paid to the picture of the Virgin and Child which Eudocia Aelia
(born 393, died 450), wife of Theodosius, acquired in the Holy Land and sent to her sister-in-law Pulcheria in Constantinople. It was believed to be very old, and tradition asserted that it was painted from life. Many enthusiasts assumed that St. Luke was the painter. Be this as it may, in the sixth century the churches in Syria and Egypt were full of pictures of Christ and the Virgin, and saints and martyrs. During the second half of the seventh century the Copts held under the Arabs, the new masters of Egypt, many lucrative positions, and they were able to assist materially the offshoot Christian community of Ethiopia. It was probably about this time that many Coptic books, including the great service " Theotokia," whence was derived the Ethiopic Weddase Maryam, or " Book of Praise of Mary," were translated into Arabic and Ethiopic.
From - Legends of the Virgin Mary
The Veneration Of The Virgin Mary In Egypt And Ethiopia Part 2.
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The Presentation of the Virgin Mary by Titian (1534-38, Gallerie dell'Accademia, Venice |
Demetrius, Archbishop of Antioch, said on the birthday of our Lord on the 29th day of the month Khoiakh :—
When Mary was three years old Anna took her to the Temple. "At the moment when her mother Anna set her upon her feet, inside the door of the Temple, before the priests, she walked by herself into the Temple, and went on until she arrived in the place behind the veil of the altar, whereon were offered up the sacrifices of the Lord. And when she had gone in she did not turn back to come out again, neither did one thought of her parents rise up in her heart, nor any thought of any earthly thing. . . . And when she had grown, and was eight or ten years old, she became a type to the priests, and they were afraid to meet her, for her whole body was pure, and her heart was firm in the Lord. She was pure in her body and in her soul, she never put her face outside the door of the Temple, she never looked at a strange man, and she never moved herself to gaze upon the face of a young man. And she lived in chastity, and in the service of God, and in the ordered service of the Temple. Her apparel was dainty Her tunic came down over her seal, and her headcloth came down over her eyes. She wore a girdle round her tunic, and her tunic was never soiled or torn. She never put eye-paint on her eyes, and she did not lay crocus-flower unguent on her cheeks. She did not put slippers on her feet as ornaments, and she wore neither armlets nor bracelets, nortrinkets nor jewellery on her arms and hands. She never craved for much food, neither did she ever walk about in the market-place of her city. She never lusted for the works of this world. She never stripped herself naked, and she never washed in the [public] bath, and she never examined with careful attention the members of her body."
After Joseph had taken her to his house " she went into her own room and took up her abode therein, and she never came down the stairs except on the day when she departed to Torine, [The village near Jerusalem where Mary's cousin Elisabeth lived.] and also on the day wherein Joseph took her to Bethlehem to register his own name, and the names of herself and her Child. . . . And she sat in his house, and she worked at weaving purple into the veil of the Temple, according to the rule concerning virgins. She never saw any man whatsoever, but the angels came and ministered unto her, and they passed the whole day standing before her in the form of young doves, and they gave her courage, and they comforted her. And she sat in Joseph's house for three years, and his sons ministered unto her."
Another description of Mary's life before the Annunciation is given us by Cyril of Alexandria, who says to the women in his congregation, " Come, O all ye women who desire virginity, emulate the example of Mary, the mother of thy Lord. Consider ye her coarse and meagre food and her sleeping on the ground. She craved for none of the things of this world. The mention of her was always in the mouths of the priests. She never washed herself in a [public] bath. She never adorned herself with face-paint, and eye-paint, and powder. She never decked herself out in brightly coloured raiment, as do all women who love fine clothes. She never tasted wine. She used to sit always with her face turned towards the east, for she was always awaiting the Creator of the world. She never met and talked to any one, except her father, and her mother, and her brethren."
For the Discourse of Demetrius of Antioch on the Virgin Mary following the Annunciation of Gabriel we have a very interesting group of Salutations to Mary which summarizes in a remarkable way the views that both Egyptians and Ethiopians held concerning the mother of Jesus. The manuscript in which they are found (Oriental No. 7027) was written in the 721st year of the Era of the Martyrs (a.d. 1005), and the scribe was Victor, the son of Mercurius, a deacon of the Church of St. Mercurius at Esna, or Asna (Latopolis). Of the archetype we know nothing, but we may assume that it was old and authoritative. These Aves, or "Hail Marys," are so important that I transcribe them in full. [See Budge, Miscellaneous Coptic Texts, p. 662 ff.]
Hail, Mary, thou woman whose fruit shall give salvation to the world and to all mankind !
Hail, thou who hast found favour ! The Lord is with thee.
Hail, Mary, thou spotless Dove ! in whom there is no blemish, to whom is sent the choice, sweet odour by me, Gabriel.
Hail, thou who hast found favour ! The Lord is with thee.
Hail, Mary, who shalt clothe the whole world in the apparel of salvation !
Hail, thou who hast found favour ! The Lord is with thee.
Hail, Mary, through whom salvation shall come to the whole world, because of thy walking in it !
Hail, thou who hast found favour ! The Lord is with thee.
Hail, Mary, thou who art the choicest thing in heaven and upon the earth !
Hail, thou who hast found favour ! The Lord is with thee.
Hail, Mary, thou Tower, wherein is the King's treasure!
Hail, thou who hast found favour ! The Lord is with thee.
Hail, Mary, who hast given us an entrance into heaven !
Hail, thou who hast found favour ! The Lord is with thee.
Hail, Mary, who hast opened to us the door of Paradise, which was closed through the transgression of Adam and Eve !
Hail, thou who hast found favour ! The Lord is with thee.
Hail [Mary], thou second Ark which hath saved the world from the destruction of impiety!
Hail, thou who hast found favour ! The Lord is with thee.
Hail [Mary], thou beautiful Lamb, who hast provided us with the pure wool and the apparel of incorruption !
Hail, thou who hast found favour ! The Lord is with thee.
Hail [Mary], thou Pot of gold, wherein was the manna !
Hail, thou who hast found favour ! The Lord is with thee.
Hail [Mary], who didst remove the enmity which existed between God and us!
Hail, thou who hast found favour ! The Lord is with thee.
Hail [Mary], Sweet Perfume that mounted up before God Almighty until He became reconciled to His creation which He created !
Hail, thou who hast found favour ! The Lord is with thee.
Hail [Mary], Tent of the Godhead, wherein the Only-begotten of the Father hath reposed !
Hail, thou who hast found favour ! The Lord is with thee.
Hail [Mary], thou Ark, covered all over with gold, wherein God the Father sojourned in the Form of His Holy Word !
[Hail, thou who hast found favour ! The Lord is with thee.]
Hail [Mary], thou Bread that hath come from heaven to satisfy hungry souls and to fill them with good things!
Hail, thou who hast found favour ! The Lord is with thee.
Hail [Mary], thou who dost deliver every one from the storm of the Devil, and dost bring them into the haven of salvation!
Hail, thou who hast found favour ! The Lord is with thee.
Hail [Mary], Bride unpolluted and unblemished, who hast prepared for us the path of salvation !
Hail, thou who hast found favour ! The Lord is with thee.
Hail, Mary, through and by whom all the women of the world have acquired freedom of speech with her Lord!
Hail, thou who hast found favour ! The Lord is with thee.
Hail, Mary, thou holy Table, whereon the Sacrifice that reasoneth is slain !
Hail, thou who hast found favour ! The Lord is with thee.
Hail, Mary, the light of whose Son hath filled the whole world !
Hail, thou who hast found favour ! The Lord is with thee.
Hail, Mary, whose holy birth-pangs were awaited by heaven and by earth !
Hail, thou who hast found favour ! The Lord is with thee.
Hail, Mary, thou good Root who hast made to blossom for us the fruit of righteousness !
Hail, thou who hast found favour ! The Lord is with thee.
Hail, Mary, who hast made to sprout the blessed seed of the fruit of righteousness of the Tree of Life !
Hail, thou who hast found favour ! The Lord is with thee.
Hail, Mary, thou Golden Candlestick !
Hail, thou who hast found favour ! The Lord is with thee.
Hail, Mary, thou new Cistern wherein is the salt which will sweeten that which is bitter !
Hail, thou who hast found favour ! The Lord is with thee.
Concerning Mary as the loving mother of Jesus Cyril of Alexandria writes as follows :—
" O my beloved, ye God-fearing people, open ye the ears of your hearts, and hearken unto [the story of] the honour of the Mother of God, the Queen of all women, the true Bride, whom the Son of God held in high esteem. He came and dwelt in her womb for nine months, and she brought Him forth for our sakes in Bethlehem. She wrapped Him in strips of ragged stuff, she laid Him in a cattle manger, and the beasts looked upon Him and recognized Him and protected Him. Thou didst stretch out thy right arm, thou didst take Him and make Him to lie on thy left arm. Thou didst bend thy neck, and let thy hair fall down over Him. Thou didst kiss His mouth as the Father kissed His mouth in heaven, and thou didst seat Him upon thy knees. He lifted up His eyes to thy face. He stretched forth His hand. He took thy breast, and He drew into His mouth the milk which was sweeter than manna. The savour of thy sacrifice was sweeter to Him than the savour of the sacrifice of Noah. He drank from thy immaculate breasts. He called thee ' My Mother.'
" Come ye and behold God calling Mary ' My Mother ' and kissing her mouth. And as she kissed His mouth she called Him always' My Lord, and my Son.'
She worshipped Him ; for when she used to give Him her breast she bowed down her head towards Him, whilst He stood like a tower ; and then she worshipped Him, saying, ' My Lord, and my Son.' And after these things she used to take hold of His hand, and lead Him along the roads, saying, ' My sweet Son, walk a little way,' in the same manner as all other babes are taught to walk. And He, Jesus, the Very God, followed after her without trouble. He clung to her with His little fingers. He stopped from time to time, and He hung on to the skirts of Mary His mother—He upon Whom all creation hangeth ! He used to look up into her face —He upon Whom the whole universe hangeth and by Whom it is sustained—and she would snatch Him to her body, and lift Him up in her arms, and carry Him along. Come, O all ye women, and look upon Mary, and behold God, Who clave her side, lifting up His face and kissing her! Walk on, walk on, O daughter of Sion, I mean thee, Mary. Behold, the King, the Christ, [resteth] on thee, for the King, the Christ, is with thee, He is sitting in thy arms ! The Father hath made Himself a fellow-worker with thee, the Son hath made Himself thy kinsman, and the Holy Spirit is inseparable from thee. The angels are subject unto thee, for He loveth thee, and hath sojourned with thee because of thy purity. For thou alone among all women hast found favour with God, for the Lord is with thee. Lift up thine hands on high and receive from God the Father the Image of His Son and carry it on thy head." [Budge, Miscellaneous Coptic Texts, p. 717 f.]
From - Legends of the Virgin Mary
The Veneration Of The Virgin Mary In Egypt And Ethiopia Part 1.
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Coptic |
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Coptic |
When under the influence of the teaching of the Apostles and Disciples Christ's Doctrine spread abroad in the regions outside Syria and Palestine, the converts to Christianity demanded more information about the life of Christ when upon earth and that of Mary, both before^nd after His death, than the Gospels contained. The result of this demand was that many, both those with and those without adequate knowledge, wrote accounts of the manner of the birth and the infancy of Christ, and stories of His childhood, and accounts of Mary, which found general acceptance. H we are to believe all that is written in the works of the Fathers on the subject it would seem that every Apostle, and many of the Disciples wrote Gospels. In any case it is quite clear that even in Apostolic times many works of this kind were current in Syria and Egypt, and that they were soon translated into languages of more remote countries. One of the oldest and best known of these works is the so-called Protevangelion, or the Book of James the Less, the cousin (" brother ") of Christ, and the first Bishop of Jerusalem. It was probably written in Hebrew, and it seems to have existed in the first century a.d. A manuscript of the work was brought to Europe by G. Postel (born 1510, died 1581) from Constantinople (?), was translated by him into Latin and was printed at Basle in 1552. From this book we learn that Mary's father and mother were called Joachim and Anna, that Joachim consulted the Urim and Thummim about the birth of the child, whom the angel told him his barren wife should bear to him, and it describes the birth of Mary, the flight of Elisabeth to the mountains, and the murder of Zacharias. [For the Greek text see Tischendorf, Evangelia Apocrypha, Leipzig, 1876, p. I ff.] Versions and extracts of this work exist in Syriac, Coptic, Arabic, and Ethiopic.
Another ancient work of the kind is the Gospel of THE Birth of Mary, which was attributed to St. Matthew, and was regarded as genuine and authentic by many early Christian sects. In the third chapter it is stated that an angel told Joachim that God had shut up the womb of Anna his wife, so that He might open it in a more wonderful manner, and that that which should be born of her would be not the product of human lust, but the gift of God. [" et ideo cum alicujus uterum claudit, ad hoc facit ut mirabilius denuo aperiat, et non libidinis esse quod nascitur sed divini muneris cognoscatur."— De Nativitate Mariac, ed. Tischendorf, op. cit., p. 114.] Hence in later times many Christians asserted that Mary was born of a virgin, just as Christ was born of a virgin.
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Ethiopian |
Ethiopian |
The older Apocryphal Gospels attributed to Mary the power to work miracles nearly as marvellous as those worked by her Son during His Infancy and Boyhood, and throughout them it was tacitly assumed that her influence over Him was very great, and that He granted all her requests. The natural result of this assumption was that, little by little, men magnified the power of Mary, and in their private prayers, at least, appealed to her in their difficulties, and besought her to intercede with her Son on their behalf. At the same time their interest in her history grew steadily, and stories of her birth and childhood, and of her life in the Temple and after the death of Christ, were in great demand. Every tradition of her was carefully preserved, and every detail was regarded as a piece of precious information worthy to be written down for perusal by the faithful. The authorities of the Church prepared narratives of her life which they declared they had received from Mary herself, who appeared to them in answer to their urgent petitions ; the substance of such narratives was derived chiefly from the Apocryphal Gospels mentioned above. Thus we have one narrative attributed to Theophilus, Patriarch of Alexandria (see pp. 61-80), and another to Timothy, another Patriarch of Alexandria (see pp. 81-101). An account of her death (see pp. 152-167), which was believed to have been written by St. John, and a short history of how the manuscript of it was discovered (see pp. 143-151), were regarded as authentic and genuine, and treasured accordingly. Many of the Fathers wrote Homilies upon Mary, and the short extracts from some of them given below illustrate the manner in which her life was treated by them. [The extracts are from the Coptic Homilies by Cyril of Jerusalem, Demetrius of Antioch, and Cyril, Archbishop of Alexandria, edited and translated by E. A. Wallis Budge, Miscellaneous Coptic Texts in the Dialect of Upper Egypt, London, 1915.]
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Ethiopian |
Of her life in the Temple Cyril of Jerusalem says: " They (i.e. Joakim and Anna) were in the habit of visiting their daughter once each month, when they carried to her whatsoever things of which she had need. And their little virgin daughter ministered in the Temple with the other women, who were aged virgins, and they taught her to work with her hands. And when she had become somewhat master of herself she used to go alone into the court of the Temple, but no man whatsoever saw her, with the exception of the priest and her father. Her food consisted of bread and water and a few green herbs, and she did not fast for long periods at a time. . . . The little Virgin Mary was in the Temple, and she remained by herself before the Archangel Gabriel came to her with a sweet odour. . . . There was no limit to her beauty, and the Temple was wont to be filled with angels because of her sweet odour, and thev used to visit her for the sake of her conversation. . . . The whole time of her life was sixty years."
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