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St. Thomas, one of the twelve apostles of Jesus
Christ, is the founder of the ancient church in
India around 52 AD. Christian writers and historians
from the 4th century refer to the evangelistic
work of Apostle Thomas in India, and the Indian
Christians ascribe the origin of their church
to the labours of the apostle in the 1st century.
The
name, Indian (Malankara) Orthodox Syrian Church,
refers to the section of the St. Thomas Christians
of India, that Canonically came under Catholicate
of the East whose Supreme Head is His Holiness
The Catholicos of the East and Malankara Metropolitan,
with head quarters at Devalokam, Kottayam, Kerala,
India. St. Thomas Christians at present belong
to ten different churches and denominations. The
Malankara Orthodox Church is one among them and
it is the second largest.
The
Indian Church had a character different from that
of any other Church of ancient times. Christianity
has been in existence in India from the beginning
of the Christian era. Christianity came to India
much before it went to Rome or Western Europe.
The Syrian Christians of Kerala constitute the
most ancient Christian community of India. Their
form of Christianity is apostolic and derived
directly from Apostle St.Thomas.
It
is reasonable to believe that the St. Thomas came
to India, preached the gospel, established the
church and died there as a martyr. It is believed
that St. Thomas arrived in Cranganore, Kerala,
India in 52 A.D. He preached the gospel and established
churches at seven places; Crangannore, Palur,
Paraur, Gokkamangalam, Niranam, Chayal and Quilon,
and appointed prelates and priests. He is believed
to have been martyred at Mylapur, Madras, India,
around 72 A.D. Malankara Orthodox Church in India
is as old as any ancient Christian communities
elsewhere in the world.
South
India had trade connections with the Mediterranean
and West Asian world since ancient times. This
enabled the Church in those areas, particularly
Persia, to have knowledge of the existence of
a Christian community in India. Many Christians,
when they were persecuted in Persian Empire, fled
to the Southwestern coast of India and found there
a ready and warm welcome.
There is no documentary evidence referring to
the way the Indian Church was governed during
early centuries. According to tradition, the successor
of St. Thomas corresponded with the leaders of
the Christian Churches in the Middle East, and
the church of India from time to time was ruled
by prelates from that part of the world. Like
the other churches, the Indian Church maintained
its autonomous character under its local leader.
When the Portuguese established themselves in
India in the 16th Century, they found the Church
in Kerala, as an administratively independent
community. Following the arrival of Vasco de Gama,
the Portuguese General, in Calicut, Kerala, India,
in 1498, they came to South India and established
their political power there. The Portuguese brought
with them missionaries to carry on evangelistic
work in order to establish churches in communion
with Rome under the Portuguese patronage. These
missionaries were eager to bring the Indian Church
also under the Pope. They succeeded in their efforts
in 1599 with the `Synod of Diamper'. The representatives
of various parishes who attended the assembly
were forced by Portughese Authorities to accept
the Papal authority.
Following
the synod, the Indian Church came to be governed
by Portuguese prelates. They were as a whole,
unwilling to respect the integrity of the Indian
Church, and a majority of people were not happy
about the state of affairs. This disaffection
led to general revolt in 1653 which is known as
"The Coonen Cross Pledge". They demanded
administrative autonomy for the Indian Church.
This body, since it had no bishop to guide spiritually,
had to face serious difficulties. Yet it was determined
to keep the independence of Indian Church.
LINKS WITH PERSIA
The
Persian connection of the Indian churches has
to bee seen in the context of the internal dissensions
and state persecution of Christians in Persia
from the 5th century. A Synod of the Persian Church
(410 AD) affirmed the faith of Nicea and acknowledged
the Metropolitan of Selucia-Ctesiphon as the Catholicos
of East. Not long after, the christological controversies
of Chaldeon, fuelled by the strains between the
Persian and Byzantine empires, swayed the Persian
church to declare itself "Nestroian"
and its head to assume the title of Patariarch
of the East (Babylon). From their base in the
then flourishing theological school of Nisibis,
Nestorian missionaries began moving to India,
Central Asia, China and Ethiopia to teach their
doctrines-probably associating the churches in
these countries with the work of St. Thomas the
Apostle, whom the Persians must have venerated
as the founder of their own church.
By the 7th Century, specific references of the
Indian church began to appear in Persian records.
The Metropolitan of India and the Metropolitan
of China are mentioned in the consecration records
of Patriarches of the East. At one stage, however,
the Indian church was claimed to be in the jurisdiction
of the Metropolitan of Fars but this issue was
settled by Patriarch Sliba Zoha (714- 728 AD)
who recognized the traditional dignity of the
autonomous Metropolitan of India.
There were other developments in the Persian Church
of potential import to the Indian Church. A renaissance
of the pre-Chalcedon faith began led by Jacob
Baradeus, emphasizing the West Syrian Christological
tradition of the one united nature, influencing
the church in Persia as well. Availing the relatively
favorable political climate following the Arab
conquest of Syria and other parts of West Asia,
a maphrianate of the anti-Chalcedonians was established
and Mar Marutha, a native Persian, became the
first Jacobite Maphriana (Catholicos) of the East.
The jurisdiction of this Catholicos at Tigris
extended to 18 episcopal diocesses in lower Mosopotamia
and further east, but significantly, not to India.
On the growth of the church in India during the
first 15 centuries, the balance of historical
evidence and the thrust of local tradition point
to its basic autonomy sustained by the core of
its own faith and culture. It received with the
trust and courtesy missionaries, bishops and migrants
as they came from whichever eastern Church- Tigris
or Babylon, Antioch or Alexandria, but not from
the more distant Constantinopole or Rome. There
were times in this long period when the Christians
in India had been without a bishop and were led
by an Arcdeacon. In such occasions requests were
sent, sometimes with success, to one another of
the Eastern prelates to help restore the episcopate
in India. Meanwhile the church in Persia and much
of west declined by internal causes and the impact
of Islam, affecting both the "Nestorian"
Patriarchate of the East (Babylon) and the Jacobite
Catholicate of the East (Tigris). As will be seen
from the later history of the Indian Church, the
latter, was reestablished in India (Kottayam)
in 1912 while the former was transplanted to America
1940.
THE
COLONIAL ERA
The post-Portuguese story of the church in India
from the 16th century- is relatively well documented.
In their combined zeal to colonize and proselytize,
the Portuguese might not have readily grasped
the way of life of the Thomas Christians who seemed
to accommodate differing strands of eastern Christian
thought and influence, while preserving the core
of their original faith. The response of the visitors
was to try and bring them under Rome-Syrian prelates,
apart from the new converts in the coastal areas
under Latin prelates.
Pushed beyond a limit, the main body of Thomas
Christians rose in revolt and took a collective
oath at the Coonen Cross in Mattancherry in 1653,
resolving to preserve the faith and autonomy of
their church and to elect its head. Accordingly,
Archdeacon Thomas was raised to the title of Mar
Thoma, the first in the long line up to Mar Thoma
IX till 1816.
At the request of the Thomas Christians, the "Jacobite"
bishop, Mar Gregorios of Jerusalem came to India
in 1664, confirmed the Episcopal consecration
of Mar Thoma I as the head of the Orthodox Church
in India. Thus began the formal relationship with
the "Jacobite" Syrian Church, as it
happened, in explicit support of the traditional
autonomy of the Indian Church.
History repeated itself in another form when the
British in India encouraged reformation within
the Orthodox Church, partly through Anglican domination
of the theological seminary in Kottayam, besides
attracting members of the church into Anglican
congregations since 1836. Finally the reformist
group broke away to form the Mar Thoma Church.
This crisis situation was contained with the help
of Patriarch Peter III of Antioch who visited
India in 1875-77. The outcome was twofold; a reaffirmation
of the distinctive identity of the Orthodox Church
under its own Metropolitan and, at some dissonance
with this renewal, an enlarged influence of the
Patriarch of Antioch in the affairs of the Indian
Church.
Thus the relation ship which started for safeguarding
the integrity and independence of the Orthodox
Church, in India, against the misguided, if understandable,
ambitions of the Roman Catholic and Anglican Protestant
Churches, opened a long and tortuous chapter in
which concord and conflict between the Indian
and Syrian Orthodox Churches have continued to
alternate, to this day.
Three landmarks of recent history, however, lend
hope that peace and unity might yet return to
the Orthodox Community, driven rather unnaturally
by divided loyalty. First, the relocation in India
in 1912 of the Catholicate of the East originally
in Selecuia and later in Tigris and the consecration
of the first Indian Catholicos-Moran Mar Baselios
Paulos- in Apostolic succession to St.Thomas,
with the personal participation of Patriarch Abdul
Messiah of Antiaoch. Second, the coming into force
in 1934 of the Constitution of the Orthodox Church
in India as an autocephalous Church linked to
the Orthodox Syrian Church of the Patriarch of
Antioch, and third the accord of 1958, by which
Patriarch Ignatius Yakkoub III affirmed his acceptance
of the Catholicos as well as the Constitution.
More recently the verdict from the honourable
Supreme court of India and the Malankara Assciation
meeting held at Parumala on March, 2002 are historical
events in the quest for lasting peace in the Orthodox
Church of India.
The fact that the Christian Church, first appeared
in India, as elsewhere, as a fellowship of self-governing
communities to the same body and born in the same
new life, may yet light the path to a future of
peace, within and beyond the Orthodox Community.
Reproduced
with edits from: HG Late Dr.Paulose Mar Gregorios,
The Malankara Orthodox Church: A historical perspective,
Malankara Sabha, May 1996
The Indian (Malankara) Orthodox Church
in
New Zealand
New Zealand started attracting our members towards
the turn of the last century. The first known
Indian Orthodox Church dignitary to visit New
Zealand was L/L His Grace Dr. Paulose Mar Gregoriose
in the 1980’s who was President
of the World Council of Churches. Most of our
members here migrated in the last 5 years. Now
we have members all over NZ, the majority in Auckland;
a few families live in Wellington, Palmerston
North, Hamilton, Christchurch, Invercargill.
We started as a prayer group in March 2001, in
Auckland. Gradually the group grew in numbers
and desired to become a worshipping community.
In the meanwhile, His Grace Dr. Yakob Mar Irenius,
Diocesan Metropolitan of Madras (Chennai), came
to know about this community and gave encouragement
by sending Rev. Fr. M.D Varghese, Vicar of our
Melbourne St. Mary's Church to New Zealand on
27th March'03. He conducted our first Holy Quarbana
on 29th March'03, at The St.Albans, Balmoral,
Auckland. The community chose the name of the
blessed Vattasseril Geevarghese Mar Dionysius,
as our patron saint, thus being the First parish
in Madras Diocese dedicated to St. Dionysius.
On 7th May'03 St. Dionysius Indian Orthodox Church
was incorporated in New Zealand.
Rev.
Fr. Thengumtharayil George John was appointed
the first resident Vicar of New Zealand Parish
in September '03 succeeding Fr. M.D. Varghese
who was till then leading the congregation from
Melbourne.
Ours
is the first parish in New Zealand of the Indian
Orthodox Church. Our church falls under the jurisdiction
of Madras diocese. The Primate of our Church is
the Catholicose of the East His Holiness Moran
Mor Baselius Mar Thoma Didymos I who is the successor
to the apostolic throne of St.Thomas. Our Diocesan
Metropolitan is His Grace Dr. Yakob Mar Irenios.
Our parish Vicar is Fr. Varghese Philip Idichandy.
We
have now congregations in Hamilton, Palmerston
North, Wellington.
We
welcome the participation of all like-minded in
the Church activities.
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