Frank Gardner reports from Egypt on BBC Radio 4's Today Programme, covering the plight of Coptic Orthodox Christians in Egypt, including an interview with His Grace Bishop Angaelos, Bishop of the Coptic Orthodox Diocese of London, and the grandfather of Maggie who was killed in a terrorist attack. http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b09drjpr Video footage: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/av/world-middle-east-42020135/coptic-christian-i-forgive-the-people-who-killed-my-granddaughter-maggie
Official Media and Communications Office for The Coptic Orthodox Church in Europe
Friday, 17 November 2017
BBC Radio 4 Today Programme on Coptic Orthodox Christians in Egypt
Frank Gardner reports from Egypt on BBC Radio 4's Today Programme, covering the plight of Coptic Orthodox Christians in Egypt, including an interview with His Grace Bishop Angaelos, Bishop of the Coptic Orthodox Diocese of London, and the grandfather of Maggie who was killed in a terrorist attack. http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b09drjpr Video footage: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/av/world-middle-east-42020135/coptic-christian-i-forgive-the-people-who-killed-my-granddaughter-maggie
Thursday, 16 November 2017
Announcement: HG Bishop Angaelos proclaimed Bishop over new Coptic Orthodox Diocese of London during historic service in Egypt
Coptic Orthodox Church UK
Media and
Communications Office
Coptic Orthodox
Church (Europe)
Media and Communications Office
HG
Bishop Angaelos proclaimed Bishop over new Coptic Orthodox Diocese of London
during historic service in Egypt
16 November 2017
On 11
November 2017 His Holiness Pope Tawadros II, Pope of Alexandria and Patriarch
of the See of Saint Mark, and the Holy Synod of the Coptic Orthodox Church,
Proclaimed His Grace Bishop Angaelos as Bishop of the new Coptic Orthodox
Diocese of London during a service at St Bishoy Monastery in Wadi-El-Natroun,
Egypt.
With
the Coptic Orthodox Diocese of London, two new dioceses were established: HG
Bishop Karass was Proclaimed Bishop of Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland and
West Virginia, and HG Bishop Marc was Proclaimed as Bishop of Paris and the
North of France.
On
Sunday 12 November, four monks were consecrated bishops: two monks from Saint
Shenouda Monastery in Milan, Fr Giovanni and Fr Antonio, were consecrated as
bishops of Mid-Europe and Milan respectively; Fr Seraphim El-Souriani was
consecrated as Bishop of Ohio, Michigan, and Indiana; and father Pigol
Al-Muharraqi was consecrated as Bishop and Abbot of Al-Muharraq Monastery in
Assiut.
Bishop
Angaelos, formerly the General Bishop of the Coptic Orthodox Church in the United
Kingdom, will travel back to England accompanied by a delegation of
Metropolitans and Bishops who will formally enthrone him as the Coptic Orthodox
Bishop of London during a vespers service in the Coptic Cathedral of Saint
George at The Coptic Centre later in the month.
Tuesday, 31 October 2017
Announcement: HG Bishop Angaelos to be enthroned as first Bishop of new Coptic Orthodox Diocese of London
Coptic Orthodox Church UK
Media and
Communications Office
Coptic Orthodox
Church (Europe)
Media
and Communications Office
Announcement
HG Bishop Angaelos to be enthroned as first Bishop of new
Coptic Orthodox Diocese of London
HG Bishop Angaelos to be enthroned as first Bishop of new
Coptic Orthodox Diocese of London
31 October 2017
HH Pope Tawadros II, Pope of
Alexandria and Patriarch of the See of Saint Mark, and the Holy Synod of the
Coptic Orthodox Church, have decided on the establishment of the new Coptic
Orthodox Diocese of London, and to entrust HG Bishop Angaelos as the first
Diocesan Bishop of London.
The Proclamation of this new
appointment will be made by His Holiness the Pope and the Holy Synod at a
service in Cairo on 11 November 2017.
Bishop Angaelos
will travel back to England, accompanied by a delegation of Metropolitans and Bishops
who will formally enthrone him during a vespers service in the Coptic Cathedral
of Saint George at The Coptic Centre later in the month.
*Ends*
Background:
The
Coptic Orthodox Church in the United Kingdom, dates back to 10 August 1954 when
it commenced its pastoral and liturgical ministry in London. In February 1969,
a historic Liturgy was celebrated in London by the then Bishop Shenouda, the
late Pope Shenouda III, who encouraged the faithful to hold regular services,
which subsequently led to the hiring of St Andrew’s church in Holborn. Copts
would gather from across the United Kingdom to pray there until 1978 when, returning
to London as Pope Shenouda III, His Holiness consecrated St Mark church in
Kensington as the first Coptic Orthodox parish in Europe.
Since
then, the Coptic Orthodox Church in the United Kingdom and Republic of Ireland
has become an active member of its respective local, regional and national
communities, serving in a variety of ways across the four nations, equipping
its faithful to be positively contributing and active members in their local
settings. At the core of its pastoral care is a focus on Christian education at
every level and an active youth ministry. The Coptic Orthodox Church also
serves on a wider level through engaging in a variety of benevolent and
advocacy related work.
The
Coptic Orthodox Church in the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland now
has approximately 20,000 faithful across 32 parishes, with the number of these
parishes constantly increasing. These have thus far been served by three
dioceses: the diocese of Birmingham, the Midlands and its affiliated regions, served
by HG Bishop Missael, the Diocese of Scotland, Ireland and North East England,
served by HG Bishop Antony, and the Papal Diocese covering London, the South of
England and South Wales, in which HG Bishop Angaelos has served as His Holiness
the Pope’s delegate since 1999.
His
Holiness Pope Tawadros II and the Holy Synod of the Coptic Orthodox Church have
now decided to establish the Coptic Orthodox Diocese of London.
Friday, 20 October 2017
Report: At annual Coptic Nayrouz Service, HG Bishop Angaelos addresses religious freedom violations around the world
Coptic Orthodox Church UK
Media
and Communications Office
Coptic
Orthodox Church (Europe)
Media and Communications Office
REPORT
At annual
Coptic New Year celebration,
HG Bishop Angaelos addresses religious freedom violations
around the world
[View photographs from the service via www.Flickr.com/CopticMedia]
19
October 2017
On 17 October 2017, messages from Her Majesty The Queen, His Royal Highness
The Prince of Wales, the Prime Minister and the Archbishop of Canterbury, were
read at the Coptic New Year (Nayrouz) Service held annually in St Margaret’s
Church, Westminster Abbey.
Addresses were also delivered by Rabbi Jonathan Wittenberg, The
Lord Alton of Liverpool, The Lord Bourne of Aberystwyth, Parliamentary Under
Secretary of State for Communities and Parliamentary Under Secretary of State
for Wales and The Right Honourable Alistair Burt MP, Minister of State for the
Middle East and North Africa at the Foreign & Commonwealth Office, and Minister
of State for International Development.
A welcome was given by The Reverend Canon Jane Sinclair, Canon of
Westminster & Rector of St Margaret’s, and the service was officiated by
His Grace Bishop Angaelos, General Bishop of the Coptic Orthodox Church in the
United Kingdom.
In his sermon, which focused on the
prospect of new beginnings, Bishop Angaelos said:
“As we celebrate the lives of the
faithful, we have a chance to start afresh, and to look at any opportunity for
a new beginning of any sort.
It is important for us to do two things
at this juncture: to look, assess, and repeat the wonderful things that have
been done, and to look at what may have been left undone; things that may have
gone unrealised, unchecked, and unaddressed.”
His Grace went on to say:
“In light of Matthew chapter 9, it is far
too easy to attempt to merely patch over issues when they seem too complex to
address. We must change our approach and address root causes. This applies of
course to us as individuals, as societies, religious institutions, and nations.”
Touching on matters of religious
persecution around the world, His Grace said:
“Over these past months, we have seen so
much in terms of religious persecution, whether it be in relation to the Coptic
Christians in Egypt, Christians in the Middle East, the wider Africa, or around
the world, people suffer daily.
Gatherings like this that we take as a
simple right, are an impossible and unrealised privilege for some in our world
today. So this evening we remember and pray for them, realising that it is
important for us to support those who want to believe, whatever their belief
is!”
Speaking of religious freedom more
generally, he said:
“If God respects humanity enough to
empower us all with a freedom of choice, who are we to decide who has the right
to believe or not believe?
The Christian message has as its ultimate
strength, the ability with which it can consciously and actively love and even
forgive those who not only persecute, but kill us. That is what sets this
apart. It is not because we are better than anyone else but because it is what
we are called to do.”
“The gathering in this church this
evening resembles the beautiful mosaic that is British life; from religious
leaders to political leaders, social activists and human rights defenders, to
members of the general public, we all work together. Together we should use
whatever platform or gift we have to further this message.
It is a tragedy if we feel there is nothing we can do, because the reality is that there is never a darkness that cannot be broken by the slightest light, and there is never a problem that cannot be addressed even if not fully resolved.”
It is a tragedy if we feel there is nothing we can do, because the reality is that there is never a darkness that cannot be broken by the slightest light, and there is never a problem that cannot be addressed even if not fully resolved.”
Closing with a message of hope, from the
book of Isaiah 43:19, he concluded:
“Today we can be confident that God will
always be our Way along even the loneliest of journeys, and He will always be
the spring of life in the most oppressive drought.”
In his address, Lord Bourne spoke of the engagement of the Coptic
Orthodox community in the United Kingdom, highlighting various ministries
including youth work, and homeless ministries.
Rabbi Jonathan Wittenberg, who recently
celebrated the Jewish New Year, said the following in his address:
“I stand here, a Rabbi from the Jewish
community from a fellow faith, in solidarity…
…Therefore in these painful and
frightening times when so many of these relationships are ruptured and require
our urgent and prolonged keen attention we must remember our purpose here on
earth, and together articulate our shared faith, hopes and tasks, not just in
our places of prayer but in the public square and in the media. Together we
must act for the well-being of every individual human for we all carry God’s
sacred spirit and all in a differing, unique and special way.”
The Lord Alton of Liverpool spoke of
religious freedom violations, calling for the same rights for all, saying:
“As Bishop Angaelos reminded us earlier,
[religious freedom] is not just something we demand for the Coptic community
but for all…
…In the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights, in Article 18 it spells out the right of every human being on this planet
to believe, not to believe, or to change their belief. Well it is with this in
mind that we gather here tonight to show our solidarity with an ancient Church,
which plays both an integral part of Egyptian life but also a much loved part
of British life and society.
It is because of the power of the Cross,
not knives and guns and bombs, that we gather here tonight. It is for that
reason, despite tragedy and sadness that we can commemorate and celebrate the
new year and commit ourselves to continue to work for values based on mutual
respect, co-existence and freedom of religion or belief.”
The Right Honourable Alistair Burt MP,
spoke of the beauty and diversity of the Middle East and the people of all
faiths within its region, while also highlighting the struggles faced by many
within it, saying:
“There are many joys in returning to the
role of Minister for the Middle East, to share a bit of time in the region I
have come to love and to value its diversity and culture, the things that are
not often spoken of in the news; to share as a person of faith the opportunity
to listen to the sounds of the Middle East, in mosque, in synagogue and in
church and to recognise that the ear picks up much that is similar between the
sounds of those of those who worship, to recognise a common humanity in its
spirituality searching and reaching out for God.”
Going on to speak about the powerful
impact of forgiveness, and human compassion shared by people of all faiths in
the midst of persecution, he concluded:
“…As we celebrate Naryouz with you, and
we remember the martyrs, we reflect on what you have said for a new opportunity
that we have, let it be a new opportunity not just for the region but for the
world to reflect a bit more, to build dialogue, to end the conflicts between
faiths, so that as we gather year by year we will have less to regret, and
forgive and more to celebrate and be joyful about.”
Joining members of the Coptic community at the service were international
royalty, members of the House of Lords, the Office of the Prime Minister, House
of Commons, the Foreign Commonwealth Office, the Diplomatic Corps, the Home
Office, humanitarian and advocacy organisations, and various ecumenical, and
inter-religious guests.
*Ends*
Thursday, 12 October 2017
Statement by His Grace Bishop Angaelos regarding the brutal murder of Coptic Orthodox priest Fr Samaan in Cairo
Coptic Orthodox Church UK
Media and Communications Office
Coptic Orthodox Church (Europe)
Media and Communications Office
Coptic Orthodox priest brutally murdered in Cairo
Statement by His Grace
Bishop Angaelos, General Bishop of the Coptic Orthodox Church in the United
Kingdom
12 October 2017
Another day in
Egypt with another Coptic Christian murdered; this time a priest from Beni
Suef, Upper Egypt, who was in Cairo collecting humanitarian aid for vulnerable members of his parish. Fr Samaan was paying a pastoral visit to a family in Cairo
and returned to the church where he was earlier to collect his mobile phone. On
the way, he was attacked by a knife-wielding assailant who chased him, stabbed
him repeatedly, and then brutally killed him.
This incident makes us once again ask so
many questions. Why should a priest not be able to walk safely down a street,
especially a suburban street in Cairo? Why should he be chased by a man
brandishing a deadly weapon and have no one run to his aid; in actual fact,
everyone was running away. Why, when he lay drenched in his own blood did the
ambulance service not arrive for over an hour, and then not treat him? Why,
when the police finally arrived, and he lay dead, was a crime scene not secured
and forensic evidence not collected to enable a robust and serious
investigation? Why is his assailant immediately deemed mentally incapable
without professional diagnosis, and why, if he is incapable, and a known
violent criminal, is he left in the community with weapons within his reach?
After the initial shock and the immense
sadness, today is a day that brings anger and I am not apologetic for that
anger. I would be just as angry if this was any other person being dealt with
in this way, in any other part of Egypt or indeed any other part of the world.
Yet he is a Christian, a Coptic Christian, and a Coptic priest, which makes it
all the more close and all the more painful.
Just this week I have been with a Coptic
delegation from Cairo seeking grants to serve not only the Coptic community but
the wider Egyptian community. Grants that would cover health, education and
poverty eradication. Where was this wider Egyptian community however when
Father Samaan ran terrified through a street being chased by a violent
criminal, and where was it when he lay dying and alone? Where was it when the
assailant attacked him repeatedly, and where will it be while his family and
congregation grieve the loss of their father, husband, brother, pastor and
friend? These are questions that need to be addressed at every level of
Egyptian community and leadership.
Crime cannot be totally eradicated, but
at least it needs to be properly investigated, prosecuted, and shown to be a
violation against the whole state and not just its immediate victim.
The immense pain of this incident and
all that have preceded it, including: child kidnapping, forced conversion,
individual targetting, bus attacks and church bombings against the Coptic
Orthodox community in Egypt, leads us to hold more strongly onto the words of
our Lord God in Exodus 3:7: “I
have surely seen the oppression of
My people who are in Egypt, and have heard their cry…for I know their sorrows.” Coptic Christians who have endured injustice, persecution, and
loss of life for centuries without retaliation, repeatedly forgiving unconditionally,
deserve to live with respect and dignity in their indigenous homeland.
While recognising that anger may often
open a path to hatred or resentment, there are times at which it is a natural expression
of a human emotion, and reaction to a sense of deep injustice. I am sure that I
am not alone in my anger, but that it is shared by every law-abiding person of
any belief and indeed of none, who has witnessed this vicious and inhumane
attack. In the midst of this anger and this sadness however I continue to pray.
I pray repose for Father Samaan, I pray for his family, I pray for his
community. I pray for the wider Egyptian Christian community that feels more
and more vulnerable and targeted daily against a backdrop of negligence and
injustice. I pray for the wider Egyptian society, that becomes more and more discredited
and compromised as these incidents continue to happen.
This anger is not void of forgiveness,
but cries out for accountability and justice.
*Ends*
For
more information please e-mail the Director of Communications via Media@CopticCentre.com
Thursday, 21 September 2017
Press Release: HG Bishop Angaelos, new President of Bible Society
Coptic Orthodox Church UK
Media and Communications Office
Coptic Orthodox Church (Europe)
Media and Communications Office
Press Release: HG Bishop Angaelos, new President of Bible Society
Commenting on his new role, Bishop Angaelos said:
"I consider it an incredible honour to serve as President of the Bible Society, an institution that has historically served to share the message of hope through the word of God. As I embark on this new journey with colleagues from, and supporters of, the Bible Society, I also recognise the immense contribution of my dear brother and friend, His Grace Bishop Richard Chartres.
This is a time in which Britain, and our world, needs the hope that can only come from the inspired message of God in the Scriptures, and it is up to us to be a faithful conduit of this life-giving message. I am sincerely committed to the ecumenical life of the Church because I believe in it, and there is nothing that can unite us more than Scripture as we endeavour to be the Body of Christ, and light in the world."
Bible Society’s Chief Executive, Paul Williams, said:
Bible Society’s Chief Executive, Paul Williams, said:
‘We are profoundly grateful to Richard Chartres for his outstanding service over the past six years.'
He said: 'Bishop Angaelos, and the Coptic Orthodox Church which he represents in the UK, models a deep, prayerful spirituality that is characterised by its attentiveness to Scripture. The love for the Bible that is demonstrated day by day, in all of life, and in the midst of considerable hardship and suffering by Coptic Christians, is a challenge and inspiration for us all.
'With his passion for the work of the church here, particularly amongst young people and the marginalised, and his connection with an ancient Christian community that has suffered throughout its history for its loyalty to Jesus Christ, Bishop Angaelos is perfectly placed to share and promote the vision of Bible Society as it moves into the new work God has for the organisation both at home and abroad.’
He said: 'Bishop Angaelos, and the Coptic Orthodox Church which he represents in the UK, models a deep, prayerful spirituality that is characterised by its attentiveness to Scripture. The love for the Bible that is demonstrated day by day, in all of life, and in the midst of considerable hardship and suffering by Coptic Christians, is a challenge and inspiration for us all.
'With his passion for the work of the church here, particularly amongst young people and the marginalised, and his connection with an ancient Christian community that has suffered throughout its history for its loyalty to Jesus Christ, Bishop Angaelos is perfectly placed to share and promote the vision of Bible Society as it moves into the new work God has for the organisation both at home and abroad.’
For the full press release visit Bible Society's webiste via: http://bit.ly/2fD1a2Y
Friday, 8 September 2017
Rohingya Crisis: Statement by His Grace Bishop Angaelos, General Bishop of the Coptic Orthodox Church in the United Kingdom
Coptic Orthodox Church UK
Media and Communications Office
Coptic Orthodox Church (Europe)
Media and Communications Office
The Rohingya Crisis
Statement
by His Grace Bishop Angaelos, General Bishop of the Coptic Orthodox Church in
the United Kingdom
8 September
2017
Chilling reports are emerging of the murder, rape and massacre of the Rohingya Muslim community in Myanmar, and these are a cause for great alarm and concern.
Chilling reports are emerging of the murder, rape and massacre of the Rohingya Muslim community in Myanmar, and these are a cause for great alarm and concern.
According to those
reports, well over 250,000 women, men and children within the
Rohingya community have fled to neighbouring Bangladesh in the past two
weeks as a result of violence and conflict. Sources state that Rohingya Muslims are denied
citizenship in their country, and the persecution they face is not new,
but has been occurring for years.
This disturbing news falls on the all too familiar backdrop of the ongoing refugee crisis which continues to plague millions of people fleeing religious persecution, violence and turmoil in the Middle East, as well as the countless people in places such as Nigeria, Sudan, North Korea and others, who face religious persecution on a daily basis as part of their daily existence.
As an international community, we must never remain silent in the face of the suffering of those whose basic God-given rights and freedoms are denied, even if those people are thousands of miles away. What is unfortunate, is that these issues often remain in our minds only as long as they frequent our news feeds, and yet the suffering continues whether we acknowledge it or not. In the case of the Rohingya Muslims and the Kachin Christians in Burma, it seems that this situation is ongoing, and by no means recent, but has only made international headlines due to the heightened level of violence and suffering.
This disturbing news falls on the all too familiar backdrop of the ongoing refugee crisis which continues to plague millions of people fleeing religious persecution, violence and turmoil in the Middle East, as well as the countless people in places such as Nigeria, Sudan, North Korea and others, who face religious persecution on a daily basis as part of their daily existence.
As an international community, we must never remain silent in the face of the suffering of those whose basic God-given rights and freedoms are denied, even if those people are thousands of miles away. What is unfortunate, is that these issues often remain in our minds only as long as they frequent our news feeds, and yet the suffering continues whether we acknowledge it or not. In the case of the Rohingya Muslims and the Kachin Christians in Burma, it seems that this situation is ongoing, and by no means recent, but has only made international headlines due to the heightened level of violence and suffering.
All human suffering
is worthy of our attention, and should not be ignored until it is unbearable or
seemingly intolerable. In Scripture, Christians are instructed to “Defend the
poor and fatherless; Do justice to the afflicted and needy” (Psalm 82:3), a
task that is ever more needed not just oversees, but often in our immediate
families and communities.
We pray for
the safety of all who flee conflict in our world today, for the Rohingya
Muslim community as they flee their home country, and for those who seek
to find ways to accommodate them and others seeking refuge from
persecution around the world. We also pray for governments and all in authority
to adhere to and safeguard the basic principles of human rights and freedoms
that God has bestowed upon us and entrusted us with, and that our humanity has prided itself on for generations.
Friday, 14 July 2017
Press Release: Cancellation of Church activities in Egypt following renewed spate of attacks against Christians
Coptic Orthodox Church UK
Media
and Communications Office
Coptic
Orthodox Church (Europe)
Media and Communications Office
Cancellation of Church activities in
Egypt following renewed spate of attacks against Christians
![]() |
| Copyright: Roger Anis |
14 July 2017
As a result of direct advice
from Egyptian Security Services, Christian denominations have issued directives
cancelling conferences and trips throughout July as a precautionary measure.
Since December 2016 there has
been a renewed spate of targeted attacks on, and murders of Egyptian Christians, with a reported 117 Coptic
Orthodox Christians murdered across the country in that period. This campaign began with the bombing of St Peter’s Coptic
Orthodox Church in Cairo in December 2016, and followed by Palm Sunday church bombings
in Tanta and Alexandria, an attack on pilgrims visiting a monastery in Minya,
and targeted attacks on individuals across Egypt.
His Grace Bishop Angaelos,
General Bishop of the Coptic Orthodox Church in the United Kingdom, confirmed these
reports, saying:
“Having
communicated with colleagues in Cairo, it is obvious that the current campaign
of terror against Christians is escalating rapidly. These measures have come
after our community has experienced brutal attacks against innocent women, men
and children across Egypt, and we pray will help to safeguard against future
atrocities.
This
unfortunate step comes at a time when children, young people and families will
be deprived of the conferences and trips that they so look forward to over the
summer period and have grown accustomed to over decades. Saying that however,
it is of course more important, while recognising their huge disappointment, to
do our best to ensure their safety.
Despite
these measures, the ongoing liturgical and pastoral life of the Church will be maintained
as she continues to provide daily support for her children.
Here in the United Kingdom, and around the world, we are praying peace and safety for all the people of Egypt at this increasingly challenging time. We also pray that the orchestrators and perpetrators of this deadly wave are rightly brought to justice, and reconciled with their intended God-given humane and merciful nature.”
Here in the United Kingdom, and around the world, we are praying peace and safety for all the people of Egypt at this increasingly challenging time. We also pray that the orchestrators and perpetrators of this deadly wave are rightly brought to justice, and reconciled with their intended God-given humane and merciful nature.”
*Ends*
Resources:
Number of Coptic
Christians reportedly murdered in Egypt since December 2016
- December - February 2017 – 40 Christians killed in total in the bombing of St Peter’s Coptic Church in Cairo, and the targeting of individuals in Cairo and Sinai
- April 2017 – 43 Christians killed in Tanta and Alexandria church bombings
- May 2017 - Bus attack in Minya – 28 killed for refusing to recant their Christian Faith
- July 2017 – 6 Christian individuals murdered in their homes
Saturday, 27 May 2017
Reflection By His Grace Bishop Angaelos on recent terrorist attacks in Egypt and elsewhere
Coptic Orthodox Church UK
Media and Communications Office
Media and Communications Office
Coptic Orthodox Church (Europe)
Media and Communications Office
Reflection
By His Grace Bishop
Angaelos, General Bishop of the Coptic Orthodox Church in the United Kingdom,
on recent terrorist attacks in Egypt and elsewhere
You are Loved
27 May 2017
Once again, we find ourselves experiencing pain before which words seem
insufficient. I have previously addressed victims of terrorist acts; I have
addressed their families; I have even addressed those who may have had an
opportunity, even in some small way, to advocate for or support those most
vulnerable. This time however, I feel a need to address those who perpetrate
these crimes.
You
are loved. The violent and deadly crimes you perpetrate are abhorrent and
detestable, but YOU are loved.
You
are loved by God, your Creator, for He created you in His Image and according
to His Likeness, and placed you on this earth for much greater things,
according to His plan for all humankind. You are loved by me and millions like
me, not because of what you do, but what you are capable of as that wonderful
creation of God, Who has created us with a shared humanity. You are loved by me
and millions like me because I, and we, believe in transformation.
Transformation
is core to the Christian message for throughout history we have seen many
transformed from being those who persecuted Christ Himself and Christians, to
those who went on to live with grace. We believe in transformation because, on
a daily basis, we are personally transformed from a life of human weakness and
sinfulness to a life of power and righteousness. We believe in transformation
because the whole message of the Cross and Resurrection of our Lord Jesus
Christ is to take humanity from the bonds of sin and death to a liberation in goodness and everlasting life. Our world is certainly suffering from the
brokenness of our humanity, but it is our responsibility, personally and
collectively, to encourage and inspire ourselves, and all those whom we meet
along our path, to a life of virtue and holiness, and the love and
forgiveness of all.
This
of course, is far from the reaction that many may have expected, but the Christian message is just that, to look at our world as through the eyes of God, Who loves all and Who desires that all be liberated through Him.
I grieve,
certainly for those who have lost their lives, for those who mourn, and for
those who will continue to be adversely affected by these tragic experiences;
but I also grieve for a young man who sees it not only justifiable, but glorious, to take the lives of other young men and women, and deprive his and
their families of enjoying them as they grow and mature.
No family should lose a son in this way, even if they are partially or wholly responsible for his flawed ideology. This loss might be to that ideology, to incarceration as a result of his actions and choices or, in the worst case, in taking his own life, along with others, regardless of the great cost to those left behind. In the same way, no family deserves to lose children and members who merely go about their day to enjoy their God-given right to exist, whether it be by attending a concert, taking a pilgrimage to a monastery, simply walking through city streets, or in any other way.
I also grieve for those who considered it a victory to board a bus filled with
pilgrims and execute children, women and men purely for refusing to renounce their Faith, as we saw happen to Coptic Christians in Menia only yesterday.
What is increasingly obvious is that many of these attacks come about due to a loss of the meaning and comprehension of the
sanctity of life, our own or that of others; so join me in praying for the
brokenness of our world that causes parents to lose their children, children to
lose their parents, and humankind to lose the humanity for which it was
created.
What
is important is not that this message be read but that it be communicated; not
that it be accepted but that it be understood as another perspective; and not
that it should be fully embraced, but that it may create at least a shadow of a
doubt in the minds of those intent on inflicting harm and pain.
*Ends*
Wednesday, 17 May 2017
Press Release: HH Pope Tawadros II received by Her Majesty The Queen, His Grace the Archbishop of Canterbury, and His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales, during his first pastoral visit to the United Kingdom
Coptic Orthodox Church UK
Media and Communications Office
Media and Communications Office
Coptic Orthodox Church (Europe)
Media and Communications Office
HH Pope Tawadros II
received by Her Majesty The Queen, His Grace the Archbishop of Canterbury, and His
Royal Highness the Prince of Wales, during his first pastoral visit to the
United Kingdom
![]() |
| Left to Right: Her Majesty The Queen, His Holiness Pope Tawadros II, His Grace Bishop Angaelos |
17 May 2017
On his
first pastoral visit, His Holiness Pope Tawadros II, 118th Pope of
Alexandria and Patriarch of the See of Saint Mark, has been visiting Coptic
Orthodox parishes and meeting with communities across the United Kingdom. Pope
Tawadros has also consecrated churches, presided over Liturgies and Vespers
services, and addressed hundreds of young people at a Coptic youth gathering.
During
his visit, Pope Tawadros II was received by Her Majesty The Queen at Windsor
Castle on 9 May. This historic audience with Her Majesty was also attended by
His Grace Bishop Angaelos, General Bishop of the Coptic Orthodox Church in the
United Kingdom, and the Rt Rev David Conner, Dean of Windsor. During the
meeting HH Pope Tawadros II presented Her Majesty with a Coptic icon depicting
the ‘Flight to Egypt’ of the Holy Family.
After
the audience, Bishop Angaelos said:
“This
meeting between Her Majesty and His Holiness is an embodiment of our Coptic
Orthodox Church here in Britain, made up of those, many of whom will have roots
in Egypt, who still feel connected to Egypt, but are very integrated as British
Copts. I am personally thankful for this meeting that reinforces this composite
and naturally organic identity at the highest level of our Church and nations.”
| Photo credit: Coptic Church UK |
Shortly
after meeting with Her Majesty The Queen, Pope Tawadros was received by His
Excellency Mr Nasser Kamel, Ambassador of the Arab Republic of Egypt to the
United Kingdom, at a dinner and reception at the Egyptian Embassy in London. The
reception was attended by Coptic clergy and laity, as well as the wider British
Egyptian community.
| Photo credit: Coptic Church UK |
“…we
feel deeply united with you and your people in sufferings that you experience,
and we pray for you very much. I know that connection extends beyond those who
would call themselves Christians, to a solidarity of humanity with you and your
people and a huge respect for, to quote another virtue from the Bible, the ‘patient
endurance’ that you always express when these difficulties occur and your words
of peace.”
| Photo credit: Coptic Church UK |
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| Photo credit: Lambeth Palace |
On Friday 12 May, His Holiness Pope Tawadros II was received by The Most Revd Justin Welby, Archbishop of Canterbury, at a historic meeting in Lambeth Palace. During the visit, Pope Tawadros met privately with the Archbishop, later joining the rest of the Coptic delegation and ecumenical guests, when addresses were delivered. His Holiness signed the official guestbook with the words ‘Love Never Ends’, and presented a Coptic icon of the ‘Flight to Egypt’ of the Holy Family to Archbishop Justin.
“We
are grateful to God for the co-operation, dialogue, and Christian love between
our two Churches. We are hopeful and pray for more and more Christian unity
globally and we believe it is possible through the love of God, and through the
ecumenical blood of all Christian martyrs.”
In his
address to His Holiness, His Grace the Archbishop commented on the resilient
example of Coptic Christians in Egypt, saying:
“The
experience of the Coptic people in Egypt is not only an example to the Body of
Christ around the world, but also a profound inspiration. The courage of your
people – their constant faith, their steadfastness, their long endurance –
brings to life those words we read so often in the epistles of Saint Paul, and
we are truly grateful and give thanks to God for you and for your people.”
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Picture(s)
by : Westminster Abbey/Picture Partnership.
|
Following the meeting at
Lambeth Palace, the two Church leaders and their delegations, attended Evensong
at Westminster Abbey at the invitation of the Dean of Westminster Rev Dr John
Hall, walking side by side during the procession, and praying together at the
shrine of St Edward the Confessor.
Evensong was followed by a
general meeting led by His Holiness the Pope, with members of the Coptic
community, in St Margaret’s Church, Westminster Abbey. The Pope gave a sermon
and presented gifts to members of the community. Before the meeting, Pope
Tawadros was officially welcomed by the Dean of Westminster who spoke of his
solidarity with the plight of Christians in the Middle East and in Egypt, and
spoke of unity, saying:
“The
cause of unity between Christians is something which is dear to us and
immensely precious. It is wonderful that in this 21st Century,
relations between all the Churches, develop so strongly and warmly together,
and Your role, Your Holiness, in convening leaders of the Churches including
Pope Francis and others has been an example to all of us.”
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| Photo by Mark Kessler |
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| Photo by Mr Sami Gabriel |
At the
commencement of the visit, an official vespers service was held in his honour
at the Coptic Cathedral of Saint George in Hertfordshire. The event was held on
6 May 2017, and attended by members of the House of Lords, the Diplomatic
Corps, the Foreign Commonwealth Office, the Home Office, humanitarian and
advocacy organisations, and various ecumenical and inter-religious guests.
Commenting on the visit as a whole, His Grace Bishop Angaelos said:
“It
has been a blessing for the Coptic community here in the United Kingdom to
engage with their shepherd. It was also an opportunity for His Holiness to meet
his flock and to encounter some of the work being done under the various
ministries within the Coptic Orthodox Church in the United Kingdom.
I am
thankful that the visit was fruitful and gave His Holiness an overview of the
diverse and dynamic role of Coptic Christians across Britain who endeavour to
live faithfully according to their Christian principles, while being fully
integrated into their surrounding community. I am also pleased that we had the
opportunity to learn from the example of peaceful yet powerful resilience that His
Holiness and our brothers and sisters in Egypt demonstrate on a daily basis.”
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| Photo by Michael Hani
More photographs available via www.Flickr.com/CopticMedia (Many more photographs and videos will become available over the coming weeks)
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