The Coptic Calendar
Father Matta
El-Meskeen
The pharaonic
Egyptians were the first in the world who measuredtime,
who dated the years, and who divided the years into months. For their record
keeping, they used a solar calendar. They knew that the year was approximately
365 days long, and they organized their calendar with precision, dividing it
into months with 30 days alloted to each-and all this
in the year 4240 B.C. In his writings on Egypt, the famous Greek historian
Herodotus says that the Egyptians were led to this conclusion by means of the
stars, and that they greatly excelled the Greeks in adjusting their solar year
so that it should begin exactly on schedule. This they accomplished by
appending an extra 5 days to the total of 12 months; these 5 days they called
the "small month."
At this point it is
worth drawing the reader’s attention to the fact that it is this solar calendar
of theancient Egyptians, based on sidereal
calculations (i.e., by means of the stars), that has been adopted by all the
rest of the world.
It is well known that
the Coptic solar year used to be divided into three seasons rather than four as
is currently the case. Originally, every season had four full months, with the
season of the rising of the Nile coming at the head of all the seasons. After
this came the season of planting and cultivation, and last came the season of
fruit and harvest. Anyone familiar with the Coptic mass will probably notice
that this tripartite division is still used in the liturgical rites of the
church. The Church assigns an owshia, or special
prayer, to each season. First is the owshia for the
rising of the waters, next comes the owshia for the
staple crops, and then comes the owshia for the winds
and the fruit crops. Thus the Coptic year is first and foremost tied to the
Nile, or in other words it is a Nilotic year.
As stated above, the
Coptic year is based on precise stellar observation and minute calculations.
This you can actually observe for yourself by looking up at the night sky just
before the beginning of the Coptic New Year-namely, just before the beginning
of the Coptic month of Tut (mid-September). At that time of the year, just
before sunrise in the eastern sky, you will see a brightly shining star, known
to the ancient Egyptians as "Stit" but now
known to us as Sirius. This star is part of the constellation which the Romans
called the Great Dog (Canis Majoris).
Because the appearance of Sirius was always a portent of the Nile’s annual
flood, the source of life and prosperity, this star was the object of adoration
to the ancient Egyptians as is witnessed in their hymns. Sirius appears close
to the sun, and only once a year, so for this reason the Egyptians called it
the "flood bringer."They thus adapted the Coptic year according to
the course of the star, considering the moment of its appearance. Historians
believe that the earliest recording of this star’s movements began in the days
of the first consolidation of the pharaonic
government in Heliopolis in the year 4240 B.C.
Christian Egypt
Egyptians have been
numbering their days and months according to their solar calendar almost
continually from the dawn of history up to the present day. This is because of
the solar calendar’s relationship with the cultivation of the land, the main sourcre of life and livelihood. In contrast to this,
Egypt’s civic-records have been markedly affected by whatever government or
sovereign happened to be in power, whether native Egyptian or of a usurping
foreigner. History was recorded according to power and conquest, as, for
example, in the case of Alexander the Great.
The Roman ruler
Diocletian came and horried the entire world, and
Egypt in particular, with his violence and his persecution of Christians. None
among the Christian countries escaped having its soil stained by the blood of
martyrs. Diocletian even went so far as to shed the blood of the Coptic
Patriarch St. Peter I, who became known as the "Seal of the Martyrs"
since he was the last to lose his life during that sinister reign. As a result
of all this, the Copts consider the year A.D. 284, the year of the tyrant’s
ascension to sovereignity, as the beginning of their
calendar. Thus the Coptic year can be calculated by subtracting 284 years from
the current year of the western calendar.
When we read from the
writings of one of the fathers of the Church who was contemporary to the reign
of Diocletian, we can understand why Egypt in particular was alone in adopting
this painful and gory period as the beginning of her calendar: "If the
martyrs of the whole world were put on one arm of the balance and the martyrs
of Egypt on the other, the balance would tilt in favor of the Egyptians."
It is estimated that the
total number of death sentences pronounced by Diocletian against the
Christians, sentences which were actually carried out, amounted to 800,000.
About Diocletian
The parents of Emperor
Diocletian were both slaves to Anulinus, a member of
the Roman Senate. His mother named him after the city in which she was born.
After an outstanding display of valor, young Diocletian was granted his
emancipation; thereafter he worked within the Emperor’s palace. Gradually he
was promoted through various offices until he became a consul, and later head
of the palace guard. Diocletian fought in the Persian war and displayed such
rare distinction that, after the death of Numerian,
his rivals were obliged to elect him-a former slave-to ascend the imperial
throne. Of the attributes ascribed to him by the English historian Gibbon, half
relate to baseness, meanness, and hypocrisy; half to courage, sycophancy, and
affected refinedness. Obviously, such contradictory
attributes combined in one person render him one of the toughest and most
dangerous sorts. Diocletian was a worshiper of Jupiter, the patron god of
wealth. Gibbon also says: "Diocletian had astounding perseverance for realising his goals, with a flexibility
for varying the means and great artistry in subserving
his skills and the skills of others to the interests of his ambitions, and in
disguising these amibitions with the strongest of
pretenses, pretending them to be for the sake of justice and Gibbon."
All these personal
attributes will be readily grasped by anyone who reads the Coptic Synaxarium in which are described
all the means of torture inflicted upon the Christians who were martyred during
Diocletian’s reign.
For 21 years Diocletian
held the empire in an iron grip; afterward he abdicated his power and retired
to the city of Salona in Dalmatia. There he stayed
for nine years, in the end dying an invalid.
The Commemoration of
Martyrs
Every Christian must be
aware that, from the first to the last, Christianity is a testimony to Christ:
"Ye are witnesses unto me!" The word "martyr" means
"witness." It was first applied to the apostles alone as those who
were witnesses to Jesus’ life, His death and His resurrection 7: "And ye
shall be witnesses unto me" (Acts 1:3).
Yet it happened that the
Lord Himself began appearing to all who, because of their faith in the Name of
Christ, endured excessive suffering-especiallyHe
appeared to those who voluntarily submitted themselves to death out of love and
adoration for the Lord; and this at the moment of the soul’s release from the
body. Thus all who accepted death in the name of Christ were called martyrs
since they truly entered into an actual vision of the Beloved. In this way,
death as the ultimate testimony to Christ came to be very highly regarded side
by side with the honour accorded the Apostles.Indeed, in the Church’s liturgical commemoration
of the saints, the martyrs are mentioned immediately
after the apostles and before the great saints. This is so, even if they were
only catechumens prior to their martyrdom, since the shedding of one’s blood as
testimony to Christ was considered as baptism in the deepest sense of the word;
as being an indelible dye, and as being a partnership in the death of Christ.
Splendid examples of the
honours bestowed by the church on martyrs have been
preserved for us in early church history. The Church has always considered the
day of martyrdom to be the martyr’s true birthday, that is to say his heavenly
birthday wherein begins his true and eternal life. To this day the Church
continues to bestow honors in the extreme on her martyrs; on the martyr’s memorial day all the church services should be conduc-ted in commemoration of his martyrdom. Honour is paid in hymns, prayers, recitals and sermons, then Holy Communion, the highest degree of celebration and
glorification, is offered.
Since the earliest time
the Church has set up small sancutaries or chapels
called "Martyria", "meaning
"places of testimony." We read about this in the life history of St. Macarius
the Great when he set up a small chapel to contain the relics of Maximus and Domadius:
When the fathers and
visitors met with St. Macarius, he used to take them
to their cell and say,"Let’s go and see the
testimony (martyrium) of the young strangers."
The reader will notice
that the word "testimony" here is a litral
translation of the Greek word "martyrium,"
or chapel dedicated to the memory of the martyr. This chapel was the symbol of
the highest veneration by which St. Macarius was able
to immortalize the memory of these two bloodless martyr-monks. The Church still
considers her martyrs to be those who intercede before God on her behalf,
intercessors whose blood pleads before God better than the blood of Abel. The
Church considers the remains of their bodies to be a treasure dearer than
perishable gold, and more precious than any adornments, any beauty, or any
splendor. Though it be small and poor, though its walls be of
mud, a church should consider itself to be greater than, the most magnificent
cathedral in the world if it possesses the body of a martyr. This pride
is not from pride in a name, a race, a land, or in a language; it is rather the
pride in a testimony of God that has been sealed in blood as it says in the
Gospel: "He that glorieth, let him glory in the
Lord" (1 Cor. 1:31). Indeed, there was a time when the Church did not
regard any altar worthy of consecration unless it contained some relic of a
martyr. Moreover, the priest appointed to a martyr’s altar was considered to be
of a higher rank than any other priest; he was called "Martyrarius,"
meaning "servant of martyrdom."
Feasts Of Martyrs And Their Liturgies
The early church in all
its enthusiasm used to celebrate in honour of Christ
twice a week with prayers and hymns on Saturdays and Sundays throughout the
year. Vigils starting on Saturday would go on all night with a display of
complete joy and a spirit of true festivity. On Sunday, the liturgical service
would then culminate in the divine oblation.
Beyond these two days
the Church used to congregate for an additional meeting one or two times every
week. This we learn from St. John Chrysostom in his sermon number forty which
was delivered during one of the occasions when a martyr’s feast day was
commemorated with vigil, prayers, and hymns until daybreak, after which the
solemn rite was brought to an end with the offering of holy
communion, just as on Sundays. We also learn from his sermon number
fifty-five, regarding the vigil held inside the church in honour
of a saint: "You have kept vigil yesterday all night long, and have
completed the requirements of sanctity, so that you havechanged
night into day; so now do not change your day into night with drunkenness and
dissolution."
Among the very earliest
documents describing the way in which martyrs were commemorated is the report
written by the ancient historian, Eusebius of Caesarea, who describes the
celebration of the martyrdom of Polycarp, Bishop of Smyrna, who achieved
martyrdom in A.D. 168. Of the bishop’s church in Smyrna we are told by St. John
Chrysostom that: They decided by the will of God to congrega
te around his tomb to
celebrate his birthday [i.e., the day of his martyrdom] with joy and jubilation
to venerate his sufferings so as toexemplify that to
the rising generations.
Tertullian also refers
to the rituals used by the church of his day when celebrating a martyr’s feast
day. He says: "The oblations are offered on behalf of those who have
passed away on their birthdays as a perpetual commemoration of the day of their
martyrdom."
St. Cyprian also
describes the Church’s interest regarding this, saying: "The Church offers
the oblation on behalf of them when they set up to commemorate their suffering
in the days of their martyrdom as a perpetual annual commemoration."
It used to be that the
liturgical service would always include a recital from the history of these
martyrs. The writing of this was entrusted to the bishops themselves, or it was
at least revised by them in order to meet ecclesiastical standards, and to
acquire an official status. Indeed, the Church would not accept a history that
had not been approved of by a bishop. The council of Carthage, for example,
instituted a legislation regulating the writing and reciting of the martyrs’
histories.
Among the rare
manuscripts in the library of the Monastery of St. Macarius,
a text composed in the Bohairic Coptic dialect was
found in which was written a preface that was to be recited by the patriarch or
bishop before the reading of the life histories of the martyrs. It also
contained instructions for the priest, should it be that the bishop
were not present. Herewith is presented the English translation:
"In the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit, of true oneness,
of no beginning, the perfectly great in His counsel, Omnipotent in His deeds, Omnipresentand utterer through
the Law and the Prophets, I beseech His Benevolence to grant me grace and mercy
and open the eyes of my heart and under-standing, so that I should understand
His law and observe His commandments and His will and glorify His great name
which is filled with glory forever. Amen. That I might inform you my beloved
sons..." Then he says, "Bless me bless me..."
However, if the utterer of the benediction is a priest he should not recite
what is written earlier, but rather the following: "In the name of the Father,
the Son and the Holy Spirit, one God. Bless me (he prostrates himself). Forgive
me O my fathers and my brothers. Pray for me with love, so that the Lord, the
benign philanthropic God, should give me some consciousness, an alert mind and
a heart imbued with comprehension, so that I could read in His Law and observe
His commandments and glorifyHis great name which is
filled with glory forever. Amen. That I might inform you, my beloved
sons..."
Lest it be thought by
the naive that the Orthodox Church’s veneration of martyrs is actually a part
of her worship, we present here the opinion of the early church concerning such
an assump-tion. The representatives of the church of
Smyrna requested the viceregent to give them the body
of the martyred Polycarp (actually the burnt remains of his body) in order to
venerate him.
The Jews of the city
sarcastically exclaimed that the Christians were now going to abandon the
Crucified and begin worshipping the body of Polycarp. The Church’s reply to
this was: "We worship the Son of God. As for the martyrs, they are the
disciples of the Lord who followed His tracks. So that we
love them because they are worthy of that, by virtue of their incom-parable love for their King and Teacher. We
wish we were also to become their partners, and companions to them in such
discipleship."
And when the centurion
saw the contention of the Jews, he put the remains of his body in the middle
and burnt them. This had become customary with them. We thus gathered his bones
afterwards. They are dearer than the precious stones and more valuable than
gold. We put them in a befitting place. We hope that the Lord would allow us to
meet together in blissfulness and felicity to celebrate the memory of all those
who previously struggled, and as a discipline and preparation for those who
follow their example.
It is worth calling the
reader’s attention to the fact that this lovely ecclesiastical celebration
happened in A.D. 168. It is the most ancient account to come down to us
concerning the commemorations of martyrs. The extract quoted above is from
Eusebius of Caesarea, the bishop and eminent church historian. From it we realise that the veneration of martyrs had been an
inseparable part of the religious life of believers; it has always enkindled their
faith to the highest degree.
A testimony from the
Church in the West is also worth noting. Bishop Austin (the original
pronunciation of Augustine who died in A.D. 604) was the first archbishop of
Canterbury who had been sent by Gregory the Great as a missionary to establish
the Church in England. He tells us: "We used to revive the memory of our
martyrs with official ecclesiastical rituals. This to elevate ourselves to the
level of being able of emulating their behavior, and to count ourselves
partners with them in this fate, and the merits they earned, and to obtain
among ourselves some benefit through the prayers for them. Nevertheless, we did
not present worship or oblation to any martyr under any circumstances except to
the God of the martyrs alone. This despite the fact that we
actually set up sanctuaries and altars in the names of the martyrs as a
memorial to them exclusively. It never ever happened that the priest
stood to present to the body of the martyr lying underneath the altar worship
or oblation, saying to you anything like: "We present this oblation, O St.
Peter and St. Paul or Cyprian!" Rather, what was presented of worship and
oblation was presented entirely and solely to the Lord Cod who venerates his
martyrs: "Precious Eusebius of Caesarea in the sight of the Lord is the
death of his saints" (Ps. 116:15)."
As for our Nairuz message, it is to shed further light on our Coptic
calendar which is based from first to last on testimony to Christ; it is as if
our entire history is a story of love toward Christ, a story stained with
blood. Each year of the story is a prolonged chapter crowded with heroes whose
memories are retold again and again, yet we do not get bored remembering them.
As for our day, it is a touching scene in which we are crucified - for indeed
in Christ we are crucified every day and resurrected every day: "for thy
sake we are killed all the day long!" (Rom.
8:36).
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