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"John Mark" redirects here. For other uses, see John Mark (disambiguation).
Mark the Evangelist (Coptic: Hebrew: מרקוס; Greek: Μάρκος), was the disciple and interpreter of Peter the Apostle. At the request of the Church in Rome, Mark composed a short gospel embodying what he had heard Peter preach and is the traditional name of the author of the Gospel of Mark.[1] (See Jerome and the Early Church Fathers Chapt. VIII)
His feast day is celebrated on April 25,[7] the anniversary of his martyrdom.[citation needed] Mark is also believed by various traditions to be the first bishop of Alexandria[8] and thus the founder of the Church in Alexandria[7] and of Christianity in Africa. In Coptic tradition he is identified as the first Pope of the Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria.[citation needed] His evangelistic symbol is the lion.[7]
[edit] Biblical and traditional informationMark of the Pauline Epistles is specified as a cousin of Barnabas (Colossians 4:10); this would explain Barnabas' special attachment to the Mark of Acts over whom he disputed with Paul (Acts 15:37-40). Mark's mother was a prominent member of the earliest group of Christians in Jerusalem.[9] It was to her house that Peter turned on his release from prison; the house was a meeting-place for the brethren, "many" of whom were praying there on the night Peter arrived from prison (Acts 12:12-17).[1] Evidence for Mark's authorship of the Gospel that bears his name originates with Papias.[10][11] A number of traditions have built up around Mark, though none can be verified from the New Testament. Traditionally, Mark is said to be the man who carried water to the house where the Last Supper took place (Mark 14:13).[12] And the young man who ran away naked when Jesus was arrested (Mark 14:51-52).[13] Coptic Church tradition additionally states that Mark is the one who hosted the disciples in his house after the death of Jesus, into whose house the resurrected Jesus Christ came (John 20), and into whose house the Holy Spirit descended on the disciples at Pentecost.[citation needed] Mark is also believed to be one of the servants at the Marriage at Cana who poured out the water that Jesus turned to wine (John 2:1-11),[14] and was one of the Seventy Apostles sent out by Christ (Luke 10:1).[14] According to the Coptic church, Saint Mark was born in the Pentapolis of North Africa. This tradition adds that he returned to Pentapolis later in life after being sent by Saint Paul to Colosse (Colossians 4:10) and serving with him in Rome (Phil 24; 2 Tim 4:11) ; from Pentapolis he made his way to Alexandria.[15] When Mark returned to Alexandria, the people there are said to have resented his efforts to turn them away from the worship of their traditional Hellenistic gods.[citation needed] In AD 68 they placed a rope around his neck and dragged him through the streets until he was dead.[16] [edit] Fate of his remains
Russian Orthodox icon of St. Mark the Evangelist, 18th century (Iconostasis of Transfiguration Church, Kizhi Monastery, Karelia, Russia). In 828, relics believed to be the body of St. Mark were stolen from Alexandria by two Venetian merchants and were taken to Venice, where the Byzantine Theodore of Amasea had previously been the patron saint. A basilica was built there to house the relics. There is a mosaic on this Venetian basilica showing how the sailors covered the body relics with a layer of pork. Since Muslims are not allowed to touch pork, this action was done to prevent Muslim intervention in the relics removal. Copts believe that the head of the saint remained in Alexandria. Every year, on the 30th day of the month of Babah, the Coptic Orthodox Church celebrates the commemoration of the consecration of the church of St. Mark, and the appearance of the head of the saint in the city of Alexandria. This takes place inside St. Mark Coptic Orthodox Cathedral in Alexandria, where the saint's head is preserved. The Eastern Orthodox Church celebrates his feast day on January 4 (for those churches which follow the traditional Julian calendar, January 4 currently falls on January 17 of the modern Gregorian calendar). In 1063, during the construction of a new basilica in Venice, St. Mark's relics could not be found. However, according to tradition, in 1094 the saint himself revealed the location of his remains by extending an arm from a pillar.[17] The newfound remains were placed in a sarcophagus in the basilica. [2] Illumination of St. Mark in the 11th century Trebizond Gospel (Russian State Museum, Saint Petersburg). In June 1968, Pope Cyril VI of Alexandria sent an official delegation to Rome to receive a relic of St. Mark from Pope Paul VI. The delegation consisted of ten metropolitans and bishops, seven of whom were Coptic and three Ethiopian, and three prominent Coptic lay leaders. The relic was said to be a small piece of bone that had been given to the Roman pope by Giovanni Cardinal Urbani, Patriarch of Venice. Pope Paul, in an address to the delegation, said that the rest of the relics of the saint remained in Venice. The delegation received the relic on June 22, 1968. The next day, the delegation celebrated a pontifical liturgy in the Church of Saint Athanasius the Apostolic in Rome. The metropolitans, bishops, and priests of the delegation all served in the liturgy. Members of the Roman papal delegation, Copts who lived in Rome, newspaper and news agency reporters, and many foreign dignitaries attended the liturgy. In the book The Lost Tomb of Alexander, historian Andrew Chugg argues that the relics of St. Mark in Venice are actually those of Alexander the Great. Few historians, however, accept this claim.[citation needed] [edit] See also
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michael lockyear Categories: Popes of the Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria | Seventy Disciples | 1st-century births | 68 deaths | Christian martyrs of the Roman era | Christian missionaries in Africa | Christianity in Egypt | Coptic Orthodox Church | Coptic Orthodox saints | New Testament people | Patriarchs of Alexandria | Roman Catholic writers | 1st-century bishops | Egyptian saints | Egyptian Roman Catholic saints | Saints from the Holy Land | Palestinian Roman Catholic saints | Burials at Saint Mark's Coptic Orthodox Cathedral (Alexandria) | Saints of the Golden Legend | Early Hebrew Christians | 1st-century Christian martyr saints | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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