Assyrian Church of the East
The
Holy Apostolic and Catholic Assyrian Church of the East under His Holiness
Mar Dinkha IV, is a
Christian church that traces its origins to the
See of
Babylon, said to be founded by
Saint Thomas the Apostle.
It sometimes calls itself the
Assyrian Orthodox Church, and is sometimes mistakenly thought to be an
Oriental Orthodox body. In
India, it is known as the
Chaldean Syrian Church. In the
West it is often known, inaccurately, as the
Nestorian Church. The Assyrian Church of the East is known by historians and scholars and also proclaimed by the
Pope John Paul II as
"The martyrs' church", because no church has suffered as much martyrdom for Christianity as the Assyrian Church of the East has.
The Assyrian Church is the original Christian church in what was once
Parthia; western
Iraq and
Iran. Geographically it stretched in the
medieval period to
China and India: a monument found in
Xi'an (Hsi-an), the
Tang-period capital of China (originally
Chang'an), in
Chinese and
Syriac described the activities of the church in the
7th and
8th century, while half a
millennium later a Chinese
monk went from
Beijing to
Paris and
Rome to call for a
crusade with the
Mongols against the
Mamelukes. Prior to the
Portuguese arrival in India in
1498, it provided "
East Syrian" bishops to the
Saint Thomas Christians. Patriarch Timothy I (727-823) wrote of the large Christian community in Tibet.
The foundations of Assyrian theology are
Diodorus of Tarsus and
Theodore of Mopsuestia, who taught at
Antioch. The normative
Christology of the Assyrian church was written by
Babai the Great (
551-
628) and is clearly different from the accusations of
dualism directed toward
Nestorius: his main christological work is strikingly called the '
Book of the Union', and in it Babai teaches that the two
qnome (
essences) are unmingled but everlastingly united in the one
parsopa (
personality) of
Christ.
Consolidation of the Church
Christian communities existed in the regions of
Assyria,
Babylonia, and
Persia as early as the
second century. A
council is known to have been held at
Seleucia-Ctesiphon about
325 to deal with jurisdictional conflicts among the leading bishops. At a subsequent
Council of Seleucia-Ctesiphon in
410 the Christian communities of
Mesopotamia renounced all subjection to Antioch and the "Western" bishops and the Bishop of
Seleucia-Ctesiphon assumed the rank of
Catholicos.
* J.-M. Fiey,
Jalons pour une histoire de l'eglise en Iraq, (Louvain: Secretariat du CSCO, 1970).
* M.-L. Chaumont,
La Christianisation de l'empire Iranien, (Louvain: Peeters, 1988).
Schism with the Western Church
The Assyrian Church was split from the
western churches as a result of the
Nestorian schism in
431, but the theology of the Assyrian church cannot be defined as
Nestorianism. Nestorius, a
pupil of Theodore of Mopsuestia and
bishop of
Constantinople, was condemned because he refused to call the
Virgin Mary '
mother of God' ("Theotokos" in Greek). He would only call her 'mother of Christ' ("Christotokos" in Greek). His opponent
Cyril of Alexandria accused him of dividing Christ into two
persons, which he clearly denied. The affair was complicated by the unclear arguments of Cyril, which soon after provoked the
Monophysite schism.
Cyril of
Alexandria worked hard to remove Nestorius and his supporters and followers from power. But in the Syriac-speaking world Theodore of Mopsuestia was held in very high esteem, and the condemnation of his pupil Nestorius was not received well. His followers were given refuge. The
Persian kings, who were at constant war with the Roman Empire, saw the opportunity to assure the loyalty of their Christian subjects and supported the Nestorian schism:
* They granted protection to Nestorians (
462).
* They executed the pro-Roman Catholicos
Babowai who was then replaced by the Nestorian Bishop of
Nisibis Bar Sauma (
484).
* They allowed the transfer of the school of
Edessa to the Persian city Nisibis when the Roman emperor closed it for its Nestorian tendencies (
489).
Subsequent history
At the time of the arrival of the Nestorian refugees from Edessa, the prelate was
Babaeus or
Babowai (sometimes also called 'Babai', not to be confused with 'Babai the Great') (
457-
484), who appears to have received them with open arms. But
Bar Sauma, having become Bishop of Nisibis, the nearest important city to Edessa, broke with the weak Catholicos, whom he had deposed at the
Synod of Beth Lapat in April,
484. In the same year Babowai was accused before the king of conspiring with Constantinople and cruelly put to death.
At the synod of Beth Lapat it was also decided that monks and all church dignitaries should marry. This led to
apostasy and a weakening of spiritual life, and already by
544 some of the reforms had been reverted. The counter reforms reached their zenith in
571 when
Abraham the Great of Kashkar founded a new
monastery on
Mt. Izla above Nisibis to revive the strict monastic movement, and
Henana of Adiabene became head of the school of Nisibis. Henana then broke with the Antiochene tradition of Theodore and openly followed the teaching of
Origen. Attempts by the Bishops to censor and condemn Henana failed because of his protection by the royal court and he remained head of the school, even though almost all the students left.
The wars of
610â€"
628 between the Persian and Byzantine empires weakened the political standing of the Assyrian church and several sees and villages were lost to the Monophysites. The Assyrian church was not allowed to choose a new Catholicos, and its theological tradition was undermined by Henana.
Babai the Great together with
Archdeacon Mar Aba administered the church without the authority vested in the position of the Catholicos. But in his official position as 'visitor of the monasteries of the north' Babai had the authority to investigate the
orthodoxy of the monks and monasteries of northern Mesopotamia and to enforce discipline. In particular, he drove out married monks.
Babai the Great and his co-religionists worked hard to defend the legacy of Theodore: rival schools were set up in Nisibis and Balad, and the monastery of Mar Abraham, headed by Babai, took in a number of students from the school of Nisibis. Babai himself wrote a great number of commentaries and
hagiographies to defeat the Monophysites and the Origenist Henana, and developed the only systematic Assyrian Christology. He taught that the two
qnome (essence) are unmingled but everlastingly united in the one
parsopa (personality) of Christ.
The defenders were successful: at the
episcopal gathering of
612 the teachings of Theodore were
canonized. Soon Babai's writings and Christology became normative, and the writings of Henana were doomed to oblivion. Assyrian monasticism was purged and gathered momentum. The church proved to be well organized during the
Arab conquest that followed the
Byzantine-Persian Wars, and flourished for many centuries after.
Southern expansion
Assyrian Christians reached
India at an early date, either overland or via
Christians in the Persian Gulf. There they are popularly known as
Saint Thomas Christians. Bishops from the
Church of the East were sent from Mesopotamia to India until the
Sixteenth Century, but ecclesio-political considerations related to
Portuguese missions meant that for the next few centuries bishops for India were ordained only with authorization from Rome, or from the
Chaldean Catholic Church (a
particular church in communion with Rome). Those who sought independent ecclesiatical organization looked mainly to the
Syrian Orthodox Church. During the
Nineteenth Century, Christians in
Trichur again sought the ordination of a native bishop under authority of the Church of the East. This resulted in the organization of the
Chaldean Syrian Church. The present Metropolitan of India is Mar Aprem.
Eastern expansion
The Assyrian Church was the first Christian tradition to reach China (in
635), reaching
Mongolia at about the same time, and its relics can still be seen in Chinese cities such as
Xi'an (
Sai-an Fu), at that time the capital of China. An
inscribed stone, set up in February,
781 at
Chou-Chih (
Pinyin, "
Zhouzhi"), fifty miles to the south-west, describes the introduction of Christianity into China from Persia in the reign of
Tang Taizong; see the entry for
Nestorian Stele. However when
Tang Wu Zong decided to suppress all foreign
religions; Christianity largely ceased to exist in China. The church appears to have survived for a time, however, among the
Uyghur, and even had a revival under the
Mongols of the
Yuan Dynasty. A native of China was elected Patriarch as
Yaballaha III in
1281, and his colleague
Rabban Bar Sauma journeyed as far west as
Gascony. A
fourteenth-century monument in the remains of the Monastery of the Cross at Zhoukoudian in the
Fangshan District near Beijing can still be seen. In
2003, it was discovered that a single church body of the Assyrian Church still existed in China, cut off from any contact with its
Patriarch for centuries.
Recent historical research indicates the presence of Christianity in Tibet in as early as the sixth and seventh centuries. A strong presence existed by the eighth century when Patriarch Timothy I (727-823) in 782 calls the Tibetans one of the more significant communities of the Church of the East and wrote of the need to appoint another bishop in ca. 794. ("The Church of the East in Central Asia," Bulletin of the John Rylands University Library of Manchester, 78, no.3 (1996)).
*A. C. Moule,
Christians in China before the year 1550, (London: SPCK, 1930).
*
P. Y. Saeki,
Nestorian Documents and Relics in China, 2nd ed., (Tokyo: Maruzen, 1951).
*
Article on the 14th Century monument at Zhoukoudian in ChinaIn the
15th century, the church decreed that the title of Patriarch could pass only to relatives of then-patriarch
Mar Shimun IV. This upset many in the church's hierarchy, and in
1552 a rival Patriarch,
Mar Yohanan Soulaqa VIII was elected. This rival Patriarch met with the
Pope and entered into communion with the
Roman Catholic Church. The Assyrian Church now had two rival leaders, a hereditary patriarch in
Alqosh (in modern-day northern
Iraq), and a Papal-appointed patriarch in
Diyarbakir (in modern-day eastern
Turkey). This situation lasted until
1662 when the Patriarch in Diyarbakir,
Mar Shimun XIII Denha, broke communion with Rome, resumed relations with the line at Alqosh, and moved his seat to the village of
Qochanis in the Turkish mountains. The
Vatican responded by appointing a new patriarch to Diyarbakir to govern the Assyrians who stayed loyal to the
Holy See. This latter group became known as the
Chaldean Catholic Church. In
1804 the hereditary line of Patriarchs in Alqosh died out, and that church's hierarchy decided to accept the authority of the Chaldean patriarchs. The line of patriarchs at
Qochanis remained independent.
Assyrians faced reprisals under the
Hashemite monarchy for co-operating with the
British during the years after
World War I, and most fled to the West. The Patriarch
Mar Eshai Shimun XXIII, though born into the line of Patriarchs at Qochanis, was educated in Britain. For a time he sought a homeland for the Assyrians in
Iraq but was forced to take refuge in
Cyprus in 1933, later moving to
Chicago, Illinois and finally settling near
San Francisco. The present Patriarch of Babylon is based in Chicago, and less than 1 million of the world's 4.5 million Assyrians remain in Iraq.
The Chaldean community was less numerous at the time of the
British Mandate of Palestine, and did not play a major role in the British rule of the country. However with the
exodus of Church of the East members, the Chaldean Catholic Church became the largest non-
Muslim group in Iraq, and some later rose to power in the
Ba'ath Party government, the most prominent being
Deputy Prime Minister Tariq Aziz.
In
1964, the issue of hereditary succession again caused a schism, with the subsequent election of
Mar Thoma Darmo as a rival to the hereditary
Mar Eshai Shimun XXIII. Mar Shimun resigned in
1973, and was assassinated in
1975 while negotiations were being carried out over his possible reinstatement.
Mar Dinkha IV was elected as Shimun's successor, and announced the permanent end of the hereditary succession. While this removes the underlying dispute, the rift between the rival Patriarchs still exists, with
Mar Addai as the successor to Mar Thomas Darmo at the head of a group called the
Ancient Church of the East.
On
November 11,
1994, an historic meeting of Mar Dinkha IV and
Catholic Pope John Paul II took place in the Vatican and a
Common Christological Declaration was signed. One side effect of this meeting was that the Assyrian Church's relationship to the Chaldean Catholic Church was improved.
The most common eucharistic liturgy of the Church of the East is the
Liturgy of Addai and Mari. This rite is well known to liturgical scholars because it lacks the words of institution used by Jesus at the
Last Supper (This is my body...This is my blood). For that reason many (especially Roman Catholics) considered this liturgy as invalid. However, in 2001, after a study of this issue, the
Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity and the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (Cardinal
Ratzinger, now
Benedict XVI, then being prefect) declared that this was a valid liturgy and that Catholics in Iraq could receive the
Eucharist in an Assyrian Church if unable to attend their own churches. This declaration was approved by Pope
John Paul II.
There are three
archdioceses in the Assyrian Church, one for
Lebanon,
Syria, and
Europe, another for
India, and the last serves
Iraq and
Russia. Individual
dioceses exist in the eastern
United States (including
Chicago), western United States, eastern
California,
Canada,
Syria,
Iran,
Europe, and one for both
Australia and
New Zealand. Several
congregations exist in
Georgia, India, Iraq, Iran, Lebanon, and Syria. A single
parish exists in the
People's Republic of China, whose existence stretches back to antiquity, and another in Moscow. The present Patriarch, Mar Dinkha IV, has his headquarters (along with four other houses of worship) in Chicago, Illinois, United States.
*
Assyrian Rite*
Holy Synod of the Assyrian Church of the East*
List of Christian denominations*
List of Christian denominations by number of members*
List of Patriarchs of Babylon*
Nestorianism in China*
Assyrian Church of the East*
Official Website of the Assyrian Church of the East *
Diocese of Australia and New Zealand*
Article on the Assyrian Church of the East - from the Catholic Near East Welfare Association*
An Unofficial Website on the Church of the East - An informational site written by an amateur church historian*
Holy Apostolic Catholic Assyrian Church of the East - Commission on Inter-Church Relations and Education Development: Is the theology of the Church of the East Nestorian?*
Website of the Moscow parish of the Assyrian Church of the East*
Common Christological Declaration Between the Catholic Church and the Assyrian Church of the East from Vatican.va*
Guidelines for Chaldean Catholics receiving the Eucharist in Assyrian Churches