The Church of St. Thomas
It can only be a gift of Grace that the faith and tradition of a small community of the early Christians in India have remained alive and vibrant throughout nearly two thousand years. Even amidst eriodic storm, from one source or another, across these centuries of change, the community has maintained an inner calm, in the safety of the spiritual anchor, cast in the original concept of the word Orthodox, that is the right glorification of God.
The early Christians of
India (mainly on the southern coast) were known as Thomas Christians and
indeed by no other name - until the advent of the Portuguese in the 16th
century followed closely by the British.
That the Church in India was
founded by St. Thomas the apostle is attested by West Asian writings since
the 2nd century (The Doctrine of the Apostle Thomas and the Acta Thomae),
both of which were written at or near Edessa ca 200-250 AD - St. Ephrem,
St. John Chrysostom and St. Gregorios Nazianzen, in the 4th century; St.
Jerome, ca 400 AD, and historians Eusabius ca 338 and Theodore, of the 5th
century.
Against the background of
trade between India and west asia since ancient times, travel close to the
coast of Arabia was feasible and not uncommon, reaching Malabar, the Tamil
country, Sindh (Scythia) and western India (Kalyan), around the time St.
Thomas came to India.
There is a wealth of
corroborative evidence to support, and no good reason to doubt the living
tradition of St. Thomas Christians that the Apostle arrived in
Kodungalloor (Muziris) in Kerala in 52 AD, preached the gospel,
established seven churches, and moved on to other kingdom, returning to
Madras (Mylapore) in 72 AD where he was martyred that year. Writers of the
4th century, St. Ephrem and St. John Chrysostom knew also about the relics
of St. Thomas resting at that time in Edessa, having been brought there
from India by West Asian merchants.
The Church founded
by
St. Thomas
must have
been rather spread out in the subcontinent, including the North-West, the
Western and Eastern coasts of the peninsula, probably also
reaching
Sri
Lanka
. Tradition associates the ministry
of St. Thomas with the Indo-Parthian king, Gondophares in the north and
with king Vasudeva (Mazdeo) of the Kushan dynasty in the south. It was the
latter who condemned the apostle to death.
Among the Early
Christians
The Orthodox Church
in
India
is one of the 37 Apostolic Churches, dating from the time of the disciples
of Christ. Nine of them were in
Europe
and 28
in
Asia
and
Africa
. Today it belongs to the family of
the five Oriental Orthodox Churches, which
include
Syria
,
Egypt
,
Ethiopia
and
Armenia
,
and to the wider stream of the world’s Orthodox Churches, comprising in
all over 150 million Eastern Christians. It has a
strength of over 2 million members in about 1500 parishes mainly in
Kerala and increasingly spread all
over
India
and in many parts of the globe. Eastern in origin and Asian in its
moorings,
the
Indian
Church
is, at the same time, a distinctive and respected part of the rich
religious mosaic that
is
India
.
Until the 16th century,
there was only one Church
in
India
,
concentrated mainly in the south west. The seven original churches were
located at Malankara (Malayattor?), Palayur (near Chavakkad), Koovakayal
(near
North Paravur
), Kokkamangalam
(
South Pallipuram
?), Kollam, Niranam and Nilackel
(Chayal). Of the same pattern adopted by the other Apostles, each local
Church was self-administered, guided by a group of presbyters and presided
over by the elder priest or bishop.
The
Indian
Church
was autonomous then, and is now, like all Orthodox Churches. This is clear
from the fact that no name of any church
in
India
is seen in the now available list of bishoprics of the Church
in
Persia
from the fifth to the seventh century.
The early Church
in
India
remained one and at peace, treasuring the same ethnic and cultural
characteristics as the rest of the local community. Its members enjoyed
the good will of the other religious communities as well as the political
support of the Hindu rulers. The Thomas Christians welcomed missionaries
and migrants from other churches, some of whom sought to escape
persecution in their own countries. The language of worship in the early
centuries must have been the local language, probably a form of Tamil. In
later centuries, the liturgical language mingled with East Syriac received
through the churches of Selucia
and
Tigris
.
Links
with Persia
The Persian connection of
the Indian Churches has to be seen in the context of the internal
dissension 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-Ctesphion as the Catholicos of the East. Not long after, the
christological controversies
of
Chalcedon
, fuelled by
the strains between the Persian and Byzantine empires, swayed
the
Persian
Church
to declare itself ‘Nestorain’ and its head to assume the title of
Patriarch of the East
(
Babylon
). From their base in
the then flourishing theological school of Nisibis, Nestorain missionaries
began moving to India, Central Asia, China and Ethiopia to teach their
doctrines - probably associating 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
Patriarchs 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 Bardeus,
emphasizing the West Syrian Christological tradition of the One United
Nature, influencing the church
in
Persia
as well. Availing the relatively equable political climate following the
Arab conquest of Syria and other parts of West Asia, a Maphrianate of the
anti-Chalcedonians was established by 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 dioceses in
lower
Mesopotamia
and further east, but
significantly, not
to
India
.
On the life 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
Constantinople
or
Rome
. There were times
in this long period when the Christians
in
India
had been without a bishop and were led by an Archdeacon. And requests were
sent, sometimes with success, to one or another of the eastern prelates to
help restore the episcopate
in
India
.
Meanwhile the church in Persia and much of west Asia 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 re-established
in
India
(Kottayam) in 1912 while the former was transplanted
to
America
in 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 under Romo-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
(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 a relationship which
started for safe-guarding 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, ripen rather unnaturally by divided loyalty. First,
the relocation in India in 1912 of the Catholicate of the East originally
in Selucia 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
Antioch; 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 Yacoub III affirmed his acceptance of the
Catholicos as well as the constitution.
The fact that the Christian
Church first appeared in India, as elsewhere, as a fellowship of
self-governing communities, belonging to the same body and born into the
same new life, may yet light the path to a future of peace, within and
beyond the Orthodox community.
(Courtesy: The Orthodox
Church
in
India
:
Towards the Third Millennium.)