Since the Council of Chalcedon in the 5th century and the official separation of the Coptic Church from the Western Christian and Eastern Orthodox churches, the Catholic Church has attempted to achieve reunion with the Copts in Egypt many times. During the Council of Florence in 1442, the Coptic delegates present agreed to a reunion with the papacy in Rome,[4] but the Coptic populace was opposed to the idea, and the union did not take effect. Further failed attempts at reunion were undertaken by Coptic delegates in 1560 and 1582.[5]
In the 17th century, at the behest of Pope Urban VIII, Catholic missionaries (primarily Franciscans) started to come to Egypt. In 1630, a number of missions of the Capuchin Order were founded in the Levant by Joseph of Paris, including in Cairo.[5] Although the mission in Cairo initially faced setbacks, tensions with the local Coptic priesthood were minimized with the arrival of Capuchin priest Agathangelo of Vendome to the city in 1633.
Initial relations between Catholics and Copts in Egypt were poor. One Coptic councilor in 1637 referred to the Roman Church in Egypt as "a brothel".[5][6] Attempts to excommunicate Catholic offenders in the city were seemingly fruitless.[5] Agathangelo would later be hanged as a martyr in Ethiopia by order of the Ethiopian king in 1638,[6] and the mission in Cairo would start to decline.
The Jesuits came in 1675.[7]
In 1741, the Coptic bishop, Anba Athanasius of Jerusalem, became a Catholic. [8] In 1781, he was appointed by Pope Benedict XIV as vicar apostolic of the fewer than 2,000 Egyptian Coptic Catholics.[7] Eventually, Athanasius returned to the Coptic Orthodox Church and others served as Catholic vicar apostolic.[7]
The number of Catholics of this rite increased to the point that Leo XIII in 1895 restored the Catholic patriarchate.[8] He initially named Bishop Cyril Makarios as patriarchal vicar. Makarios then presided over a synod, which led to the introduction of some Latin practices. In 1899, Leo appointed Makarios as patriarch of Alexandria of the Copts, taking the name Cyril II. He resigned in 1908 at the request of the Pope over a controversy. The patriarchate seat remained vacant until an election in 1947[7] and was administered by an apostolic administrator.[9]
Hierarchy
The Coptic Catholic Church sui juris comprises a single ecclesiastical province, covering Egypt alone. The Patriarch is the sole metropolitan archbishop, retaining the ancient title Alexandria but his actual seat is in Egypt's modern capital Cairo.
Most candidates for the priesthood are trained at St. Leo's Patriarchal Seminary [ar], in suburban Cairo. More than 100 Coptic Catholic parishes administer primary schools, and some have secondary schools as well. The church maintains a hospital, a number of medical dispensaries and clinics, and several orphanages.[10]
Ecumenism
Relations between the Coptic Catholic Church and the larger Coptic Orthodox Church are generally very good.[11]
^Roberson, Ronald G. "The Eastern Catholic Churches 2010"(PDF). Eastern Catholic Churches Statistics. Catholic Near East Welfare Association. Archived from the original(PDF) on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 28 December 2011.
^ abcdefghRoberson, Ronald G. "The Coptic Catholic Church". Eastern Catholic Churches. Catholic Near East Welfare Association. Retrieved 27 January 2012.