10Feb2026
  • Sanan Pasha Street – El Zeitoun – Cairo
  • [email protected]
TwitterFacebook-fYoutubeSpotifySoundcloud
logotype
  • Home
  • Index
    • Video Index
    • Audio Index
      • Other Miscellaneous Topics
    • Articles Index
    • Books Index
  • Encyclopedias
  • Video Lectures
  • Audio Lectures
  • E-Books
  • Photo albums
  • العربية
Contact Us
logotype
  • Home
  • Index
    • Video Index
    • Audio Index
      • Other Miscellaneous Topics
    • Articles Index
    • Books Index
  • Encyclopedias
  • Video Lectures
  • Audio Lectures
  • E-Books
  • Photo albums
  • العربية
Contact Us
  • Home
  • Index
    • Video Index
    • Audio Index
      • Other Miscellaneous Topics
    • Articles Index
    • Books Index
  • Encyclopedias
  • Video Lectures
  • Audio Lectures
  • E-Books
  • Photo albums
  • العربية
logotype
logotype
  • Home
  • Index
    • Video Index
    • Audio Index
      • Other Miscellaneous Topics
    • Articles Index
    • Books Index
  • Encyclopedias
  • Video Lectures
  • Audio Lectures
  • E-Books
  • Photo albums
  • العربية
Saint Mark the Apostle
Home All Categories Encyclopedias Encyclopedia of the Saints’ Lives Saint Mark the Apostle
Encyclopedia of the Saints’ Lives
1 August 19650 Comments

Saint Mark the Apostle

مجلة الكرازة
تحميل
📄 تحميل PDF 📝 تحميل Word 📚 تحميل ePub

In previous issues, we spoke about four preachers of this generation: Archpriest Philotheos Ibrahim, Archdeacon Habib Girgis, Archdeacon Iskandar Hanna, and Priest Mansi Yuhanna. In this issue, however, we return to the first apostolic age and speak about our great Evangelist,

Saint Mark the Apostle.

He preached throughout the ancient world:
This great evangelist began his ministry at a young age. He was not only the preacher of our Egyptian lands but also preached in North Africa, in the Pentapolis (the five western cities), shared with Saint Paul the Apostle in evangelizing some churches of Asia Minor, participated in the founding of the Church of Rome, and also labored in Colossae and other cities of Europe. Thus, we see that Saint Mark preached in almost every continent of the ancient world known in his time.

In addition, he was one of the four Evangelists whose Gospels were preached to the whole world. He also authored the liturgy later known as the Liturgy of Saint Cyril, and he founded the theological school in Alexandria, which became a fountain of divine knowledge for seekers of faith throughout the Christian world.

He was born into a devout family among the earliest to believe in Christianity and to serve it. He was related to Saint Peter (1), Saint Barnabas (Col. 4:10), and Saint Thomas (2). Yet he did not merely hear about the Lord Jesus in this religious environment—he saw Him, conversed with Him, and lived with Him; therefore, the Church calls him “The Beholder of God.” Ibn Kabar mentions that Saint Mark was one of the seventy apostles of the Lord (3).

The house of Mark was one of the most cherished in Christian history—it was there that the Lord Jesus celebrated the Last Supper with His disciples and washed their pure feet. This house was built on Mount Zion, and both Saint Epiphanius, Bishop of Cyprus, and Saint Cyril, Bishop of Jerusalem, testified that it was the upper room where the disciples gathered and where the Holy Spirit descended (4).

The house of Mark became the first church in the world, where Christians gathered in the days of the apostles (Acts 12:12).

The Ministry of Mark:
The Acts of the Apostles records that Saint Mark, as a young man, accompanied the apostles Paul and Barnabas on a missionary journey from Antioch to Cyprus and the southern coast of Asia Minor, where he helped establish the churches of Galatia. For reasons unknown, Mark returned before completing the journey, but later he cooperated with Saint Paul again in founding many churches in Europe.

(1) History of the Patriarchs by Anba Sawirus, Bishop of El-Ashmunein.
(2) Same source, and also History of the Patriarchs by Anba Yusab, Bishop of Fuwwah.
(3) Lamp of Darkness, chapter four.
(4) Hastings’ Dictionary of the Bible, Vol. 3.

Mark went to the Pentapolis and all its regions, preaching the Word of God. Many believed in Christ, and he performed many signs and wonders. Then the Holy Spirit commanded him to go to Alexandria to sow the good seed, the Word of God. He went there, founded the Coptic Church, and spent a period in our Egyptian land, ordaining Saint Anianus as bishop—the first believer in Alexandria through Mark’s preaching.

Afterward, Saint Mark returned to continue his missionary work in Europe and Asia, and then came back to Egypt, where he was martyred.

Mark the Apostle’s Role in Founding the Church of Rome:
The Church of Rome was founded by the great Apostle Paul, aided by many—foremost among them, Saint Mark. In Paul’s Epistle to the Colossians, written in Rome, he mentions that Mark was with him there and urges the Colossians to welcome him when he comes to them (Col. 4:10).

In the Epistle to Philemon, also written from Rome, Paul lists Mark among his fellow workers, placing him first before Aristarchus, Demas, and Luke (Philem. 1:24). Finally, in his second letter to Timothy, written from Rome, Paul says, “For I am already being poured out as a drink offering, and the time of my departure is at hand… Get Mark and bring him with you, for he is useful to me for ministry” (2 Tim. 4:6, 11). Thus, Saint Mark returned to Rome, serving alongside Paul in establishing that church before returning to his see in Egypt.

Even the Catholics themselves acknowledge that Saint Mark shared in founding the Church of Rome, though they claim he did so alongside Saint Peter, sharing in his apostolic labors. They also say he served that church during Peter’s absence and that the believers requested him to write down the Holy Gospel, that they might be comforted by reading it and remember it forever. Thus, he wrote for them the Holy Gospel (5).

His Other Evangelical Works Throughout the World:
The Gospel of Mark, his liturgy, and the Theological School of Alexandria were three pillars of preaching and worship. Their influence extended not only over Egypt but over the entire Christian world, affirming the universal and apostolic character of Saint Mark’s ministry.

The Martyrdom of Saint Mark:
When the Apostle was celebrating the offering of the Holy Sacrifice on Easter Day—which coincided with the feast of Serapis, one of the pagan gods—the mob attacked the church that the believers had built near the sea, in a place called the “House of the Cows.” They seized Saint Mark after scattering the faithful and dragged him through the streets and squares, crying out, “Drag the dragon into the House of the Cows!”

They continued dragging him until his flesh was torn and his blood flowed. In the evening, they threw him into a dark prison. At midnight, the Lord Jesus appeared to him, strengthening him and promising him the crown of martyrdom (6).

In the morning, they took him out and repeated the same tortures until he delivered his soul into the hands of the Lord. The persecutors then lit a great fire to burn the saint’s body, but heavy rain fell and extinguished the flames. The believers then took his body, wrapped it in honorable linens, and laid it reverently in a coffin (6).

The Head of Saint Mark:
The Venetians stole the saint’s body and built a church over it in their city. However, his head remains in Alexandria (7), where the great St. Mark’s Church was built upon it.

(5) Meadows of the Righteous, p. 233 (April 25).
(6) Synaxarion, 30 Baramouda; History of the Patriarchs.
(7) Lamp of Darkness, chapter four.

Our Negligence Toward This Saint:
This saint, through whom we came to know Christ, is celebrated so little among us! Few are the feasts and churches bearing his name. While more than 200 churches in Egypt are named after Saint George, only about twelve churches in the entire country bear the name of Saint Mark—a clear example of our great neglect.


  1. Article by His Grace Bishop Shenouda, Bishop of Education – El-Keraza Magazine, First Year, Issue Six – August 1965

  2. For better translation support, please contact the center.
Al Keraza Magazine Evangelism SaintMark
4 Likes

Leave me alone now

1 August 1965

Leave Me Now

1 August 1965
Leave Me Now

منشورات ذات صلة

Encyclopedia of the Saints’ Lives
27 October 1993

Reverend Sergius

By Mounir Malak
popeshenoda podcast
Feasts of the Saints
13 December 2006

The Importance of Reading the Lives of the Saints

By Helana Ghatas

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Archive by Date
الاقسام
  • All Categories(2,762)
    • Digital Library(2)
      • E-books(1)
      • Video(1)
    • Encyclopedias(2,660)
      • Encyclopedia of Ascetic Theology(12)
        • Life of Stillness(3)
        • Monasticism(5)
      • Encyclopedia of Barthology(28)
      • Encyclopedia of Canon Law (Legislative Theology)(93)
        • Canons of the Ecumenical Councils(4)
        • Canons of the Fathers (Apostles and Patriarchs)(7)
        • Church Penalties(15)
        • Ibn al-‘Assal’s Canonical Collection(6)
        • Personal Status(32)
      • Encyclopedia of Church History(120)
        • Historical Verification(2)
        • Saint Mark and the Church of Alexandria(12)
          • Christianity in Egypt(1)
          • History of the Coptic Church and Its Martyrs(2)
          • Life of Saint Mark the Apostle(2)
          • The Church of Alexandria and Its Patriarchs(7)
        • The Church after the Schism – The Middle Ages(5)
          • Famous Christians in the Islamic Eras(1)
          • The Armenians(1)
          • The Church after Chalcedon(1)
        • The Church before the Schism(30)
          • Famous Fathers in the Early Centuries(5)
          • History of Heresies and Schisms in the Early Centuries(5)
          • Monasticism(8)
          • The Fourth Century and Its Importance(7)
        • The Church in the Modern and Contemporary Era(1)
          • The Church in the Diaspora(1)
        • The Early Church(16)
          • Our Apostolic Fathers(8)
          • The Beginning of the Christian Church(2)
      • Encyclopedia of Comparative Theology(324)
        • Differences with the Catholics(23)
        • Differences with the Protestants(42)
        • Doctrinal Issues(8)
        • Jehovah’s Witnesses(12)
        • Modern Heresies(42)
        • Pelagianism and Original Sin(2)
        • Seventh-day Adventists(11)
      • Encyclopedia of Dogmatic Theology(150)
        • Redemption(5)
        • Salvation(1)
        • The Angels(6)
        • The Holy Trinity(12)
        • The Incarnation(5)
        • The Theology of the Holy Spirit(4)
        • The Virgin Mary, Mother of God(18)
      • Encyclopedia of Dogmatic Theology(103)
        • Atheism(4)
        • Attributes of God(80)
      • Encyclopedia of Eschatology(34)
      • Encyclopedia of Feasts and Occasions(136)
        • Beginning of the New Year(4)
        • Feast of the Epiphany(8)
        • Feast of the Nativity(13)
        • Feast of the Resurrection(6)
      • Encyclopedia of Liturgical Theology(48)
        • Church Occasions(1)
        • Liturgies(5)
        • The Altar(2)
        • The Church(24)
        • The Sacraments(1)
      • Encyclopedia of Moral Theology(127)
        • Christian Concepts(10)
        • Christian Conduct(7)
        • The Conscience and the Influencing Factors(7)
        • The Human(7)
        • Virtues (Moral Theology)(3)
      • Encyclopedia of Pastoral Theology(568)
        • Church Organizations(12)
        • Concepts(87)
        • God’s Providence(31)
        • Priestly Service(167)
        • Some Categories of Pastoral Care(119)
        • Some Fields of Pastoral Care(21)
      • Encyclopedia of Spiritual Theology(373)
        • Life Experiences(2)
        • Milestones of the Spiritual Journey(11)
        • Questions and Answers(2)
        • Spiritual Theology – Virtues(35)
          • Faith(1)
          • Love(5)
          • Meekness and Humility(4)
        • Spiritual Warfare(18)
          • The Self(1)
          • Wars of Thought(1)
        • The Spiritual Man(10)
      • Encyclopedia of the Holy Bible(259)
        • New Testament(67)
          • Commentary on the New Testament(47)
          • Persons of the New Testament(5)
          • Spiritual Topics – New Testament(9)
        • Old Testament(113)
          • Commentary on the Old Testament(35)
          • Persons of the Old Testament(61)
          • Spiritual Topics – Old Testament(1)
      • Encyclopedia of the Saints’ Lives(97)
        • Feasts of the Saints(1)
        • Lives of the Anchorite Fathers(11)
        • Lives of the Martyrs and Confessors(4)
        • Saints of Virginity and Monasticism(4)
      • Others, Miscellaneous and Various Topics(98)
      • Poems, Hymns, and Songs(96)
    • Questions(29)
Related Topics
  • Meditate on the Lives of the Saints Who Loved Him
    Meditate on the Lives of the Saints Who Loved Him
    29 March 2009
  • Meditations on the Three Holies – 2
    Meditations on the Three Holies – 2
    7 October 2007
  • The Importance of Reading the Lives of the Saints
    The Importance of Reading the Lives of the Saints
    13 December 2006
Tags
Al-Ahram Newspaper Al Keraza Magazine Audio Section Care Church Creation Divinity Education Eternity Faith Forgiveness giving Grace Holiness Holy Spirit Hope Humility Incarnation Knowledge Love Marriage Meditations on the Song of Songs Mercy Monasticism Obedience pastoral care Peace Prayer Preaching Priesthood Purity Redemption Repentance Responsibility Resurrection Salvation Service spirituality Steadfastness Teaching Unity Video Section Virtue Watani Newspaper Wisdom

Quick Links

Encyclopedias Photo albums E-Books Graphic Designs Contact us

Encyclopedias

Comparative Theology Spiritual Theology Liturgical Theology Pastoral Theology Theoretical Theology

Contact the Center

Sanan Pasha Street – El Zeitoun – Cairo

[email protected]

www.popeshenouda.org.eg

TwitterFacebook-fYoutubeSpotifySpotify
logotype

© All rights reserved to Foundation of His Holiness Pope Shenouda III for Heritage Preservation

Privacy Policy

Terms and Conditions