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Few Christian
denominations can claim the antiquity of the Syriac Orthodox Church of Antioch,
whose foundations can be traced back to the very dawn of Christianity. The
Church justifiably prides itself as being one of the earliest established
apostolic churches. It was in Antioch, after all, that the followers of Jesus
were called Christians as we are told in the New Testament, "The disciples
were first called Christians in Antioch." (Acts 11:26).
According
to ecclesiastical tradition, the Church of Antioch is the second established
church in Christendom after Jerusalem, and the prominence of its Apostolic See
is well documented. In his Chronicon
(I, 2), the church historian Eusebius of Caesarea tells us that Apostle St.
Peter established a bishopric in Antioch and became its first bishop. He also
tells us that St. Peter was succeeded by Evodius. In another historical work, Historia Ecclesiastica,
Eusebius tells us that Ignatius the Illuminator, "a name of note to most
men, [was] the second after Peter to the bishopric of Antioch" (III, 36).
| The Patriarchate in Damascus
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 Pope's visit to Damascus in 2001
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In
the mid of the 5th century, the Bishop of Antioch, and his counterparts in
Alexandria, Byzantium and Rome, would be called patriarchs. The Syriac Orthodox
Patriarch of Antioch used to be known by his own name; however, since 1293 the
patriarchs of Antioch adopted the name Ignatius, after the Illuminator.
The See
of Antioch continues to flourish till our day, with His Holiness Patriarch Ignatius Zakka I, being the 122nd
in the line of legitimate patriarchs.
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