Displaying 41 - 50 of 70.
This review outlines statements made about Max Michel, who has named himself Archbishop Maximus and claims to be the patriarch of the Orthodox Copts.
Sa‘d al-Dīn Ibrāhīm, head of the Ibn Khaldūn Center for Development Studies, invites former head of the Israeli Academic Center in Egypt to attend a conference on minorities’ rights.
During his participation in a conference of expatriate Copts in New York a few weeks ago, the deputy chairman of the Egyptian Union of Human Rights Organization (EUHRO), Māhir Khallah, accused the organizers of the conference of distorting the image of Egypt abroad by representing individual...
This review deals with the controversy still blazing over the split of clergyman Max Michel from the mother Coptic Orthodox Church, and his establishment of Qur’ān independent church and a holy synod for Copts in Egypt and the Middle East.
In the same week as the pope’s return to Cairo after a medical trip abroad, many have spoken out about the controversial Archbishop Maximus I, or Max Michel. This article notes some of the key points of Michel’s life and discusses whether his controversial church has links with the US.
This press review deals with a controversial announcement made by Max Michel, a Christian who split from the Coptic Orthodox Church and set up a church in the Muqattam area and named himself Archbishop Maximus I, amidst an outcry from the Egyptian mother church and severe criticism.
The author deals with the splinter church of Max Michel, a self-proclaimed patriarch of Orthodox Christians in Egypt and the Middle East, in a step described as an attempt to seek legitimacy.
Student at the Evangelical Faculty of Theology, Michael ‘Ādil ‘Ajāybī, sends a message entitled “Why fanaticism?” to Pope Shenouda III of Alexandria, complaining about the refusal of the Coptic Orthodox Church to allow the celebration of the International Day of Prayer to take place at the...
The Qasr al-Doubāra Evangelical Church Sunday celebrated the International Day of Prayer with the participation of the Prayer League and a large number of prominent Christian figures.
The Egyptian minister of awqāf [Endowments], Dr. Muhammad Hamdī Zaqzouq, said the encrypted signal, used to produced a single call to prayer in Cairo’s mosques, would be sent from a broadcasting hub in al-Muqattam and would be scrambled with the signal of the Qur’ān Radio Station.

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