Local commemorations of the fourth-century martyr Saint Peter of
Alexandria will take place on Nov. 25 and 26. Although his feast day in
the Western tradition (on the latter date) is no longer a part of the
Roman Catholic Church’s universal calendar, he remains especially
beloved among Catholic and Orthodox Christians of the Egyptian Coptic
tradition.
Tradition attests that the Egyptian bishop was the last believer to
suffer death at the hands of Roman imperial authorities for his faith in
Christ. For this reason, St. Peter of Alexandria is known as the “Seal
of the Martyrs.” He is said to have undertaken severe penances for the
sake of the suffering Church during his lifetime, and written letters of
encouragement to those in prison, before going to his death at the
close of the “era of the martyrs.”
Both the date of Peter’s birth, and of his ordination as a priest, are
unknown. It is clear, however, that he was chosen to lead Egypt’s main
Catholic community in the year 300 after the death of Saint Theonas of
Alexandria. He may have previously been in charge of Alexandria’s
well-known catechetical school, an important center of religious
instruction in the early Church. Peter’s own theological writings were
cited in a later fifth-century dispute over Christ’s divinity and
humanity.
In 302, the Emperor Diocletian and his subordinate Maximian attempted
to wipe out the Church in the territories of the Roman Empire. They used
their authority to destroy Church properties, imprison and torture
believers, and eventually kill those who refused to take part in pagan
ceremonies. As the Bishop of Alexandria, Peter offered spiritual support
to those who faced these penalties, encouraging them to hold to their
faith without compromise.
One acute problem for the Church during this period was the situation
of the “lapsed.” These were Catholics who had violated their faith by
participating in pagan rites under coercion, but who later repented and
sought to be reconciled to the Church. Peter issued canonical directions
for addressing their various situations, and these guidelines became an
important part of the Eastern Christian tradition for centuries
afterward.
Around the year 306, Peter led a council that deposed Bishop Meletius
of Lycopolis, a member of the Catholic hierarchy who had allegedly
offered sacrifice to a pagan idol. Peter left his diocese for reasons of
safety during some portions of the persecution, giving Meletius an
opening to set himself up as his rival and lead a schismatic church in
the area.
The “Meletian schism” would continue to trouble the Church for years
after the death of Alexandria’s legitimate bishop. Saint Athanasius, who
led the Alexandrian Church during a later period in the fourth century,
claimed that Meletius personally betrayed Peter of Alexandria to the
state authorities during the Diocletian persecution.
Although Diocletian himself chose to resign his rule in in 305,
persecution continued under Maximinus Daia, who assumed leadership of
the Roman Empire’s eastern half in 310. The early Church historian
Eusebius attests that Maximinus, during an imperial visit to Alexandria,
unexpectedly ordered its bishop to be seized and killed without
imprisonment or trial in 311. Three priests – Faustus, Dio, and Ammonius
– were reportedly beheaded along with him.
St. Peter of Alexandria’s entry in the “History of the Patriarchs of
the Coptic Church of Alexandria” (a volume first compiled by a Coptic
Orthodox bishop in the 10th century) concludes with a description of the
aftermath of his death.
“And the city was in confusion, and was greatly disturbed, when the
people beheld this martyr of the Lord Christ. Then the chief men of the
city came, and wrapped his body in the leathern mat on which he used to
sleep; and they took him to the church … And, when the liturgy had been
performed, they buried him with the fathers. May his prayers be with us
and all those that are baptized!”