Priesthood and Deacons
Is the Coptic Pope the same as the Roman Catholic Pope?
Although both use the word Pope, the Coptic Pope and the Roman Catholic Pope are different offices in different churches. The Coptic Pope is the Pope and Patriarch of Alexandria, the chief hierarch of the Coptic Orthodox Church. The Roman Catholic Pope is the Bishop of Rome and head of the Roman Catholic Church.
In Coptic usage, Pope is a title of fatherhood for the patriarch of Alexandria, the successor of St. Mark in the Church of Alexandria. The title belongs to Coptic apostolic succession, patriarchal care, and synodal life.
The Coptic Title Pope
The Coptic Church uses Pope and Patriarch together for the same Alexandrian office. Pope here means father, and Patriarch means the chief father or head of a patriarchal church. The full title points to the See of St. Mark and to the Coptic Orthodox Church's historic continuity in Alexandria.
The word itself can confuse readers because English-speaking people often hear Pope and immediately think of Rome. The Coptic answer begins with Alexandria: St. Mark, the line of patriarchs, the Holy Synod, and the pastoral fatherhood of the Coptic Orthodox Church.
Authority In The Coptic Orthodox Church
The biblical root is the Church's need for overseers who shepherd the flock. The Coptic Church understands the Pope of Alexandria within this episcopal and patriarchal order. He presides as patriarchal father, while the bishops of the Holy Synod share responsibility for guarding the apostolic faith.
Therefore take heed to yourselves and to all the flock, among which the Holy Spirit has made you overseers.
The Pope of Alexandria teaches, shepherds, ordains with the bishops, presides over major matters, and represents the Coptic Orthodox Church publicly. His authority is received as service to Christ's Body and exercised within the Church's received faith.
Why The Shared Word Causes Confusion
The shared word Pope creates a vocabulary overlap, while the offices remain distinct. The Coptic Pope belongs to the Oriental Orthodox Church of Alexandria. The Roman Catholic Pope belongs to the Roman Catholic Church and the See of Rome.
In parish life, most guidance comes through the local priest and bishop. The Pope's role remains patriarchal and synodal. He is a father to the Church of Alexandria and the chief hierarch of the Coptic Orthodox Church.
A clear answer helps conversations stay honest: Copts have a Pope, and the title means Pope and Patriarch of Alexandria. Learning that title on its own terms keeps the answer faithful to Coptic Orthodox order rather than reducing it to a comparison with Rome.
- Pope and Patriarch of Alexandria, Coptic Orthodox Diocese of the Southern United States Q&A. Pastoral answer connecting the Pope of Alexandria to St. Mark, the See of Alexandria, and the worldwide Coptic Orthodox Church.
- Pope and Patriarch, Coptic Orthodox Diocese of the Southern United States Q&A. Direct answer explaining that Alexandria uses both Pope and Patriarch for the same patriarchal office.
- Apostolic Leadership in the Church, Coptic Orthodox Diocese of the Southern United States Q&A. Pastoral answer describing the Coptic Pope as first among equals and the Holy Synod as the highest authority in the Church of Alexandria.
- History of the Coptic Orthodox Church, Coptic Orthodox Diocese of the Southern United States. Overview of the Church of Alexandria, St. Mark, and Coptic Christian history.
- The Coptic Orthodox Church, Coptic Orthodox Diocese of the Southern United States. Diocesan overview of the Coptic Church, her apostolic roots, and life of faith.
Orthodox: Right worship and right belief, naming the Church's received apostolic faith and the life of worship that preserves it.
Bishop: A successor in the apostolic ministry who shepherds the Church, ordains clergy, guards the faith, and presides in the unity of the local Church.
Oriental Orthodox: The family of ancient Orthodox churches, including the Coptic Church, that share the same non-Chalcedonian Orthodox Christological confession.
