The Coptic
Church Seasons
The liturgical year is not a calendar — it is a journey. Every season, every fast, every feast draws the faithful deeper into the life, death, and resurrection of Christ.
Martyrum
Nayrouz — The Coptic New Year
1 Thout · September 11 · Era of the Martyrs begins
The Ancient Roots
The Coptic calendar is based on the ancient Egyptian calendar — 12 months of 30 days plus the “little month” of Nasie (5–6 days). In 284 AD, Emperor Diocletian began the most brutal persecution of Christians.
Resetting Time
The Coptic Church chose 284 AD — the year Diocletian took power — as Year 1. Not to honor the tyrant, but to immortalize the sacrifice of the martyrs. Every Coptic date is a declaration of victory.
Theology of Martyrdom
- Martyrdom = ultimate victory, not defeat
- Church wears red and white
- Chanted in the Joyful Tune
- Martyrdom viewed as a wedding feast with Christ
The Nativity Fast
November 25 — January 7 · 43 Days
Moses & The Law
Moses fasted 40 days on Mount Sinai to receive the Word of God written on stone. We fast to prepare our hearts to receive the Word of God in the flesh — Jesus Christ, the Logos. Our hearts become a pure manger.
The 43 Days
- 40 Days — Corresponding to Moses’ fast on Sinai
- 3 Days — Added for the Miracle of Mokattam Mountain (10th century)
Kiahk — Month of Praises
Dedicated to the acceptance of the Lord as St. Mary accepted Him. Churches fill dark winter nights with Midnight Praises (Tasbeha), counting down to the star over Bethlehem.
The Winter Feasts
January — February · Three Interconnected Celebrations
Jan 7
Jan 14
Jan 19
Feb 15
Circumcision (Jan 14)
Exactly 8 days after Nativity. Christ submits to the Law He created — complete obedience. The first drops of His blood are shed, prefiguring Baptism as “spiritual circumcision.”
Epiphany / Theophany (Jan 19)
The first explicit revelation of the Holy Trinity: Father speaking from heaven, Son in the water, Spirit descending as a dove.
- Orange Lantern — Christ as Light of the World
- Taro Root — Purifying waters of Baptism
- Sugarcane — Spiritual growth
Presentation to the Temple (Feb 15)
40 days after Nativity, Mary and Joseph brought Jesus to the temple. They met Simeon, who had been promised he would not die until seeing the Messiah.
Jonah’s Fast & Feast
3 Days before Lent · The Sign of Jonah
The Fast of Nineveh
A strict call to repentance mirroring the King and people of Nineveh. Three days in the fish prefigure Christ’s three days in the tomb.
- Liturgies late in the afternoon
- Vegan food only when breaking fast
- Candles extinguished, sanctuary veil shut
- Lenten Tune — mournful and contemplative
The Feast of Jonah
Thursday morning breaks with a dramatic shift. The somber tone is dropped and the church bursts into the Joyful Tune. Cymbals and triangles return. Jonah’s expulsion onto dry land symbolizes the Resurrection.
Great Lent — The Spring of the Soul
55 Days · Variable dates (based on Easter)
The Lenten Sundays
- Preparation — Seeking the Kingdom
- The Treasure — Where your heart is
- Prodigal Son — Repentance & the Father’s embrace
- Samaritan Woman — The Living Water
- Paralyzed Man — Healing & patience
- Man Born Blind — Spiritual sight
- Palm Sunday — The Triumphal Entry
The Rite
- Strictly vegan (no animal products, no seafood)
- Liturgies shifted to afternoon (3–5 PM)
- Heavy emphasis on prostrations (metanoias)
- Lenten Tune — deep, elongated, contemplative
Holy Week — The Holy Pascha
Palm Sunday — Bright Saturday · The Week of Weeks
Walking with Christ
Holy Week is not a remembrance — the Coptic rite makes the congregation step out of present time and walk alongside Christ, hour by hour, toward Golgotha. “Pascha” means Passover.
The Rite
- Altar Closed — Eucharist suspended
- 5 Day Hours + 5 Night Hours — From the Book of Pascha
- Covenant Thursday — Lakkan + Eucharist institution
- Good Friday — 12 continuous hours + Burial Rite
- Bright Saturday — Full Book of Revelation
Hymns & Decorations
- Sad Paschal Tune throughout
- Thok Te Ti-Gom — chanted dozens of times
- Pek-Ethronos on Good Friday
- Black drapes cover the entire church
- Golgotha shrine with candles and flowers
The Holy Fifty Days — The Khamaseen
Easter — Pentecost · One Continuous “Lord’s Day”
Jesus appeared to disciples, healing doubts, teaching the mysteries of the Kingdom. Royal Doors stay open the entire 50 days — Paradise is open! Daily Procession (Zeffa) with the Resurrection icon.
Christ bodily ascended from the Mount of Olives, raising human nature to the right hand of the Father. Hymns: Khen Oushot and Epouro in the Joyful Tune.
The Holy Spirit descended as tongues of fire — the Birthday of the Church! The Prostration Prayer (Sajda) reintroduces kneeling: three prostrations for the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Pi-Epnevma — “The Spirit of Comfort.”
The Apostles’ Fast
After Pentecost — July 12 · 15–49 days
Empowered for Mission
After receiving the Holy Spirit, the apostles fasted before going out to preach. Acts 13:2–3: “As they ministered to the Lord and fasted, the Holy Spirit said, ‘Separate to Me Barnabas and Saul for the work to which I have called them.’”
The Structure
- Begins Monday after Pentecost
- Ends July 12 — Feast of St. Peter & St. Paul
- Vegan fast, but fish is permitted (except Wed/Fri)
- Peter = mission to the Jews; Paul = mission to the Gentiles
The Fast of the Virgin Mary
August 7 — August 22 · 15 Days · The People’s Fast
St. Thomas & The Empty Tomb
When the Virgin departed, all apostles were gathered — except Thomas, preaching in India. Traveling on a cloud, he saw angels carrying her body to heaven. She dropped her belt (the Zunnar) to him as proof.
The Nahda (Revival)
Every night for 15 days, churches hold a Nahda — Vespers, choir praises, and sermons. A massive procession carries the icon of the Virgin with cymbals, triangles, and flower petals.
Assumption vs. Ascension
- Christ ascended by His own divine power
- Mary was assumed — taken up by her Son and angels
- Her body was not permitted to see corruption
- Blue draperies and white roses adorn the church