Mark’s preaching converted crowds in Alexandria;
but, after a short stay, he returned to Rome, in about
the eleventh year of this reign, leaving Annianus
to watch over the growing church. Annianus is
usually called the first bishop of Alexandria; and
Eusebius, who lived two hundred years later, has given
us the names of his successors in an unbroken chain.
If we would inquire whether the early converts to
Christianity in Alexandria were Jews, Greeks, or Egyptians,
we have nothing to guide us but the names of these
bishops. Annianus, or Annaniah, as his name was
written by the Arabic historians, was very likely
a Jew; indeed, the Evangelist Mark would begin by addressing
himself to the Jews, and would leave the care of the
infant church to one of his own nation. In the
platonic Jews, Christianity found soil so exactly
suited to its reception that it is only by he dates
that the Therapeute of Alexandria and their historian
Philo are proved not to be Christian; and, again,
it was in the close union between the platonic Jews
and the platonists that Christianity found its easiest
path to the ears and hearts of the pagans. The
bishops that followed seem to have been Greek converts.
Before the death of Annaniah, Jerusalem had been destroyed
by the Roman armies, and the Jews sunk in their own
eyes and in those of their fellow-citizens throughout
the empire; hence the second bishop of Alexandria
was less likely to be of Hebrew blood; and it was
long before any Egyptians aimed at rank in the church.
But though the spread of Christianity was rapid, both
among the Greeks and the Egyptians, we must not hope
to find any early traces of it in the historians.
It was at first embraced by the unlearned and the poor,
whose deeds and opinions are seldom mentioned in history;
and we may readily believe the scornful reproach of
the unbelievers, that it was chiefly received by the
unfortunate, the unhappy, the despised, and the sinful.
When the white-robed priestesses of Ceres carried the
sacred basket through the streets of Alexandria, they
cried out, “Sinners away, or keep your eyes
to the ground; keep your eyes to the ground!”
When the crier, standing on the steps of the portico
in front of the great temple, called upon the pagans
to come near and join in the celebration of their
mysteries, he cried out, “All ye who are clean
of hands and pure of heart, come to the sacrifice;
all ye who are guiltless in thought and deed, come
to the sacrifice.”
But many a repentant sinner and humble spirit must have drawn back in distrust from a summons which to him was so forbidding, and been glad to hear the good tidings of mercy offered by Christianity to those who labour and are heavy laden, and to the broken-hearted who would turn away from their wickedness. While such were the chief followers of the gospel, it was not likely to be much noticed by the historians; and we must wait till it forced its way into the schools and the palace before we shall find many traces of the rapidity with which it was spreading.