POLITICS: Debunking the Misconception That St. Frumentius “Introduced” Christianity to Ethiopia – USSA News

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Each year on October 27th, the Catholic Church celebrates the Feast of Saint Frumentius. Yet, within this veneration lies a persistent and pervasive historical fallacy and misconception: that Frumentius “introduced” Christianity to Ethiopia in the “4th Century”, thereby cementing the nation’s religious and political ties with “Egypt” and the “West.” A rigorous examination of historical records, ranging from early Church historians and biblical accounts to biblical archaeology, patristic writings, and numismatic evidence, reveals this narrative to be a profound case of historical negationism, a distortion that obscures Ethiopia’s far more ancient and autonomous Christian heritage. It disregards a rich pre-existing religious landscape and anachronistically projects modern geopolitical constructs onto the ancient world.

The standard narrative, often repeated in both Eastern and Western-centric historical summaries, casts Frumentius as the sole apostle to Ethiopia. While his contributions were significant, this framing relies on a logical fallacy of omission, ignoring a wealth of evidence that places Christianity in Ethiopia long before the 4th century (Rufinus of Aquileia, 1997), rooted in even older Old Testament traditions.

To debunk this misconception, three steps must be taken. Provide evidence, clear, accessible historical sources; explain the why, the psychological and historical reasons the apologue gained traction; and expose the logical inconsistencies behind it, show how it contradicts established fact.

The Frumentius Correction: Not Introduction
The widespread misconception that St. Frumentius ‘introduced’ Christianity to Ethiopia arises from a conflation of the institutionalization of Christianity with its introduction. As early ecclesiastical historians attest, Frumentius was a Phoenician from Tyre (present-day Lebanon) who was shipwrecked along with his companion Aedesius and enslaved in the Aksumite kingdom (Rufinus of Aquileia, 1997). After gaining their freedom and the trust of the royal court, Frumentius became the tutor to the young Prince Ezana. Frumentius’s seminal achievement was converting King Ezana from the practiced Judaism of the Aksumite elite to Christianity around 333 CE (Phillipson, 2012; Munro-Hay, 1991)

Following his conversion, Ezana declared Christianity the official state religion, establishing Aksum as one of the world’s first Christian kingdoms, a peer to Armenia and preceding the conversion of the Roman Empire itself. The Roman Emperor Constantius II later attempted to interfere, urging King Ezana to replace Frumentius with an Arian bishop, but Ezana firmly refused (Rufinus of Aquileia, 1997)—a powerful demonstration of Aksum Empire’s theological and political independence. Thus, while Frumentius was an influential agent in the royal conversion, he was not the origin of Christianity in Ethiopia, but rather a catalyst for its formal adoption at the state level.

Aksum Empire: A Great Power in an Ancient World
The claim that Frumentius cemented Ethiopia’s ties with “Egypt” and the “West” is a profound anachronism, projecting a 21st-century geopolitical map and modern power dynamics onto the 4th century. During the reign of King Ezana in the 4th century, the geopolitical concepts of “East” and “West” as we know them today did not exist. The major powers were a triumvirate: the Roman Empire (and its Eastern successor, the Byzantine Empire), the Sassanian Persian Empire, and the Aksumite Empire. Egypt was not an independent actor but a province of the Roman and later Byzantine Empires until the Arab conquests in the 7th century (641 AD) (Phillipson, 2012).

Aksum was a critical trading partner and geopolitical peer of Rome, not a peripheral outpost. Its influence stretched across the Red Sea into present-day Yemen and southern Arabia, controlling vital Red Sea trade routes for ivory, incense, and gold (Finneran, 2007; Phillipson, 2012). As numismatic, epigraphic, and archaeological evidence confirms, Ezana’s own inscriptions, carved on stone stelae that still pierce the Axumite sky, were written in Ge’ez, Sabaean, and Greek, reflecting a cosmopolitan, multilingual empire engaging with the world from a position of strength (Munro-Hay, 1991; Finneran, 2007). His coinage, bearing his likeness alongside the Christian cross, announced the faith of a sovereign to the known world. To claim Aksum’s tie was with a subordinate “Egypt” is to fundamentally misunderstand its status as a co-equal great power.

Evidence of a Pre-Frumentius Christian Presence: Christianity Before King Ezana
The historical record and biblical accounts provide compelling evidence that Christianity had already taken root in Ethiopia before Frumentius ever set foot there.

  • The Ethiopian Eunuch (the first covert): The most definitive New Testament account is found in the Book of Acts (8:26-39), which describes the conversion and baptism of an Ethiopian eunuch, a high-ranking official of the Queen of Ethiopia, by the deacon Philip. This was not a random traveller but the treasurer of a powerful kingdom, reading from the Prophet Isaiah. The church historian Eusebius confirms this, writing that this eunuch was “the first fruit of the faithful throughout the world” and that upon his return, he preached the gospel, fulfilling the prophecy, “Ethiopia shall stretch out her hand to God” (Psalms 68:31) (Eusebius, 1999). Crucially, this event predates the arrival of Frumentius in Ethiopia by nearly 300 years, occurring in the 1st century.
  • The Apostolic Witness: The early Church historian Rufinus of Aquileia recorded that the Apostle Matthew undertook Christ’s mission mandate to Ethiopia, drawn by the presence of the Felasha (Beta Israel) Ethiopian Jewish community in the northern part of the country (Rufinus of Aquileia, 1997).
  • The Pentecostal Pilgrims and Early Migrants: St. John Chrysostom mentions that Ethiopians were among the diverse crowds present in Jerusalem for the Pentecost. These pilgrims returned home as the first bearers of the apostolic message, seeding Christian thought among the existing Jewish communities (Chrysostom, 1987).
  • The Prophetic Precedent: The spiritual connection between the God of Israel and Ethiopia is deeply rooted in the Old Testament. In Amos 9:7, God declares: “Do not think, O Israelites, that you are more important to me than the people of Ethiopia.” Early Christian writers did not overlook the theological weight of this verse. It provided a powerful theological impetus, a “compelling reason,” as theologians argue, for the Apostles to see Ethiopia as a destined land for the Gospel. This scriptural foundation is central to the Ethiopian self-understanding as a people chosen by God, a belief that predates the Christian era and facilitated the later embrace of the faith. Likewise, Ethiopian tradition interpreted this as divine confirmation of their chosen identity, strengthening the belief that apostles would be sent to Ethiopia.
  • Judaic Tradition in Ethiopia: Ethiopia preserved customs taken directly from Judaism: Sabbath observance, circumcision, dietary laws, temple-style liturgy, and veneration of the Ark of the Covenant. Why does that matter? Because Christianity began within Judaism. If Judaism was already deeply rooted in Ethiopia, Christianity naturally followed.
  • Scholarly Corroboration: Historian notes, “There is no doubt that Judaic influences and Old Testament reflections had reached Ethiopia long before the introduction of Christianity that is why the Ethiopian Eunuch was reading the Book of Isaiah during the time of the apostles.” (Mikias, 2006).  This existing Judaic foundation, upon which Ethiopian Christianity was built, is critical to understanding its unique character.

Conclusion
In the final analysis, the weight of historical evidence, from the conversion of the Ethiopian eunuch in the Book of Acts to the Judaic traditions deeply embedded in Ethiopian society, paints a picture far richer than the false narrative of a fourth-century introduction. Christianity took root in Ethiopia organically from the first century, nourished by pre-existing Judaic soil, biblical prophecy, apostolic witness, and early converts such as the Ethiopian Eunuch.

The role of Saint Frumentius was not that of a pioneer planting the first seed in barren soil, nor a missionary bringing an unknown religion to a distant land, but that of a learned theologian who recognized the vibrant pre-existing Judeo-Christian soil in Ethiopia and served as a catalyst for its institutionalization at the royal level. Debunking the false narrative that Saint Frumentius “brought” Christianity to Ethiopia does not diminish his legacy; rather, it contextualizes it within a much broader and deeper historical trajectory. Likewise, correcting this case of historical negationism does not minimize St. Frumentius, it restores Ethiopia’s true place in world history as the oldest continuously Christian nation on earth.

References

Chrysostom, J. (1987). Homilies on the Acts of the Apostles (P. Schaff, Ed.). In Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Series 1, Vol. 11. Christian Literature Publishing Co. (Original work published ca. 390–407 CE).

Eusebius. (1999). The ecclesiastical history (K. Lake, Trans.). Harvard University Press. (Original work published ca. 324 CE).

Finneran, N. (2007). The archaeology of Ethiopia. Routledge.

Mikias, P. (2006). Ethiopia and the Bible. Red Sea Press.

Munro-Hay, S. C. (1991). Aksum: An African civilization of late antiquity. Edinburgh University Press.

Phillipson, D. W. (2012). Foundations of an African civilization: Aksum and the northern Horn, 1000 BC – AD 1300. James Currey.

Rufinus of Aquileia. (1997). The church history of Rufinus of Aquileia: Books 10 and 11 (P. R. Amidon, Trans.). Oxford University Press.

 

 

 

 

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