St. Mark's Church

X6P4+GHX, Mohanapuri 3rd St, Mohanapuri, Brindavan Nagar, Adambakkam, Chennai, Tamil Nadu 600088, India
About

St. Mark's Church is a catholic church and church located in Chennai, Tamil Nadu. The average rating of this place is 4.60 out of 5 stars based on 180 reviews. The street address of this place is X6P4+GHX, Mohanapuri 3rd St, Mohanapuri, Brindavan Nagar, Adambakkam, Chennai, Tamil Nadu 600088, India. It is about 1.21 kilometers away from the Velacheery railway station.

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FAQs
Where is St. Mark's Church located?
St. Mark's Church is located at X6P4+GHX, Mohanapuri 3rd St, Mohanapuri, Brindavan Nagar, Adambakkam, Chennai, Tamil Nadu 600088, India.
What is the off day for St. Mark's Church?
St. Mark's Church is closed on Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Monday and Tuesday.
What is the nearest metro station from St. Mark's Church?
St. Mark's Church is nearly 0.80 kilometers away from St Thomas Mount Metro Station. You can go to this metro station by using the Metro MRT Green Line.
What is the nearest railway station from St. Mark's Church?
Velacheery railway station is the nearest railway station to St. Mark's Church. It is nearly 1.21 kilometers away from it.
What people say about St. Mark's Church

Nelson F 15 months ago

This is our church. Previous 14years before i studied the Opposite school St.marks school.. the both very precious evergreen momentz

Rajiv Fernando 24 months ago

This is a beautiful church located at Adambakkam. There is a hall located for conducting events. Also, there is a large dining area to accommodate the guests.
About St. Mark:
Much of what we know about St. Mark, the author of the Second Gospel, comes largely from the New Testament and early Christian traditions. Mark the Evangelist is believed to be the 'John Mark' referred to in the Acts of the Apostles, the history of the early Church found in the Canon of the New Testament.

He was the son of Mary of Jerusalem (Acts 12:12) whose home became a meeting place for the apostles. He is also the cousin of St. Barnabas (Colossians 4:10), a Levite and a Cypriot.

Mark joined St. Paul and St. Barnabas on their first missionary journey to Antioch in 44 A.D. When the group reached Cyprus, Christian tradition holds that Mark left them and returned to Jerusalem, possibly because he was missing his home (Acts 13:13). This incident may have caused Paul to question whether Mark could be a reliable missionary. This created a disagreement between Paul and Barnabas and led Paul to refuse Mark's accompaniment on their second journey to the churches of Cilicia and the rest of Asia Minor.

However, it can be assumed the troubles between Paul and Mark did not last long, because when Paul was first imprisoned, Mark, who was at the time in Rome with plans of visiting Asia Minor, visited him as one of his trusted companions (Col 4:10).

Mark's hopes to visit Asia Minor were most likely carried out, because during Paul's second captivity and just before his martyrdom, Paul wrote to Timothy at Ephesus advising him to "take Mark and bring him with you [to Rome], for he is profitable to me for the ministry" (2 Timothy 4:11). If Mark returned to Rome at this time, he was probably there when Paul was martyred.

According to Christian tradition, Mark also held a close relationship with St. Peter, who referred to Mark has 'his son' in his letter addressed to a number of churches in Asia Minor (1 Peter 5:13). Clement of Alexandria, Irenaeus and Papias all indicate that Mark was an interpreter for Peter.

Although Papias states Mark had not personally heard the Lord speak firsthand and, like Luke, Mark was not one of the twelve apostles, some believe Mark was likely speaking of himself when he wrote the description of Jesus' arrest in Gethsemani. "Now a young man followed him wearing nothing but a linen cloth about his body. They seized him, but he left the cloth behind and ran off naked" (Mark 14:51-52).
St. Mark lived for years in Alexandria, where he died as a martyr while being dragged through the streets.
Mark's Gospel was probably written between 60 and 70 A.D., and was based upon the teachings of St. Peter. It is believed Mark provided both Luke and Matthew with basic sources for their Gospel's.
He was probably the first bishop of Alexandria, Egypt and the founder of the Church of Alexandria, although he is not mentioned in connection to the city by either Clement of Alexandria nor by Origen.
In 828, relics of St. Mark were stolen from Alexandria and taken to Venice, Italy. There they are enshrined in a beautiful cathedral dedicated to the saint.

St. Mark's symbol is a winged lion. This is believed to be derived from his description of St. John the Baptist, as "a voice of one crying out in the desert" (Mark 1:3). The wings come from Ezekiel's vision of four winged creatures as the evangelists.
He is often depicted as writing or holding his Gospel. He is sometimes shown as a bishop on a throne or as a man helping Venetian sailors.
St. Mark is the patron saint of Venice. His feast day is celebrated on April 25.

Monica Nandini 19 months ago

Sunday Mass timings updated on 13th Nov 2022
6.30 am - Tamil mass
8.30 am - Tamil mass
5.30 pm - English mass

Contact
Address
X6P4+GHX, Mohanapuri 3rd St, Mohanapuri, Brindavan Nagar, Adambakkam, Chennai, Tamil Nadu 600088, India
St. Mark's Church's Timetable
Wednesday Day off
Thursday Day off
Friday Day off
Saturday Day off
Sunday 06:30 AM - 07:30 AM
Monday Day off
Tuesday Day off

N.B. The timetable is based on our last updated data on January 27, 2024.

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