St. George Orthodox Church, Cheppad
St. George Orthodox Church, Cheppad, Haripad in Kerala state of India, is popularly known as Cheppad Valiya Pally and is a pilgrim center of Malankara Orthodox Church. The church is also the resting place of Cheppad Philipose Mar Dionysius, Malankara Metropolitan of the Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church who lived in the mid 19th century. The 800 year-old murals in the Church exhibit Christian traditional paintings.
History
It is believed that the church may have been founded in 1175.The church is an important attraction of Cheppad. The Christian community is the second-largest religious community at Cheppad and many denominations of the Christian faith live there. The church is one of the oldest churches of the Malankara Orthodox Church, which is an apostolic church established by St. Thomas, one of the twelve apostles of Jesus Christ. There is evidence that one of the churches visited by Archbishop Menasis, in 1599 was Cheppad's St George Orthodox Church.
This church was the headquarters of the Malankara Orthodox Church during the tenure of Cheppad Philipose Mar Dionysius, Malankara Metropolitan of the Malankara Orthodox Church during 1825–1855
In 1956, the Ethiopian Emperor, Haile Selassie visited this church. It is believed that the Ethiopian Kings held a bloodline to King Solomon. Haile Selassie gifted the church a couple of gold artifacts, which were recently stolen from the church and have not been recovered. These included a gold crucifix from Ethiopia and a Bible with gold engraving in Amharic.
Mural paintings
The 800-year-old mural paintings in Cheppad St. George Orthodox Church exhibit Christian traditional paintings. The paintings are on the walls of the Madbaha of the Church, and show the events in the life of Jesus Christ from birth to ascension. It also illustrates some events from the Old Testament era. The 47 murals are arranged in three lines along three walls. The archaeological department of Kerala says that the murals are approximately 600 years old and were drawn with the extracts of leaves and fruit.Even though the old church was rebuilt in 1952, the altar was kept intact because of the Murals. The rare and attractive paintings of St. Paul with a sword, Angels, Jesus bearing the Cross, Jesus being beaten by soldiers, St. Thomas with a mint, Adam and Eve eating the prohibited fruit, Noah's Ark etc. shows the mixing of middle eastern Christian painting and Kerala's mural artwork.