you are confirmed immediately after you are baptised and you then receive the eucharist, as an infant or adolescent or adult.
Since you are confirmed Orthodox and married a Greek Orthodox, the Orthodox Church requires that any children you may have should be baptized Orthodox. Also, as an Orthodox, you are not allowed to baptize your nephew or any other person in a catholic church. From the Catholic point of view, unless your nephew is to be reared a Catholic, he may not be baptized in the Catholic Church. If he is to be reared Catholic, either by his parents or godparents, the Church will receive him. No you are GREEK orthodox u must not I reapeat not baptisma your child at a catholic church.
No, the Greek Orthodox church is a part of the Eastern Orthodox Churches.
Greek Orthodox Church of the Annunciation was created in 1769.
Eastern Orthodox Church (or the Christian Orthodox Church).
The Romanian Orthodox Church mainly follows the liturgical practice of the Greek Orthodox Church, rather than the Russian Orthodox Church, such as the use of the new calendar.
No.
You get baptised and get married in the Greek Orthodox Church
The present archbishop of the Greek Orthodox Church in America is Archbishop Demetrios.
Greek Orthodox Church of the Holy Trinity was created in 1953.
Profitis Ilias Greek Orthodox Church was created in 2008.
The Greek Orthodox Church was brought to Australia from the demand of Greek immigrants migrating to Australia in the middle of the 19th century and the foundations of the Greek Orthodox Church were then laid on 29th of May, 1898.
Macedonian orthodox like Athenian orthodox and Thessalian, Epirotian, Thracian orthodox can all marry in the Greek Orthodox Church no matter where in Greece they hail from. The foreign church of the Former Yugoslav Republic is a schismatic church and not recognized by the ecumenical patriarchy of Constantinople as an orthodox church. Therefore no Greek, whether Macedonian, Athenian, Thessalian etc can marry in the church of the former Yugoslav Republic but the various ethnicities of the Former Yugoslav Republic who follow their Christian church can marry in a Greek Orthodox Church.