The main ones are: 1) The Liturgy of St John Chrysostom, 2) the Liturgy of St Basil the Great, 3) the Liturgy of St James, and 4) the Liturgy of the Pre-sanctified Gifts.
the eastern orthodox church which has been established 2000 years ago by Jesus and his Apostles. Another important thing is that the Eastern Orthodox Church was is the second largest church in the world
i am orthodox and personally i have never heard of this papal infallibility been used in the church or dogmata.
No, as Orthodox Christians (regardless of age) are only permitted to receive Communion in an Orthodox Church.
orthodox
Yes, there are groups that split from the Eastern Orthodox Church. The so called "Nestorians," now known as the Church of the East, or the Assyrian Church of the East; the so-called "Monophysites," now known as the Armenian Apostolic Church, the Syrian Orthodox Church, The Malankara Church, the Ethiopian Tewahedo Church, the Coptic Church, and the Eritrean Orthodox Church; the Roman Catholic Church. All of these "splits" resulted in new organizations that have never reconciled completely with the Orthodox Churches. Also, splits more "within" the Orthodox Church that have been reconciled in some cases, and not in other cases (some small groups believe they they alone carry on the Orthodox Church, and that the current Orthodox Churches are no longer Orthodox) Old Rite or Old Believers, Old Calendarists (several different organizations), Catacomb Church in Russia (which is virtually extinct; new varieties seem to come into existence frequently). Nationalist driven splits-the Ukrainian Orthodox Church is the only large grop that insists on being on its own, while its Mother Church, the Russian Orthodox Church, does not sanction the unilateral declaration of "independence," as that is not how is has been traditionally done within the Church.
I have been searching for one since i came to Toulouse France, if you r seeking a copte orthodox church then no there is none, the nearest to you will be 150-200 kms away. But there is a Russian Orthodox church in the avenue of GRANDE BRETAGNE.
It has always been the Church from the beginning.
That person must needs to be baptised into the Orthodox Christian Faith before being able to marry in the church.
Answer: the vast majority of ethnic Macedonians are Orthodox Christians, usually members of the Macedonian Orthodox Church, which has not been granted autonomy from the Serbian Orthodox Church. The are very small numbers of Macedonians that adhere to other types of Christianity and Islam.
As with many questions, it depends . . . the Russian Orthodox Church is headed by the Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia (the Russian Orthodox Church is often referred to as "the Moscow Patriarchate," or simply, "MP"). By "All Russia," of course, is meant all the lands that have been traditionally included in a Russian State. Ukraine has been included in Russian States for the past several hundred years. Ukraine only gained independence after the fall of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s. The Russian Orthodox Church has several hundred, if not thousands, of parishes in the Ukraine, under the designation of "The Ukrainian Orthodox Church under the jurisdiction of the Moscow Patriarchate." This jurisdiction is rather loose-the Ukrainian Church under the MP is considered an "Autonomous Church"-all the Bishops, as well as the Metropolitan (head of this Church) are voted on in Ukraine by Ukrainian Bishops; the MP has the "right of refusal" if a candidate is considered unworthy, but in practice, this happens very rarely. So, the Ukrainian Orthodox Church/Moscow Patriarchate, is indeed in union with the Russian Orthodox Church.
Charlemagne has not been canonized in the Latin Church, he has been beatified. He is considered a saint in the Orthodox Churches, however.
Yes, as long as the spouse has been baptized the religion of the spouse doesn't matter.