the Eastern Orthodox Church and the Roman Catholic Church
The reformed church and the protestant church. Variations of the Catholic church.
The Roman Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church emerged from the Schism in 1052.
the two churches were eastern orthodox and the roman catholic.
The two churches were the Eastern Orthodox and the Roman Catholic
The two Christian churches that developed after the split in 1054 are the Roman Catholic Church, based in Rome and headed by the Pope, and the Eastern Orthodox Church, which has its headquarters in Constantinople (modern-day Istanbul) and is led by various patriarchs.
The Catholic Church and the Orthodox Churches split during the schism in 1054.
The Churches that came out of the Great Schism of 1054 both claimed to be the original Christian Church. One was the Roman Catholic Church and the other was the Orthodox Church, although this is a more general term for a group of Churches with more than one Patriarch.
The Christian faith began after the ascension of Jesus Christ. It wasn't until the Great Schism of 1054 until two churches emerged: Eastern Orthodoxy and Roman Catholicism.
Short answer: it was one of the causes of the split between the western and eastern Christian churches. The result of the split (schism) is the Catholic church (western) and Orthodox church (eastern).
We do not know when the first schism in the Christian Church occurred. Even in the time of Saint Paul, he talks of opponents and those who taught a "different Christ". By the beginning of the second century, and probably earlier, Christianity was divided along two major lines: what is sometimes now called the proto-Catholic-Orthodox Church and the Gnostic Churches. Marcion made his break from Rome in the middle of the second century. The split of the Coptic Church from the Catholic-Orthodox Church occurred in 451 CE. The Great Schism of 1054 separated the Roman Catholic and Orthodox Churches. The Western Schism of the fourteenth century temporarily split the Catholic Church. The Protestant Reformation was the next major schism, in the sixteenth century.
The schism in the Christian Church (A.D. 1054) brought about two groups - the Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church in the East.
The Orthodox Church began as the first Christian Church (alongside the Roman Catholic Church--this was obviously before the schism which occurred in 1054 between the two churches) at Pentecost in Jerusalem. Short answer: Jerusalem
William M'Combie has written: 'The Christian church considered in relation to unity and schism' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Christian union, Schism, Church
Eastern Schism.
You're thinking of the Eastern Schism, sometimes called the Great Schism, but in the Catholic Church, the Great Schism refers to the Western Schism in the 15th century, not the Eastern Schism in the 11th century.
it divided the roman catholic church which lead to protestant churches