they share the bread and the wine and then the altar boys sing songs of love and relationships about not only their God but aloso their vicars
Everyone is welcome to attend services or mass in the church, but only a person who is an Orthodox Christian can receive Holy Communion in an Orthodox Church.
June 5; December 19 (Eastern Orthodox church)
Yes, there is. "Holy Royal Martyrs of Russia Orthodox Church" celebrated their 10th anniversary on July 17, 2010.
Mass is specifically a Catholic rite. In the Episcopal Church, they call a similar ritual the Eucharist.
There is an Orthodox Church and a Catholic Church. There is no Catholic Orthodox Church.
Eastern Orthodox Church (or the Christian Orthodox Church).
The Catechism of the Catholic Church refers to the Eucharist celebrated in Mass as the "source and summit of the Christian life" (1324).
Orthodox Christians do not refer to it as mass, but the Divine Liturgy. What language it is performed in depends on the church's ethnicity, though most Orthodox churches in America do it mostly in English. If it is a Greek church, then it is partially in Greek; if Russian, then in Russian; etc. But, like I said, the majority is done in English. In Antiochian Orthodox Churches, the entire liturgy is in English.
No, the Greek Orthodox church is a part of the Eastern Orthodox Churches.
Catholic Mass is typically celebrated for about 1 hour.
Anglican Orthodox Church was created in 2001.
The Orthodox Church of Greece (Eastern Orthodox Church).