Changes

Jump to: navigation, search

Russian True-Orthodox Church (Vyacheslav)

5,470 bytes added, 00:59, May 25, 2006
no edit summary
'''My first questions is: What's the copyright status for this stuff? Another website has been referenced - has it's placement here been authorized, and is it being re-released under the copyright terms of OrthodoxWiki? If the one who posted this does not verify this, both these articles (here and on the talk page) will be removed. The original website states "Copyright 2002- 2004 by RTOC-MM: DNA & BLAGO Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission from BLAGO is prohibited!" [the exclamation point is original!]''' {{User:FrJohn/sig}}== HISTORY OF THE RUSSIAN TRUE ORTHODOX CHURCH ==
{{cleanup}}'''The Early Foundation of Orthodoxy in Russia'''
'''RUSSIAN TRUE-ORTHODOX CHURCH Archdiocese According to tradition, St. Andrew, the first called Apostle, stopped at the hills of North America - RTOC AdNA'''For virtually all centuries what would become the great city of its historyKiev while preaching the Gospel. It would, however, take nearly one thousand years before Christianity would begin to take hold of the Orthodox Church region. In 954 Princess Olga of Kiev was baptized. But it was her grandson, Prince Vladimir, whose baptism in 988 would forever establish Orthodoxy as the principal religion of Russia had been playing an important stabilizing .<br>The Orthodox faith grew and flourished throughout the Russian Empire and consolidating role, especially served as a unifying force in the times lives of the Russian people. Not only did the Church provide spiritual strength and nourishment for its people, but it became a center of critical cataclysmseducational enrichment as well. In The Russian Orthodox Church had forever become an inseparable part of the years life of the Civil War it also didn’t take people and Russia itself.<br>The unprecedented growth and stability of this Church inevitably led to the side establishment of any a new patriarchate within orthodoxy, with Metropolitan Job of Moscow becoming the belligerents; first Patriarch and of Russia in 1589. Following the death of Patriarch Adrian in 1700, the Holy Synod were fighting Church remained without a Patriarch for putting an end to more than two hundred years. At the insistence of Peter I, a collective administration, known as the fratricidal discord Holy and obsession with political passionsGoverning Synod, advocating tolerance was established in 1721. This form of governance lasted until 1917 at which time the All-Russian Council restored the patriarchal office and love elected Metropolitan Tikhon of fellow menMoscow as Patriarch.
 '''Orthodoxy in Russia in the Early Twentieth Century''' The joy of the election of Patriarch Tikhon would be short lived, as Russia entered a very difficult period in its history. The Bolsheviks, who had come into power in 1917, saw the Russian Orthodox Church as an enemy to be destroyed as resolutely as the tsarist institution. This period saw the repression of the church as well as the imprisonment of many of its bishops, priests, monastics and laypeople. Patriarch Tikhon was himself imprisoned a little more than a year. Upon his release he found a Church embattled by division and an ever-increasing persecution by the government. He continued to be a source of unification among the people and fought vigorously to uphold the faith and traditions of the Church, but the strain of these years weighed heavily upon him. His death in 1925 dealt a severe blow to Russian Orthodoxy and the stability of the Church.   '''Orthodoxy in the Post-Tikhon era''' Following the death of Patriarch Tikhon unrest settled over the Russian Orthodox Church. The designated successors of Patriarch Tikhon were arrested by the civil authorities and Metropolitan Sergiy was named "locum tenens" of the Patriarchate. In 1927 Metropolitan Sergiy, in a formal declaration to all members of the first decade of Church, called for loyalty toward the Soviet State’s existence government. This event sparked division among the hierarchy, clergy and laity and led to the formation of the attempts True Orthodox Church in Russia. Those who opposed Metropolitan Sergiy were not simply opposed to his political concessions, which they felt were too extreme, but were also at variance with him on a number of canonical and theological issues. His alliance with the authorities allowed him to turn over to the civil authorities all hierarchs and clergy who were at odds with him on political issues as well as purely church-related issues. While the True Orthodox Church in Russia was never a single organization, many of its followers were labeled "Josephites", after Metropolitan Joseph of Leningrad, the leader of its largest branch.   A considerable part of the Church in Russia stood in opposition to subdue Metropolitan Sergiy and took the stand of the True Orthodox Church. The opposition, however, remained primarily on a church-related basis. The overwhelming majority of the True Orthodox Churchtried to observe the Soviet laws. This, take it however, was not enough. The authorities had taken their stand in the church dispute and were prepared to use whatever means necessary to bring the bishops under total controlthe obedience of Metropolitan Sergiy. This tragic resolve on the part of the Soviet government caused the numerous True Orthodox Church eparchies and communities to go underground for the length of the Soviet period.   '''The Emergence from the Underground and the Establishment of the Russian True Orthodox Church - Metropolia of Moscow''' In the period from the 1970s-80s, many of the True Orthodox Church communities had lost their last bishops and much of their clergy. Many of these groups were forced to exist and celebrate services in the absence of a priest.<br>After the change in political conditions in the late 1980s, the True Orthodox Church began to emerge from the underground. Various churches solved the question of their future existence in different ways. Some of the communities joined the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, which by that time had begun to open communities within Russia. Others renewed their episcopacy and clergy through arrangements made with other jurisdictions. The Russian True Orthodox Church - Metropolia of Moscow chose the latter.  In 1996 an initiative group of Russian orthodox clergy and laity approached Patriarch Dimitriy of the Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox Church, asking him to assist them in the canonical restoration of a hierarchy for the True Orthodox Church. It was decided that the name for the restored church would be the Russian True Orthodox Church. In June of 1996, with the blessing of Patriarch Dimitriy, Archbishop Roman and Bishop Methodiy of the UAOC ordained Hieromonk John a bishop of the Russian True Orthodox Church in order to restore apostolic succession. In December of 1996 Bishop John and Bishop Methodiy ordained Archimandrite Stefan a bishop for the Russian True Orthodox Church. These two bishops, John and turn Stefan, would pass the apostolic succession to the rest of the bishops of the Russian True Orthodox Church. In 2000 the Russian True Orthodox Church officially added "Metropolia of Moscow" to its name in order to distinguish it into “an appendage from other groups within Russia.  Today, the Church is led by Metropolitan Vyacheslav of Moscow and Kolomensk together with Archbishop Mikhail of Bronitsk and Velensk, Archbishop Alexy of Minneapolis and Chicago, Bishop Haralampos (Western Rite) and Bishop Vladimir. The Church strives to live the Gospel of Our Lord, God and Savior Jesus Christ through adherence to the Holy Scriptures, Holy Tradition, the Canons of the Ecumenical Councils, and regulations of the Church Councils of the state apparatusOrthodox Church. Its desire is to serve the needs of its faithful through spiritual nourishment and with compassion and understanding.
21
edits

Navigation menu