Open main menu

OrthodoxWiki β

Changes

Church of Serbia

128 bytes added, 18:35, January 23, 2006
m
some cleanup
music=[[Byzantine Chant]]|
calendar=[[Julian Calendar|Julian]]|
population=15,000,000 |
website=[http://www.spc.yu Church of Serbia]
}}
==History==
The Serbian Orthodox Church is an autocephalous, or ecclesiastically independent, member of the Orthodox communion, located primarily in Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, and FYROM. Since many Serbs have emigrated to foreign countries, now there are now many Serbian Orthodox communities on all continents. Soon after their arrrival to Balkans , the Serbian tribes were successively [[baptism|baptised ]] by Christian [[missionary|missionaries ]] and became Orthodox Christians. The [[consecration ]] of St. [[Sava of Serbia|Sava]] as autocephalous Archbishop of Serbia in 1219, even more strengthened various Serbian principalities even more in their ecclesia- stical ecclesiastical allegiance to [[Church of Constantinople |Constantinople]] and the Christian East. Later, as the medieval kingdom of Serbia grew in size and prestige and as Stefan Dusan, king of Serbia from 1331, assumed the imperial title of tsar in (1346 to 1355), the Archbishopric of Pec was correspondingly raised to the rank of Patriarchate. The period before the arrival of the Turks was the time of the greatest flourishing of the Serbian Church. After the final Turkish conquest of the most influental Serbian principality in 1459, the greater portion of Serbian lands became a Turkish pasalik (province). After the death of Patriarch [[Patriarch Arsenios II of Serbia|Arsenios II]] in 1463 , a successor was not elected. The [[Patriarchate]] was thus de facto abolished, and the Serbian Church passed under the jurisdiction of the [[Ecumenical Patriarchate]]. The Serbian Patriarchate was restored in 1557 by the [[Turkish sultan]] [[Suleiman the Magnificent]]. [[Macarios (Sokolovic) of Pec|Macarios]], brother of the famous [[Mehmed Pasha Sokolovic]] , was elected Patriarch in Pec.
The restoration of the Patriarchate was of great importance for the Serbs because it helped the spiritual unification of all Serbs in the [[Turkish Empire]]. After consequent Serbian uprisals against the Turkish occupators in which the Church had a leading role, the [[Turks]] abolished the Patriarchate once again in [[1766]]. The Church remained once more under the jurisdiction of the [[Ecumenical Patriarch]] of Constintinople . This period of so called "Phanariots" was a period of great spiritual decline because the Greek [[Greekbishop]] bishops s had very little understanding for their Serbian flock. This was also the period when great number of Christians converted to [[Islam]] to avoid severe taxes imposed by the [[Turks]] in retaliation for uprisings and continued resistance. Many Serbs with their hierarchs [[hierarch]]s migrated to Southern [[Hungary]] where they had been granted the Church autonomy. The seat of the archbishops was moved from [[Pec]] to [[Karlovci]]. The [[Serbian Orthodox Church]] finally regained its independance independence and became autocephalous in 1879, the year after the recognition by the [[Great Powers]] of Serbia as an independent state. After World War I , all the Serbs were united under one ecclesiastical authority, and the Patriarchate was reestablished in 1920 with election of Patriarch [[Demetrius (Pavlovic) of Serbia|Dimitry]], the Patriarch's full title being "Archbishop of Pec, Metropolitan of Belgrade and Karlovci, and Patriarch of the Serbs."  During the Second World War , the Serbian Orthodox Church passed through severe trials in which many bishops, priests [[priest]]s and about "700,000 [[lay ]] Orthodox Christians were killed by [[Croatian]] and [[Muslim]] [[fascists]] according to the Orthodox Diocese of Raska and Prizren. Hundreds of churches [[church]]es were completely destroyed or desecrated. After the [[Second World War]] the Church experienced new trials under the communists who prohibited teaching of religion in schools, confiscated the property of the Church , and using used various overt and covert means of persecution in order to diminish the influence the Church had among the people. It was only after [[1989]] that the position of the Church has became tolerable, although the Church estastes estates have not yet been returned to their lawful owners.
== Structure of the patriarchate ==
The supreme authority of the Serbian Orthodox Church is the [[Holy Synod]], composed of all its bishops, who meet once a year. A permanent synod of four members carries out the administration of the day-to-day affairs of the church.
The Serbian Orthodox Church is divided into 40 [[diocese]]s each headed by its own metropolitan, archbishop , or bishop:
===Serbia and Montenegro===
interwiki, renameuser, Administrators
9,194
edits