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15 October 2018
- The Eastern Schism, also known as the 2018 Moscow–Constantinople schism, is a schism between the Russian Orthodox Church (ROC, also known as the Moscow Patriarchate) and the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople, which began on 15 October 2018 when the former unilaterally severed full communion with the latter.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2018_Moscow–Constantinople_schism
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The Eastern Schism, also known as the 2018 Moscow–Constantinople schism, is a schism between the Russian Orthodox Church (ROC, also known as the Moscow Patriarchate) and the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople, which began on 15 October 2018 when the former unilaterally severed full communion with the latter.
The Moscow–Constantinople schism refers to any of three schisms within the Eastern Orthodox Church wherein the Russian Orthodox Church (or one of its preceding entities) severed full communion with the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople:
- 1054 and All That
- Orthodox History and Geopolitics
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The split is being describedas the greatest rupture in Christianity since the Great Schism of 1054, which divided Eastern Orthodoxy from Roman Catholicism. It threatens to split Orthodox Christianity between those churches that remain loyal to their notional leader in Istanbul and those that choose to side with the Russian patriarch. But is this ru...
The Eastern Orthodox Church has no central authority akin to that of the Pope. Rather, it consists of a collection of independent churches, each headed by a patriarch, that share a single communion. These separate churches are to varying degrees tied to their respective nations (as in the Greek Orthodox Church, Serbian Orthodox Church, Russian Orth...
In many ways this schism comes down to a simple left-right divide, for Moscow’s bid to be the leader of Orthodoxy is attached to a particular view of what Orthodoxy should be. Much like Russia as a whole, the Russian Church has in recent years cultivated an ideological brand for itself, drawingpraisefrom reactionaries around the world for standing ...
Oct 23, 2018 · On October 15, a Synod of the Russian Orthodox Church (ROC) convened in Minsk announced a shocking decision: it would break off full communion with the Patriarch of Constantinople, arguably the highest authority in the Orthodox world.
Oct 24, 2024 · The tensions became a schism in 1054, when the uncompromising patriarch of Constantinople, Michael Cerularius, and the uncompromising envoys of the pope St. Leo IX excommunicated each other. No act of separation was at this time considered final by either side.
The East–West Schism, also known as the Great Schism or the Schism of 1054, is the break of communion between the Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church since 1054. [1] A series of ecclesiastical differences and theological disputes between the Greek East and Latin West preceded the formal split that occurred in 1054.
The Eastern Schism, also known as the 2018 Moscow–Constantinople schism, is a schism between the Russian Orthodox Church and the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople, which began on 15 October 2018 when the former unilaterally severed full communion with the latter.