answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

The Eastern Orthodox Church is a Christian church. All Christian churches share the belief that Jesus Christ is God, born on Earth as a man, and that salvation, or freedom from sin, is to be attained by following Christ as one's personal Lord and Saviour.

Just as doctrine varies among other Christian churches, the Orthodox Church has doctrine that sets it apart. Some notable points are the Orthodox perspectives on the meaning of salvation, the concept of heaven and hell, and whether The Bible is to be interpreted literally.

If you would like to investigate the differences between Eastern Orthodoxy and other Christian churches such as Catholicism and various Protestant denominations, a wealth of information is available at the Orthodox Church of America's website, which you will find in the related links section.

User Avatar

Wiki User

15y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar
More answers
User Avatar

Wiki User

15y ago

There is no theological difference between the two. They are both part of the same Eastern Orthodox Church. The only cultural difference is the language used in their services. Their beliefs are exactly the same.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

13y ago

Easy! The Orthodox Church was instituted by Christ and His Holy Apostles, to bring the Gospel and salvation to the human race. The Church of England was started as a breakaway from the Roman Catholic Church by King Henry VIII because the Pope wouldn't give Henry a divorce. Since that time, the reigning Monarch of England is the Head of the Church of England. Henry didn't want to take a chance that another upstart Bishop would tell HIM what to do! Of course, there cannot be a "head" of the Anglican Communion-those in other countries do not want a Church headed by a foreigner, or a monarch. This is what happened after "Men" became heads of "churches" rather than acknowledging Christ as the Head of the Church.

The "Sack of Constantinople" by the Roman Catholic Crusaders happened 150 years after the mutual excommunications between Constantinople & Rome.

The Church of England refers to the Mother Church of the Communion of Anglican Churches. It is technically headed by no one, although the most "Senior Bishop" is the Bishop of Canterbury and the head of the monarchy of Britain is given the title Supreme Governor of the Church of England. It has approximately 14 million adherents and allows women to function as deaconesses. The Church was created when King Henry VIII wanted an annulment from his marriage in 1534 but the Pope would not grant it to him, so in effect King Henry VIII established this own church outside the Communion of Rome in which he could have his marriage annulled.

The Greek Orthodox Church is in Communion with the Orthodox Churches which have approximately 300 million adherents, making them the second largest church after the Catholic Church. They are lead by synods of bishops who have patriarchs in traditional cities which governor regions, such as the Patriarch of Constantinople governs the Greek Orthodox. The patriarchs are considered 'first among equals' to the bishops which means they are not dictatorial leaders but they are considered to be guidance to the other bishops. The Greek Orthodox Church does not allow women ordination. The Orthodox Churches were created during the East-West Schism when legates from Rome refused the Patriarch of Constantinople the title of Patriarch and the Patriarch, Cerularius, refused to recognize the supremacy of the Pope. Cultural differences, human arrogance and the Roman sack of Constantinople in combination led to the Patriarch and Pope excommunicating each other creating the two separate entities of the Catholic Church of Rome and the Orthodox Churches, who also are considered Catholicos.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

11y ago

"Greek" Orthodox Church does not refer to the nationality of the parishioners, but to the language of scripture; the Old Testament of the first Christians was the Septuagint translated into Greek in 225 BC in Alexandria, Egypt, and the New Testament, with the exception of the Gospel of Matthew, was originally written in Greek. All Eastern Orthodox Churches by rights may claim to be "Greek" Orthodox Churches, because all have their foundation in the Greek Scriptures, thus, the "Greek Russian Orthodox Church" or the "Greek Orthodox Albanian Church" tells us that they are Christian Churches that have been founded on scripture: the 225 BC Septuagint Old Testament written in Greek, and the New Testament in Greek. Both the Septuagint and the New Testament of Eastern Christianity refer to manuscripts that pre-date

the Western Christian Textus

Receptus.

"Western" Christianity including Roman Catholicism and Protestant Churches are scripturally

founded on the much later 4th Century AD translation of Hebrew Scriptures into the Old Testament, and later translations of the New Testament into the various languages.

"Eastern" Orthodox Churches are Churches that were founded by the Apostles, and that have been in communion with one another since the first century. Rome was also a center of early Christianity and was for a thousand years part of that communion, however, in 1054, the Papal Legate, Cardinal Humbert, delivered a Papal Bull to the Altar of the Church of the Holy Wisdom in Constantinople requiring the Church in Constantinople to declare its allegiance and obedience to the Bishop of Rome, the Pope, and declaring Papal infalliablity

on all matters. The "Eastern" Church comprising those Churches of Antioch, Ephesus, Jerusalem, and Alexandria, along with Rome, had always conducted themselves as equals, no one bishop having primary authority over any of the other Churches. Consequently, the "Eastern" Church, including Alexandria, Ephesus, Antioch, Jerusalem and Constantinople, rejected the attempt of Rome to place itself in authority over the "Eastern" Church.

The "Eastern Orthodox ('ortho'

means correct, and 'doxa'

means glory or worship, a name given the Eastern Church in the first century by Clement I of Rome, because, he wrote to the Corinthians (the same Corinthians to whom

Paul wrote Epistles), the Church in Rome was already abandoning some of the Apostles' instructions). Since that time, the "Western" Church of Rome has substantially altered the beliefs and practices it once held in common with the "Eastern" Church, and it has further splintered into thousands of Protestant Churches whose roots are in the Roman Catholic Church. The "Eastern Orthodox" Church did not have a 'Reformation,' because it did not share the history and development of the Roman Catholic Church that led to the Reformation.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

15y ago

The Greek Orthodox Church is one of the 12 different Churches that make up the larger, Orthodox Church.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

15y ago

Greek is a nationality or language and Greek Orthodox is the main religion of modern Greese

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

11y ago

The Russian orthodox is part of the eastern orthodox beliefs I don't think there is significant difference between the two.

This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What is the difference between Greek Orthodox Church and Ukrainian Orthodox Church?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

When was Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the USA created?

Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the USA was created in 1915.


When was Ukrainian Autonomous Orthodox Church created?

Ukrainian Autonomous Orthodox Church was created in 1941.


When was Ukrainian Orthodox Greek Catholic Church created?

St. Nicholas Ukrainian Catholic Church was created in 1906.


What are the Ukrainian religions?

Ukrainian Orthodox Church


Is the Ukrainian Orthodox Church in union with the Antiochian Orthodox Church?

Depends which "Ukrainian Orthodox Church" you mean. If you mean the Autonomous Ukrainian Orthodox Church, which is self-ruld but under the jurisdiction of the Russian Orthodox Church, the answer is "yes." If you mean the Ukrainian Orthodox parishes in the USA, Europe, and Australia which are under the jurisdiction of the Patriarchate of Constantinople (although these are certainly NOT a "Ukrainian Orthodox Church," but simply Ukrainian Orthodox dioceses of the Patriarchate of Constantinople), the answer is "yes." If you mean any other Ukrainian Orthodox groups-whther one of the so-called variety of "Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox" Churches IN the Ukraine (some of which also now have parishes in the USA), or any of the plethora of vagante, fly by night, non-canoncial, possibly heretical, possibly occult groups in the US that include the words "Ukrainian" and "Orthodox" iin their names, the answer is "NO." See the question "is the Russian orthodox church in union with the ukrainian orthodox church" for more information


Is the Ukrainian Orthodox Church in union with the Russian Orthodox Church?

As with many questions, it depends . . . the Russian Orthodox Church is headed by the Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia (the Russian Orthodox Church is often referred to as "the Moscow Patriarchate," or simply, "MP"). By "All Russia," of course, is meant all the lands that have been traditionally included in a Russian State. Ukraine has been included in Russian States for the past several hundred years. Ukraine only gained independence after the fall of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s. The Russian Orthodox Church has several hundred, if not thousands, of parishes in the Ukraine, under the designation of "The Ukrainian Orthodox Church under the jurisdiction of the Moscow Patriarchate." This jurisdiction is rather loose-the Ukrainian Church under the MP is considered an "Autonomous Church"-all the Bishops, as well as the Metropolitan (head of this Church) are voted on in Ukraine by Ukrainian Bishops; the MP has the "right of refusal" if a candidate is considered unworthy, but in practice, this happens very rarely. So, the Ukrainian Orthodox Church/Moscow Patriarchate, is indeed in union with the Russian Orthodox Church.


What is the difference between Greek Orthodox and regular Christianity?

A: There are many differences between Greek Orthodox Church and Russian Orthodox Church, so posing the question that broadly is meaningless. Regular Christianity is too heterogeneous if at all useful notion.


What is the difference between a Church of England church and a orthdox church?

Do you mean Greek Orthodox, Russian Orthodox, Jewish Orthodox? Arguably, not a huge amount because orthodox usually denotes a high value being placed on procedure and tradition - which they all share to an extent.


What is the difference between syrian church and syrian orthodox?

The Syrian Orthodox church is an ancient church native to Syria with the Syrian Orthodox people being largely Syrian, however there are a few Iraqis who are a part of that church. There are other types of Christians in Syria such as Catholics, protestants, and Greek orthodox churches, but there is no one Syrian church.


When did the Ukrainian Orthodox Church separate from the Greek Orthodox Church?

The question calls forth degrees of answer. Both the Greek (Byzantium)and Ukrainian (Kyiv) Churches claim the activity of an apostle on their territory: St. Andrew. Greece proper was also served by St. Paul. A church matures by apostoloic activity or eveangelization to produce believers, then a bishop then a group of bishops under an Archbishop/Metropolitan or Patriarch, makes it into a spearate church. The Greek Church was elevated to be the second highest see in prestige in the universal church (Patriarch of Constantinople) during the early councils of 300s and 400s AD, the presiding see of Rome taking longer to recognize this status. The Goth tribes on Ukrainian territory already sent a bishop to the first Ecumenical Council in Nicaea in 325. From this time, Ukraine was dependent on Constaninople, but still made independent overtures to Rome. The Ukrainian Church became a province with a Metropolitan in the decades following the Ukrainian capital's Baptism of Kyiv in 988. The province included Belarus, and part of today's European Russia, and was a subdivision of the Greek Church. The Ukrainian Church continued periodic contact with Rome after the Greek and Roman Churches split into Orthodox and Catholic during 1054-1203 AD. The Ukrainian Church was completely split from the Greek Orthodox Church during the period, 1595-1686. First, most hierarchs, and later a large minority of faithful declared union with the (Catholic) Church of Rome in 1595-6. Next, in 1686, Moscow (later to be called, Rossiya, or Russia) obtained a transfer of jurisdiction of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of Kyiv from the Greeks at Contantinople to the Russians at Moscow. Ukrainians question the legality of the move, given the assertions of bribery. The Russian Orthodox Church then absorbed the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, making all bishops non-Ukrainian by 1800. As the Turkish/Ottoman invasion receded, the Church of Greece proper gained some independence from Constantinople around 1900. After 1990, a portion of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church abroad was recognized by Constantinople, while the Orthodox Church in Ukraine split into several groups and gained partial independance from Russia.


What country is the Church of the Protection of the Mother of God in Harbin in?

The Church of the Protection of the Mother of God in Harbin is an Eastern Orthodox church in Harbin, China, built in 1930. It is also called the Ukrainian Church in Harbin.


What do the Ukrainians do during Easter day?

Ukrainian Orthodox go to church around 3am to bring eggs and special bread to be holinised by pop.