Orthodox Churches - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Mon, 23 Sep 2024 07:39:36 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg Orthodox Churches - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 Easter belongs to Christ - the date doesn't matter, says Pope https://cathnews.co.nz/2024/09/23/easter-belongs-to-christ-the-date-doesnt-matter-says-pope/ Mon, 23 Sep 2024 06:06:49 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=176054

Easter belongs to Christ, not to people deciding where it falls on a calendar, Pope Francis says. Determining which is the correct date to celebrate Christ's Resurrection has been the subject of ecumenical debate for hundreds of years. The Gregorian calendar points to one set of rules, the Julian calendar points to another. It's a Read more

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Easter belongs to Christ, not to people deciding where it falls on a calendar, Pope Francis says.

Determining which is the correct date to celebrate Christ's Resurrection has been the subject of ecumenical debate for hundreds of years. The Gregorian calendar points to one set of rules, the Julian calendar points to another.

It's a debate which many - Francis included - would like to end.

"Easter does not take place by our own initiative or by one calendar or another.

"Easter occurred because God ‘so loved the world that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life'" Francis said during an audience at the Vatican last week.

"Let us not close ourselves within our own ideas, plans, calendars or ‘our' Easter. Easter belongs to Christ!

"Moreover, it is good for us to ask for the grace to be ever more His disciples, allowing Him to be the one to show us the way we should follow."

One Resurrection for all

The delegation members Francis was addressing were from the ecumenical "Pasqua Together 2025" initiative. Founded in 2022, Pasqua calls on Orthodox and mainline Christian churches to celebrate Easter on a common date.

In Easter 2025, the Julian and Gregorian calendars happen by astronomical design to align. Pasqua proposes there should be agreement that the universal celebrations planned for next year should continue every year thereafter.

Pope Francis spoke encouragingly to them in support of their initiative, noting he has been asked several times to seek a solution to the issue of multiple dates for Easter.

"I encourage those who are committed to this journey to persevere and to make every effort in the search for a shared agreement, avoiding anything that may instead lead to further divisions among our brothers and sisters."

Christians should reflect, plan and walk together so that we may bear witness to Christ and that the world may believe, he said.

What's in a date?

Next year will mark both the Holy Year for the Catholic Church and celebrations of the 1,700th anniversary of the Council of Nicaea.

That Council gave birth to the Nicene Creed, affirmed the full divinity of Christ and set a formula for determining the date of Easter. It was to be the first Sunday after the first full moon after the spring equinox.

These days though, we measure time differently from the way we did in 300 AD. The calendar a church uses determines when they'll be celebrating Easter.

Orthodox churches use the Julian calendar which was in use during the Council of Nicaea.

Mainstream Christian churches use the Gregorian calendar, introduced in 1582 as a more accurate means of keeping time.

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Orthodox churches boomed during pandemic, study finds, but calls growth ‘mixed bag' https://cathnews.co.nz/2024/08/29/orthodox-churches-boomed-during-pandemic-study-finds-but-calls-growth-mixed-bag/ Thu, 29 Aug 2024 06:13:05 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=175058 Orthodox Churches

Almost half of US Orthodox churches remained open during the COVID-19 pandemic compared to only 12 percent of all religious congregations. Most American churches navigated the patchwork of COVID-19 restrictions on public gatherings by periodically closing their doors and broadcasting services online instead. But for almost half of U.S. Orthodox Christians, whose liturgy involves processions, Read more

Orthodox churches boomed during pandemic, study finds, but calls growth ‘mixed bag'... Read more]]>
Almost half of US Orthodox churches remained open during the COVID-19 pandemic compared to only 12 percent of all religious congregations.

Most American churches navigated the patchwork of COVID-19 restrictions on public gatherings by periodically closing their doors and broadcasting services online instead.

But for almost half of U.S. Orthodox Christians, whose liturgy involves processions, incense, kissing icons and crosses and receiving Communion from a shared spoon and chalice, liturgical services continued for anyone wanting to attend in person, according to a new study of how the denomination weathered the pandemic.

The new study finds that Orthodox churches overall were reluctant to embrace virtual worship compared to all religious congregations.

By spring 2023, 75 percent of all U.S. congregations provided remote options compared to only 53 percent of Orthodox churches.

Fewer online options likely contributed to the significant drop in Orthodox church participation in the middle of the pandemic in 2021.

But compared to other U.S. congregations that are on average eight percent below pre-COVID-19 attendance, Orthodox churches had recovered in-person attendance on average by spring 2023.

At the same time, Orthodox churches overall have seen a drop in volunteer participation, from 40 percent in 2020 to 25 percent in 2023, compared to 40 percent and 35 percent in all U.S. congregations.

Orthodox Churches and the pandemic

The Orthodox tendency to "ignore" the pandemic has produced a "mixed bag," said research released Thursday (Aug. 22) by the Hartford Institute for Religion Research and Alexei Krindatch, national coordinator of the U.S. Census of Orthodox Christian Churches.

Orthodox churches in the U.S. are more likely than other religious congregations to have gained members during the COVID-19 pandemic, even while struggling with declines in participation and volunteering.

Using survey data from 2020 through 2023, the study found 44 percent of Orthodox churches remained open during the pandemic. compared to just 12 percent of all U.S. congregations.

Only 31 percent of Orthodox priests publicly encouraged parishioners to get vaccinated compared to 62 percent of all clergy.

"They were trying to avoid conflicts," said Krindatch, the study's lead researcher, who has published earlier reports on how the pandemic impacted Orthodox Christians.

Many Orthodox Churches

There is no single Orthodox Church in the U.S.

Instead, several jurisdictions — the largest are the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese, the Orthodox Church in America and the Antiochian Orthodox Archdiocese — are administered independently of one another and exist side by side, sharing the same teachings and in full communion with one another.

Many Orthodox parishes combine several immigrant groups and their descendants, from Russians and Ukrainians to Arabs and Greeks, as well as converts from other faiths and denominations.

Bishops provided pandemic guidance to the priests serving them, such as whether to require masking or not, often across a swath of states that clashed on masking and lockdown mandates.

Priests then chose whether and how to follow or adapt that guidance to their specific circumstances, sometimes casting doubt on the bishop's authority.

"I figured people are going to make their own medical decisions (about the vaccine)," said one Orthodox priest who participated in the survey, the Rev. Lawrence Margitich of St. Seraphim of Sarov Cathedral in Santa Rosa, California, a parish of the Orthodox Church of America.

"I'm the priest. What do I know about that stuff?"

Margitich said his church has grown from about 80 people on a Sunday morning in the pre-pandemic months of 2020 to about 180 people today.

To reduce the spread of the coronavirus, in 2020, the church moved services to its outdoor courtyard with an amplified sound system. Then in August 2020, smoke from a major wildfire pushed them back inside.

During that double crisis, in which hundreds of local homes burned to the ground, people began showing up to St. Seraphim.

"They started thinking more about eternal realities, I guess, and their life in this world," said Margitich.

According to several Orthodox clergy who have spoken to RNS, the pandemic lockdowns provided more time at home to browse the Internet and self-reflect.

This led many spiritual seekers to come across Orthodoxy for the first time across a proliferation of English-language resources online and then visit a local church.

Growing numbers

This year, St. Seraphim of Sarov Cathedral has experienced more baptisms than ever before in Margitich's 27-year career, he said, with 20 people catechized in the spring and 20 more in the process of conversion.

An earlier report by Krindatch concluded that while most Orthodox churches in the U.S. shrank an average of 15 percent in regular attendees from 2020 to 2022, one in five parishes instead grew their membership and in-person attendance by 20 percent.

The growing parishes tend to be those that not only remained open for in-person worship during the pandemic, but also didn't offer online worship, have a higher percentage of converts and have greater unity of opinions, among other factors.

By spring 2023, 15 percent of the members of a median Orthodox parish were newcomers who had joined since the start of the pandemic in 2020, compared to only 10 percent among other U.S. religious congregations, the latest study showed.

"It is a statistically significant difference," Krindatch said. "But there are bigger differences between Orthodox jurisdictions. People were definitely looking for any place they could join."

The Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia, commonly called ROCOR and considered the most conservative jurisdiction, picked up significantly more members than the Orthodox Church of America.

It in turn picked up more than the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese, according to Krindatch's data.

The Rev. Luke Veronis of Sts. Constantine and Helen Greek Orthodox Church in Webster, Massachusetts, near the Connecticut border, called the pandemic a "positive" experience for his parish.

That is despite describing his congregation as "extremely divided" politically, with both progressives and Donald Trump loyalists, who he refers to as "a family."

The COVID-19 restrictions pushed the church to livestream services and meet on Zoom, alternatives they have continued to offer for liturgies and Bible studies alongside the in-person gatherings.

Veronis' church also experienced atypical growth, from 150 regular monthly attendees in 2019 to about 220 today, he said. Most joined during the pandemic and are young adults under the age of 35.

Many of the Greek Orthodox churches in New England are either declining or struggling to remain open, while only a handful are growing.

"The key to our success is we've created a very welcoming church," said Veronis, who also teaches a class about cultivating "missions-minded" parishes at Hellenic College and Holy Cross Orthodox School of Theology in Brookline, Massachusetts.

"I always preach to my people, our church welcomes everybody … but then, of course, the challenge for everybody is once you come into the church, we all are on a journey of change and transformation. So don't come with your agendas."

He calls the surge in membership some churches are experiencing "both a blessing and a curse."

"One of the real challenges we in the Orthodox Church are going to have is we have a lot of people coming into our church now, especially young men," he said.

While expressing gratitude for the men who have found his parish, he added, "I would be afraid if some of these men went to some other Orthodox churches, where the priests themselves have given in to these ideological wars and these priests would just feed into what these men are already looking for, the right-wing, extreme craziness."

National study

The study is part of a national mixed-methods project titled Exploring the Pandemic Impact on Congregations and funded by the Lily Endowment that is investigating changes to congregational life resulting from COVID-19.

Faith Communities Today provided 2020 survey data of over 15,000 congregations on the pre-pandemic congregational landscape.

The next survey in November 2024 will follow up on many of the same themes to examine how the pandemic's impacts continue to change how congregations operate and collect perspectives from not just clergy but also lay persons.

  • First published by RNS
  • Meagan Saliashvili is an author at Religion News Service.
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Advisor says Francis wants to reform papacy for Christian unity https://cathnews.co.nz/2014/08/05/advisor-says-francis-wants-reform-papacy-christian-unity/ Mon, 04 Aug 2014 19:12:41 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=61474

Pope Francis wants to reform the papacy to allow greater unity between the Catholic and Orthodox Churches, a newly appointed senior adviser says. Enzo Bianchi was appointed on July 22 as a consultor of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity. The Tablet reported him saying the Pope could allow a council of bishops, including Read more

Advisor says Francis wants to reform papacy for Christian unity... Read more]]>
Pope Francis wants to reform the papacy to allow greater unity between the Catholic and Orthodox Churches, a newly appointed senior adviser says.

Enzo Bianchi was appointed on July 22 as a consultor of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity.

The Tablet reported him saying the Pope could allow a council of bishops, including Orthodox bishops, to assist in governing the Church.

Reform of the Synod of Bishops and the growth of synodality within the Catholic Church would greatly enhance the opportunity for union between Rome and the Orthodox Churches.

Fr Bianchi, Prior of the Bose monastery in Italy, said: "I believe that the Pope wants to achieve unity by reforming the papacy."

Pope Francis feels that union with the Orthodox Churches in particular is "an urgent goal", he added.

"I believe that the Pope has one particular concern, that unity should not be achieved in the spirituality of unity but rather it is a command by Christ which we must carry out," he told the Italian daily La Stampa.

Reform would involve a new balance between collegiality and primacy, Bianchi explained.

"The Orthodox have synodality, but not primacy. We Catholics have primacy, but a lack of synodality.

"There can be no synodality without supremacy, and there can be no supremacy without synodality.

"It is conceivable that we could have an episcopal body that helps the Pope in governing the Church without calling into question his primacy," Bianchi said.

"This would help to create a new style of papal primacy and the government of bishops."

Pope Paul VI's Nota Praevia, attached to the Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, Lumen Gentium, ensured that none of the document's teaching on collegiality should impact on the rights and privileges of the Pope.

The Synod of Bishops therefore remains a solely consultative body and relies on papal endorsement.

Last year Pope Francis suggested strengthening the synod, saying it was a "half-baked" development of the Second Vatican Council.

Sources

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