Organization of the Eastern Orthodox Church
The Eastern Orthodox Church, officially the Orthodox Catholic Church and commonly known simply as the Orthodox Church, is a communion composed of up to seventeen separate autocephalous hierarchical churches that profess Eastern Orthodoxy and recognise each other as Canon law of the [Eastern Orthodox Church|canonical] Eastern Orthodox Christian churches.
Each constituent church is self-governing; its highest-ranking bishop called the primate reports to no higher authority. Each regional church is composed of constituent eparchies ruled by bishops. Some autocephalous churches have given an eparchy or group of eparchies with varying degrees of autonomy. Such autonomous churches maintain varying levels of dependence on their mother church, usually defined in a tomos or another document of autonomy. In many cases, autonomous churches are almost completely self-governing, with the mother church retaining only the right to appoint the highest-ranking bishop of the autonomous church.
Normal governance is enacted through a synod of bishops within each church.
Church governance
The Eastern Orthodox Church is decentralised, having no central authority, earthly head or a single bishop in a leadership role. Thus, the Eastern Orthodox use a synodical system canonically, which is significantly different from the hierarchical organisation of the Roman Catholic Church that follows the doctrine of papal supremacy. References to the Ecumenical [Patriarch of Constantinople] as a sole authoritative leader are an erroneous interpretation of his title “first among equals". His title is of honor rather than authority and in fact the Ecumenical Patriarch has no direct authority over churches other than the Ecumenical [Patriarchate of Constantinople|Constantinopolitan Church]. The Ecumenical Patriarch's unique role is sometimes referred to as being the "spiritual leader" of the Eastern Orthodox Church, although even this is disputed.The autocephalous churches are normally in full communion with each other, so any priest of any of those churches may lawfully minister to any member of any of them, and no member of any is excluded from any form of worship in any of the others, including the reception of the Eucharist. However, there have been varying instances in the history of the Eastern Orthodox Church where communion has been broken between member churches for short periods, particularly over autocephaly issues or disagreements over ecumenism with other Christian denominations.
Following Justinian, the church existed only as a single denomination of five communing churches ruled by five patriarchs: the bishops of Rome, Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem, collectively referred to as the Pentarchy. Each of the five patriarchs had jurisdiction over bishops in a specified geographic region which did not overlap with the jurisdiction of another patriarch. This continued until 927, when the Bulgarian Patriarchate became the first newly promoted patriarchate to join the original five.
Historically, the Patriarch of Rome was considered to be the "first in place of honor" among the five patriarchs. Disagreement about the limits of his authority was one of the causes of the Great Schism, conventionally dated to the year 1054, which split the previously unified Church into the Roman Catholic Church in the West, headed by the Pope, and the Orthodox Catholic Church, led by the four eastern patriarchs. After the schism, the honorary primacy of the Bishop of Rome shifted to the Patriarch of Constantinople, who had previously been accorded second-place rank at the First Council of Constantinople.
In the 5th century, Oriental Orthodoxy separated from Chalcedonian Christianity, well before the 11th century Great Schism. It should not be confused with Eastern Orthodoxy or Roman Catholicism.
Jurisdictions
Autocephalous Eastern Orthodox churches
Ranked in order of seniority, with the year of independence given in parentheses, where applicable. There are a total of 17 autocephalous Eastern Orthodox churches which are recognized to various degrees among the communion of the Eastern Orthodox Church.Canonicity refers to the state of being in communion with the larger Eastern Orthodox Church, whereas autocephaly refers to the state of being more or less self-governing. Canonicity is binary while autocephaly exists on a spectrum. Disputes over autocephaly often lead to short-term breaks in communion for political reasons. These short-term breaks are typically not due to differences in doctrine or theology.
Four ancient patriarchates
- Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople
- Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Alexandria
- Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Antioch
- Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Jerusalem
National patriarchates
- Bulgarian Orthodox Church
- Georgian Orthodox Church
- Serbian Orthodox Church
- Russian Orthodox Church
- Romanian Orthodox Church
Autocephalous archbishoprics
Note:Autocephalous metropoles
Note:Universally recognized as canonical, autocephaly disputed
Canonical and spiritual independence status disputed
Canonical and autocephalous status disputed
Canonical and autocephalous status unrecognised
- A minority of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church – Kyiv Patriarchate led by Filaret (Denysenko) split again in 2019, following internal disputes and concerns as to whether the autocephaly granted by the Ecumenical Patriarchate amounted to true autocephaly due to the conditions imposed. They are not recognized by any church, including rival Ukrainian churches.
- The Old Calendarists and True Orthodox split from their local church and are not recognized as canonical, nor do they recognize any of the above churches as canonical. Some maintain communion with the Kyiv Patriarchate under Filaret.
Internal ranking
The typical order that the four ancient churches appear in the diptychs is the same order given above. While every major church places the four ancient churches in their diptychs before the other autocephalous churches, this order may still differ slightly. For example, in the diptychs of the Russian Orthodox Church and some of its daughter churches, the ranking of the five junior patriarchates is: Russia, Georgia, Serbia, Romania, Bulgaria. The ranking of the archbishoprics is the same, with the Church of Cyprus being the only ancient one.Autonomous Eastern Orthodox churches
;Under the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople;Under the Greek Orthodox Church of Antioch
- Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese of North America
- Antiochian Orthodox [Archdiocese of São Paulo and All Brazil]
;Under the Russian Orthodox Church
- Belarusian Orthodox Church
- Metropolis of Chișinău and All Moldova
- Orthodox Church in Japan
- Chinese Orthodox Church
- Metropolis of Bessarabia
- Romanian Orthodox Metropolis of the Americas
- Romanian Orthodox Metropolis of Western and Southern Europe
Semi-autonomous churches
;Under the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople;Under the Russian Orthodox Church
Limited self-government (not autonomy)
;Under the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople- Monastic community of Mount Athos
- Greek [Orthodox Archdiocese of Italy and Malta]
- Korean Orthodox Church
- Exarchate of the Philippines
- American Carpatho-Russian Orthodox Diocese
- Ukrainian Orthodox Church of Canada
- Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the USA
- Archdiocese of Russian Orthodox churches in Western Europe
- Diocese of Korea (Russian Orthodox Church)
- Korean Orthodox Committee
Unrecognised churches
Churches that are not recognised despite wanting to
The following churches recognize all other mainstream Eastern Orthodox churches, but are not recognised by any of them due to various disputes:- Abkhazian Orthodox Church
- American Orthodox Catholic Church
- Belarusian Autocephalous Orthodox Church
- Latvian Orthodox Church
- Montenegrin Orthodox Church
- Turkish Orthodox Church
- Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox Church Canonical
- Ukrainian Orthodox Church – Kyiv Patriarchate
True Orthodox
are groups of traditionalist Eastern Orthodox churches which have severed communion since the 1920s with the mainstream Eastern Orthodox churches for various reasons, such as calendar reform, the involvement of mainstream Eastern Orthodox in ecumenism, or the refusal to submit to the authority of mainstream Eastern Orthodox Church. The True Orthodox Church in the Soviet Union was also called the Catacomb Church; the True Orthodox in Romania, Bulgaria, Greece and Cyprus are also called Old Calendarists.These groups refrain from concelebration of the Divine Liturgy with the mainstream Eastern Orthodox, while maintaining that they remain fully within the canonical boundaries of the Church: i.e., professing Eastern Orthodox belief, retaining legitimate apostolic succession, and existing in communities with historical continuity.
The churches which follow True Orthodoxy are:
- Old Calendarists
- Serbian True Orthodox Church
- Russian True Orthodox Church (Lazar Zhurbenko)
- Russian Orthodox Autonomous Church
- * Latvian Orthodox Autonomous Church
- True Orthodox [Metropolis of Germany and Europe]