Moscow Patriarch’s interview with the Greek newspaper « Ethnos tis Kyriakis »
Patriarch Kirill of Moscow, « In Greece, I have each time the feeling that I have not come to foreigners, but to my brothers ».
Patriarch Kirill of Moscow, « In Greece, I have each time the feeling that I have not come to foreigners, but to my brothers ».
According to the Greek news website Romfea.gr, at the invitation of Archbishop Chrysostomos of Cyprus, patriarchs Theodore of Alexandria, John of Antioch, and Theophilos of Jerusalem are currently meeting on the Ukrainian question and on how to deal with it. According to the same source, a joint statement is expected on the issue of the recognition of the new autocephalous Orthodox Church in Ukraine.
D’après le site d’information grec Romfea.gr, à l’invitation de Mgr Chrysostome, archevêque de Chypre, les patriarches Théodore d’Alexandrie, Jean d’Antioche et Théophile de Jérusalem participent à une réunion sur la question ukrainienne et sur la manière de la traiter. D’après Selon la même source, une déclaration commune sur la question de la reconnaissance de la nouvelle Église orthodoxe autocéphale en Ukraine est attendue.
Le patriarche de Moscou Cyrille : « En Grèce, j’ai chaque fois le sentiment que je ne suis pas venu chez des étrangers, mais chez mes frères »
« We are proud when we are called Banderistes, » said Metropolitan Epifaniy, the primate of the new Orthodox Church of Ukraine, during his visit at Lviv National Agrarian University, as part of his pastoral visit in the region.
On June 9, the Orthodox Church of the Czech Lands and Slovakia will canonize a new martyr, Father Stanislav Nasadil, killed in 1941by Croatian Ustashi.
A new 2018-19 series of articles shared on the roots and the prospects that unite Eastern and Oriental Orthodox Traditions to the realm of Jewishness and Hassidism, Compared semantics and exegetical “paysages” by Archpriest Alexander A.Winogradsky Frenkel (Patriarchate of Jerusalem). Below the twenty-first article: “Toward The Fresh Breadxit Of Resurrection”.
L’Église des Terres tchèques et de Slovaquie canonisera le 9 juin un nouveau saint martyr, le père Stanislav Nasadil, tué par des oustachis croates en 1941.