jabinkhatun907
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Post by jabinkhatun907 on Feb 24, 2024 5:46:46 GMT
That is They Do Not Base Their Preaching and Their Principles of Authority Only on the Bible but Also on the Apostles and Their Succession. Orthodox and Catholics Consider Themselves Heirs of Christianity From the First Millennium Until the Schism That Separated Them in the Year . For This Reason Among Other Things They Share the Same Saints Until the Th Century. The Schism Was the Expression of Some Theological Differences but Above All a Result of Political Disputes Between Different Leaderships Within Christianity. On the One Hand the Bishop of Rome the Pope on the Other the Patriarchs of the Eastern Churches. We Are Not Interested Now in the Historical Reasons but Rather in Their Consequences in the Way Christianity is Organized and Governed. In the Catholic Church the Figure of the Pope Was Consolidated as the Highest Authority and Fundamentally From the Th Century Onwards His Power Bahamas Phone Number List and His Attributions Increased Until the Bishop of Rome Became a Kind of Absolute Monarch. For Example Today It is the Pope Who Appoints the Bishops in Each Diocese Throughout the Planet. This Process of Centralization Which in the Catholic World is Known as Romanization Brought With It a Tightening of Ties Between the Holy See and Numerous Churches That Until Then Had Had Few Links With Rome. On the Contrary in Orthodox Christianity Although the Patriarch of Constantinople Today Istanbul is Considered a Primus Inter Pares He is So Only in Honorific and Symbolic Terms Since He Has No Interference or Power in the Government of the Different Churches All of Them Organized in Patriarchies. These Are Autocephalous Institutions That is With Their Own Head and Therefore Autonomous From Each Other. Of Course They Remain United in Theological Terms and Have Close Ties but Each Patriarch is the Ruler of His Church With Autonomy From the Rest.
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