Everything about Serbian Orthodox totally explained
The
Serbian Orthodox Church (
Serbian: Српска Православна Црква /
Srpska Pravoslavna Crkva; СПЦ /
SPC) or the
Church of Serbia is one of the
autocephalous Orthodox
Christian churches, ranking sixth in order of seniority after
Constantinople,,
Antioch,
Jerusalem, and
Bulgaria. It is the second oldest
Slavic Orthodox Church in the world, as well as the westernmost predominant
Eastern church in
Europe.
It exercises jurisdiction over Orthodox Christians in Serbia and surrounding Slavic and other lands, as well as
exarchates and patriarchal representation churches around the world. The
Patriarch of Serbia serves as first among equals in his church; the current patriarch is His Holiness
Pavle.
The Serb Patriarch's full title is "Archbishop of
Peć, Metropolitan of
Belgrade and
Karlovci, and Patriarch of the Serbs."
History
The Serbian Orthodox Church is an autocephalous, or ecclesiastically independent, member of the Orthodox communion, located primarily in
Serbia,
Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Montenegro and
Republic of Macedonia, as well as
Croatia. Since many Serbs have emigrated to foreign countries, there are now Serbian Orthodox communities worldwide. Many significant items from
Christianity are in the possession of the Serbian Orthodox Church, such as the right hand of
John the Baptist,
Saint George's hand and skull parts, Holy Cross segments,
Paraskevi's finger,
St Vasilije Ostroski,...
Origins
The
Serbs were converted to
Christianity not long after their arrival in the
Balkans, before the
Great Schism split the Christian Church into rival Latin-speaking (
Roman Catholic) and Greek-speaking (
Eastern Orthodox) Churches. During the early
Middle Ages, the religious allegiance of the Serbs was divided between the two churches.
The various Serbian principalities were united ecclesiastically in the early 13th century by
Saint Sava, the son of the Serbian ruler and founder of the Serbian medieval state
Stefan Nemanja and brother of
Stefan Prvovencani, the first Serbian king. Sava persuaded the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople to establish the Church in Serbia as an autocephalous body, with Sava himself as its archbishop, consecrated in 1219. This sealed Orthodox Christian supremacy in the Serbian realm, which was up then divided between Catholicism and Orthodoxy.
The status of the Serbian Orthodox Church grew along with the growth in size and prestige of the medieval
kingdom of Serbia. After King
Stefan Dušan assumed the imperial title of
tsar, the Archbishopric of
Peć was correspondingly raised to the rank of Patriarchate in 1346. In the century that followed, the Serbian Church achieved its greatest power and prestige.
In 1459, the
Ottoman Empire conquered Serbia and made much of the former kingdom a pashaluk (to Muslim faith or law. Although many Serbs did convert to Islam, most continued their adherence to the Serbian Orthodox Church).
The Church itself continued in existence throughout the Ottoman period, though not without some disruption. After the death of
Patriarch Arsenios II in 1463, a successor wasn't elected. The
Patriarchate was thus
de facto abolished, and the Serbian Church passed under the jurisdiction of the
Ecumenical Patriarchate. The Serbian Patriarchate was restored in 1557 by the
sultan Suleiman the Magnificent, much thanks to the famous
Mehmed-paša Sokolović, when
Macarios, his brother or cousin, was elected Patriarch in Peć.
The restoration of the Patriarchate was of great importance for the Serbs because it helped the spiritual unification of all Serbs in the
Turkish Empire. After consequent Serbian uprisings against the Turkish occupiers in which the Church had a leading role, the
Turks abolished the Patriarchate once again in 1766. The Church remained once more under the jurisdiction of the
Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople. This period of so called "Phanariots" was a period of great spiritual decline because the
Greek bishops had very little understanding of their Serbian flock.
During this period, many Christians across the Balkans converted to
Islam to avoid severe taxes imposed by the Turks in retaliation for uprisings and continued resistance. Many Serbs migrated with their hierarchs to
Habsburg Monarchy where they'd been granted autonomy. The seat of the archbishops was moved from
Peć to
Karlovci. The new Serbian
Metropolitanate of Karlovci became a
patriarchate in 1848.
The church's close association with Serbian resistance to Ottoman rule led to Serbian Orthodoxy becoming inextricably linked with Serbian national identity and the new Serbian monarchy that emerged from 1817 onwards. The Serbian Orthodox Church in Serbia finally regained its independence and became autocephalous in 1879, the year after the recognition by the
Great Powers of Serbia as an independent state. This church was known as the Metropolitanate of Belgrade, thus in the end of the 19th century and beginning of the 20th century, two separate Serbian Churches existed - the
Patriarchate of Karlovci in the
Habsburg Monarchy and the
Metropolitanate of Belgrade in the
Kingdom of Serbia. The
Cetinje Metropolitanate held successorship to the Serb Patriarchate in Pec, its Vladikas were "Exarchs of the Pec Throne"
Serbia and Yugoslavia
After
World War I all the Orthodox Serbs were united under one ecclesiastical authority, and two Serbian churches were united into the single
Patriarchate of Serbia in 1920 with the election of
Patriarch Dimitry. It gained great political and social influence in the inter-war
Kingdom of Yugoslavia, during which time it successfully campaigned against the Yugoslav government's intentions of signing a
concordat with the
Vatican.
In retaliation to Serbian oppression during the
Second World War the Serbian Orthodox Church suffered severely from persecutions by the occupying powers and the rabidly anti-Serbian
Ustaše regime of
Croatia, which sought to create a "
Croatian Orthodox Church" which Orthodox Serbs were forced to join. Many Serbs were killed during the war; bishops and priests of the Serbian Orthodox Church were singled out for persecution, and many Orthodox churches were damaged or destroyed.
After the war the Church was suppressed by the
Communist government of
Josip Broz Tito, which viewed it with suspicion due to the Church's links with the exiled Serbian monarchy and the nationalist
Chetnik movement. Along with other ecclesiastical institutions of all denominations, the Church was subject to strict controls by the Yugoslav state, which prohibited the teaching of religion in schools, confiscated Church property and discouraged religious activity among the population.
The gradual demise of Yugoslav communism and the rise of rival nationalist movements during the 1980s also led to a marked religious revival throughout Yugoslavia, not least in Serbia. The Serbian Patriarch,
Pavle, supported the opposition to
Slobodan Milošević in the 1990s.
The
Macedonian Orthodox Church was created by the Yugoslav authorities in 1967, effectively as an offshoot of the Serbian Orthodox Church in what was then the
Socialist Republic of Macedonia, as part of the Yugoslav drive to build up a
Macedonian national identity. This was strongly resisted by the Serbian Church, which doesn't recognise the independence of its Macedonian counterpart. Campaigns for an independent
Montenegrin Orthodox Church have also gained ground in recent years.
Yugoslav wars
The
Yugoslav wars gravely impacted several branches of the Serbian Orthodox Church.
Many churches in Croatia were damaged or destroyed since the beginning of the war in that country in 1991. The bishops and priests and most faithful of the eparchies of Zagreb, of Karlovac, of Slavonia and of Dalmatia became refugees. The latter three were almost completely abandoned after the exodus of the Serbs from
Croatia in 1995. The eparchy of Dalmatia also had its see temporarily moved to
Knin after the
Republic of Serbian Krajina was established. The eparchy of Slavonia had its see moved from
Pakrac to
Daruvar. After
Operation Storm, two monasteries were particularly damaged:
The eparchies of Bihać-Petrovac, Dabar-Bosnia and Zvornik-Tuzla were also dislocated due to the war in
Bosnia and Herzegovina. The eparchy see of Dabar-Bosnia was temporarily moved to
Sokolac, and the see of Zvornik-Tuzla to
Bijeljina. Over a hundred Church-owned objects in the Zvornik-Tuzla eparchy were destroyed or damaged during the war. Many monasteries and churches in the Zahumlje eparchy were also destroyed. Numerous faithful from these eparchies also became refugees.
By 1998 the situation had stabilized in both countries. Most of the property of the Serbian Orthodox Church was returned to normal use, the bishops and priests returned, and that which was destroyed, damaged or vandalized was restored. The process of rebuilding several churches is still under way, notably the cathedral of the
Eparchy of Upper Karlovac in
Karlovac. The return of the SOC faithful also started, but they're not nearly close to their pre-war numbers, as of 2004.
Kosovo
Due to the
Kosovo War, after 1999 numerous Serbian Orthodox holy sites in the province were left occupied only by clergy. Since the arrival of
NATO troops in June 1999, 156 Serbian Orthodox churches and monasteries have been damaged or destroyed. Only during few days of the 2004
unrest in Kosovo, 35 Serbian Orthodox churches and monasteries were damaged or destroyed.
Involvement of Serbian government with the church
As a reaction to the
2008 Kosovo declaration of independence, the
Serbian government Minister of Religion
Radomir Naumov (
DSS) decided to pay the salaries to Serbian Orthodox clergy in
Kosovo.
Structure
| Metropolitanate |
See |
Country |
Cathedral |
Founded |
Metropolitan |
Belgrade (Metropolitan of Belgrade-Sremski Karlovci) |
Belgrade |
Serbia |
Cathedral Church of Saint Michael the Archangel |
1920 (reestablished) |
Patriarch Pavle |
Dabar-Bosnia (Metropolitan of Dabar-Bosnia) |
Sarajevo |
Bosnia and Herzegovina |
Nativity of the Mother of God Cathedral |
1880 |
Nikolaj |
Montenegro and the Littoral (Metropolitan of Montenegro and the Littoral) |
Cetinje |
Montenegro |
Ostrog Monastery |
1219 |
Amfilohije |
Midwestern America (Metropolitan of Midwestern America) |
Chicago |
United States |
St. Sava Monastery |
1920 |
Hristifor |
Zagreb and Ljubljana (Metropolitan of Zagreb, Ljubljana and All Italy) |
Zagreb |
Croatia, Slovenia and all of Italy |
|
|
Jovan |
New Gračanica, U.S. and Canada (Bishop of U.S. and Canada) |
Third Lake, Illinois |
United States and Canada |
Most Holy Mother of God |
1963 |
Bishop Longin |
| Diocese |
See |
Country |
Cathedral |
Founded |
Bishop |
Australia and New Zealand (Bishop of Australia and New Zealand) |
Hall, Australia |
Australia and Oceania |
New Kalenić Monastery |
|
Irinej |
Banat (Bishop of Banat) |
Vršac |
Serbia |
|
|
Nikanor |
Bačka (Bishop of Bačka) |
Novi Sad |
Serbia |
|
|
Milutin |
Braničevo (Bishop of Braničevo) |
Požarevac |
Serbia |
|
|
Ignatije |
Budimlje and Nikšić (Bishop of Budimlje and Nikšic) |
Berane |
Montenegro |
Đurđevi stupovi |
|
Joanikije |
Banja Luka (Bishop of Banja Luka) |
Banja Luka |
Bosnia and Herzegovina |
The Church of Holy Trinity; The Cathedral of Christ the Saviour) |
1900 |
Jefrem |
Bihać and Petrovac (Bishop of Bihać and Petrovac) |
Bosanski Petrovac |
Bosnia and Herzegovina |
|
|
Hrizostom |
Britain and Scandinavia (Bishop of Britain and Scandinavia) |
Stockholm |
Great Britain, Norway, Sweden and Denmark |
|
|
Dositej |
Buda (Budim) (Bishop of Buda) |
Sentandreja |
Hungary, Czech Republic, and Slovakia |
|
|
Lukijan |
Canada (Bishop of Canada) |
Hamilton, Ontario |
Canada |
St. Nicholas Cathedral |
|
Georgije |
Canada (Bishop of Canada) |
Mississauga, Ontario |
Canada |
St. Sava |
|
Central Europe (Bishop of Central Europe) |
Himmelstühr |
Germany, Austria, and Switzerland |
Himmelstühr monastery |
|
Constantine |
Dalmatia (Bishop of Dalmatia) |
Šibenik |
Croatia |
|
|
Fotije |
Eastern America (Bishop of Eastern America) |
Pittsburgh, PA |
United States |
Holy Trinity Cathedral |
|
Mitrophan |
Mileševa (Bishop of Mileševa) |
Mileševa |
Serbia |
Mileševa monastery (Ascension of Our Lord Jesus Christ) |
|
Filaret |
Niš (Bishop of Niš) |
Niš |
Serbia |
|
|
Irinej |
Osječko polje and Baranja (Bishop of Osječko polje and Baranja) |
Dalj |
Croatia |
|
|
Lukijan |
Ras and Prizren (Bishop of Ras and Prizren) |
Prizren |
Serbia |
|
|
Artemije |
Šabac (Bishop of Šabac) |
Šabac |
Serbia |
|
|
Lavrentije |
Slavonia (Bishop of Slavonia) |
Daruvar |
Croatia |
|
|
Sava |
Srem (Bishop of Srem) |
Sremski Karlovci |
Serbia |
St. Demetrius Cathedral |
|
Vasilije |
Šumadija (Bishop of Šumadija) |
Kragujevac |
Serbia |
|
|
Jovan |
Timişoara (Bishop of Timişoara) |
Timişoara |
Romania |
|
|
|
Timok (Bishop of Timok) |
Zaječar |
Serbia |
|
|
Justin |
Upper Karlovac (Bishop of upper Karlovac) |
Karlovac |
Croatia |
|
|
Gerasim |
Valjevo (Bishop of Valjevo) |
Valjevo |
Serbia |
|
2006 |
Milutin |
Vranje (Bishop of Vranje) |
Vranje |
Serbia |
|
|
Pahomije |
Western America (Bishop of Western America) |
Alhambra, California |
United States |
St. Steven's Cathedral |
|
Maksim |
Western Europe (Bishop of Western Europe) |
Paris |
France, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Spain |
|
|
Luka |
Zahumlje and Herzegovina (Bishop of Zahumlje and Herzegovina) |
Trebinje |
Bosnia and Herzegovina |
Monastery Tvrdoš |
|
Atanasije |
Žiča (Bishop of Žiča) |
Kraljevo |
Serbia |
Žiča Monastery |
|
Hrizostom |
Zvornik and Tuzla (Bishop of Zvornik and Tuzla) |
Bijeljina |
Bosnia and Herzegovina |
|
|
Vasilije |
| Autonomous Archdiocese |
See |
Country |
Cathedral |
Founded |
Archbishop |
Ohrid (Archbishop of Ohrid and Metropolitan of Skoplje) |
Ohrid |
Republic of Macedonia |
|
2002 |
Jovan |
Dioceses are further divided into
episcopal deaneries, each consisting of several
church congregations and
parishes. Church congregations consist of one or more parishes. A parish is the smallest Church unit - a communion of Orthodox faithful congregating at the
Holy Eucharist with the parish priest at their head.
Holy Assembly of Bishops
The Holy assembly of Bishops is consisted of the Patriarch, the Metropolitans, Bishops, and
Vicar Bishops.
Vicar Bishops
Vicar Bishop of Hvostno Atanasije
Vicar Bishop of Jegar Porfirije
Vicar Bishop of Lipljan Teodosije
Vicar Bishop of Dioclea Jovan
Vicar Bishop of Toplica Antonije
Architecture of Churches
Wooden Church
The original style of Serbian Orthodox Church was the church built out of wood. These churches were typically found in poorer villages where it was too expensive to build a church out of stone.
Serbo-Byzantine Style
This is the typical style of churches built. This style of church architecture was developed in the late 13th century combining Byzantine and Raskan influences to form a new church style.
By the end of 13th and in the first half of 14th century the Serbian state enlarged over Macedonia, Epirus and Thessaly up to the Aegean Sea. On these new territories Serbian art was even more influenced by the Byzantine art tradition.
Gračanica, which was entirely rebuilt by King Milutin in 1321, is the most beautiful monument of Serbian architecture from the 14th century. The church of this monastery is an example of a construction that achieved the highest degree of architecture not only in the Byzantine form but in the creation of an original and freestyle exceeding its models. The wall creation in steps is one of the basic characteristics of this temple. The Kings's Church in Studenica, characterized as an ideal church, was built in the first decades of the 14th century.
By the end of the third decade of the 14th century the Pec Patriarchate had finally been shaped. The exterior of the Patriarchate is a vision of shapes characteristic of contemporary Serbian architecture. On the major part of the outer walls paint decoration was used instead of stone relief and brick and stone decoration.
A typical Serbo-Byzantine church has a rectangular foundation, with a major dome in the center with smaller domes around the center one. The inside of the church is covered with frescos that illustrate various biblical stories and portrays Serbian saints.
Western Influences
During the 17th Century many of the Serbian Orthodox Churches that were built in Belgrade took all the characteristics of baroque churches built in the Austrian occupied regions where Serbs lived. The churches usually had a bell tower, and a single nave building with the iconostasis inside the church covered with Renaissance-style paintings. These churches can be found in Belgrade, which was occupied by the Austrian Empire from 1717 to 1738, and on the border with Austrian (later Austro-Hungarian empire) across the Sava and Danube rivers from 1804 when Serbian statehood was re-established.
Icons
Icons are replete with symbolism meant to convey far more meaning than simply the identity of the person depicted, and it's for this reason that Orthodox iconography has become an exacting science of copying older icons rather than an opportunity for artistic expression. The Orthodox believe that the first icons of Christ and the Virgin Mary were painted by Luke the Evangelist. Orthodox regard their depiction of Christ as accurate, with Christ having brown semi-curly hair, brown eyes, and Semitic features (the Virgin Mary being similar). The personal, idiosyncratic and creative traditions of Western European religious art are largely lacking in Orthodox iconography before the 17th century, when Russian icon painting was strongly influenced by religious paintings and engravings from both Protestant and Catholic Europe. Greek icon painting also began to take on a strong romantic western influence for a period and the difference between some Orthodox icons and western religious art began to vanish. More recently there has been a strong trend of returning to the more traditional and symbolic representations.
Icons are not considered by the Orthodox to be "graven images" or idols, and prohibitions against three-dimensional statuary are still in place, though before the crisis of Iconoclasm there was an Eastern Christian tradition of statuary, though not as major as in the West. Biblical prohibitions against material depictions have been altered by Christ (as God) taking on material form. Also, it isn't the wood or paint that are venerated, but rather God is through the individual (or event) portrayed.
Large icons can be found adorning the walls of churches and often cover the inside structure completely. Orthodox homes often likewise have icons hanging on the wall, usually together on an eastern facing wall, and in a central location where the family can pray together.
Icons are often illuminated with a candle or oil lamp. (Beeswax for candles and olive oil for lamps are preferred because they're natural and burn cleanly.) Besides the practical purpose of making icons visible in an otherwise dark church, both candles and oil lamps symbolize the Light of the World which is Christ.
Tales of miraculous icons that moved, spoke, cried, bled, or gushed fragrant myrrh are not uncommon, though it has always been considered that the message of such an event was for the immediate faithful involved and therefore doesn't usually attract crowds. Some miraculous icons whose reputations span long periods of time nevertheless become objects of pilgrimage along with the places where they're kept.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Serbian Orthodox'.
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