2018 Moscow–Constantinople schism | Wikipedia audio article
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2018 Moscow–Constantinople schism
00:03:13 1 Background 00:08:39 1.1 Russkiy Mir vs Romiosyne 00:09:10 1.1.1 Russkiy Mir 00:09:58 1.1.2 Romiosyne 00:10:32 1.2 1996 schism over Estonia 00:11:51 2 Deterioration of Moscow–Constantinople relations 00:12:31 2.1 Three Orthodox churches in Ukraine 00:15:28 2.2 Ecumenical Patriarchate and the ecclesiastical situation in Ukraine 00:19:31 3 Autocephaly of the Orthodox Church in Ukraine 00:19:42 3.1 June 2016 request of autocephaly 00:21:01 3.2 April 2018 request of autocephaly 00:26:39 3.3 Ecumenical Patriarch's legates in Ukraine and reactions of the Russian Orthodox Church 00:29:30 3.4 September 2018: Russian Orthodox synod's retaliatory measures and the aftermath 00:32:39 3.5 11 October 2018 communiqué of the synod of the Ecumenical Patriarchate 00:37:13 3.6 29 November 2018 communiqué of the synod of the Ecumenical Patriarchate 00:39:36 4 Break of communion with the Ecumenical Patriarchate by the Russian Orthodox Church 00:40:36 4.1 Declarations by the Russian Orthodox Church 00:50:35 4.2 Declarations by the Ecumenical Patriarchate 00:51:00 5 Events in Ukraine 00:51:09 5.1 Transfer of St Andrew's church 00:53:27 5.2 Cancellation of the transfer of the Pochayiv Lavra 00:55:10 5.3 Planned unification council 01:05:19 5.3.1 Convocation of the council 01:08:03 5.3.2 Disagreement with the UOC-KP 01:12:53 5.3.3 Unification council 01:14:47 5.3.4 Election of Metropolitan Epiphany 01:15:12 5.4 Ukrainian Supreme Court 01:15:59 5.5 Kerch Strait incident 01:16:40 6 Reactions 01:16:49 6.1 International community 01:18:50 6.2 Responses from other autocephalous Eastern Orthodox churches 01:19:02 6.2.1 Church of Cyprus 01:19:57 6.2.2 Greek Orthodox Church of Alexandria and the Polish Orthodox Church 01:21:47 6.2.3 Serbian Orthodox Church and the Greek Orthodox Church of Antioch 01:24:13 6.2.4 Georgian Orthodox Church 01:25:32 6.2.5 Romanian Orthodox Church 01:26:58 6.2.6 Albanian Orthodox Church 01:28:59 6.2.7 Orthodox Church of the Czech Lands and Slovakia 01:29:59 6.2.8 Other Orthodox churches 01:30:43 6.3 Responses from churches under the jurisdiction of the Russian Orthodox Church 01:30:56 6.3.1 Belarusian Orthodox Church 01:32:05 6.3.2 Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia 01:33:58 6.3.3 Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) 01:37:34 6.3.4 Archdiocese of Chersonesus 01:38:25 6.4 Responses from churches under the jurisdiction of the Ecumenical Patriarchate 01:38:37 6.4.1 Archdiocese of Russian Orthodox Churches in Western Europe 01:40:21 6.4.1.1 Defection of the Russian Orthodox Church of the Nativity of Christ 01:42:55 6.4.1.2 Dissolution of the archdiocese 01:46:16 6.4.2 American Carpatho-Russian Orthodox Diocese 01:46:40 6.4.3 Greek Orthodox Metropolis of Germany 01:47:51 7 Canonical issues 01:50:21 7.1 Ecumenical Patriarchate's claims 01:54:39 7.2 Arguments against the Ecumenical Patriarchate's claims 01:57:07 7.3 Possibility of a pan-Orthodox synaxis on the question of Ukraine 02:01:07 8 See also
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SUMMARY
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The Moscow–Constantinople schism, also known as the Orthodox Church schism of 2018, is a schism which began on 15 October 2018 when the Russian Orthodox Church unilaterally severed full communion with the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople. This was done in response to a decision of the synod of the Ecumenical Patriarchate on 11 October 2018 to move towards granting independence (autocephaly) to the orthodox Church of Ukraine, to reestablish the stauropegion of the Ecumenical Patriarch in Kiev, to revoke the legal binding of the letter of 1686 which led to the Russian Orthodox Church establishing jurisdiction over the Ukrainian Church, and to lift the excommunications which affected clergy and faithful of two unrecognized Orthodox churches in Ukraine.Those two churches (the UAOC and the UOC-KP) were competing with the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) and were, and still are, considered schismatics b ...