ROMSO Cyprus Knowledge Base
"The Romanian Orthodox Church"
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The Romanian Orthodox Church is one of the utopian churches of Orthodox Christianity. This church consists of most of the country’s Romanian residents and the world’s Romanian dispersion, and also believe in minorities such as some of them.
According to the 2011 census, 16,307,004 86.45% of the Romanian population will be incorporated into the Romanian Orthodox Church. Outside of Romania, it has many faiths in the Republic of Moldova, Ukraine, Hungary, Serbia, France, Italy, Spain, Germany, England, the United States, Canada, and Australia and others.
In Moldova, the Republic of Moldova was found in a 2000 survey that 21.5% of the population and a quarter of the Christian population (about 720,000), declared that they belonged to the Mitropolia of Serbia – the removal of the Romanian Orthodox Church. According to the total length of Orthodox Christians who belong to the Romanian Orthodox Church in the world (in the above mentioned countries) reaches 20 million people.
The number of believers is the second among the Orthodox churches after the Russian Orthodox Church.
The name of the Orthodox Church originated in the Greek language (ορθο = Ottawa, that is true, true, and δοξα = Duxa, i.e. learning, knowledge), i.e. the right study.
The language of the liturgy (the prayer and religious ceremonies) in the Romanian Orthodox Church is Romanian, and outside Romania even in Ukrainian or Serbian, rarely have ceremonies in the English, English, or French in the state language that the ceremonies are held in. The Romanian Orthodox Church is considered the seventh place in the chronological order of the establishment of the world’s Orthodox churches. Beginning in 1925, the top of the patriarch church is Bucharest. The Romanian Patriarch bears the title of Archbishop Bucharest, Mitropolit Montania and Dubrovnik, filling up the Bishop of Caseyry in Cappadocia (Ciri, Dukes present in Turkey), the Patriarch of the Romanian Orthodox Church and chair of the Holy Synod in Bucharest.
The Romanian Orthodox Church in Romania is the only utopian Orthodox Church that uses a major liturgical language in the Roman language group beginning in 2007 the Patriarch of the Romanian Orthodox Church is Daniel Chobotia. After the Romanian Revolution (1989), which ousted the Communist dictatorship, the influence of the church in the life of the state returned to take an important place; it had the television channel "Ternittas" for religious programs, radio religious programs. Yes, religious rates (catechism rates) were practiced in schools and its institutions are granted tax exempt.
The Church Organization
The Romanian Orthodox Church is organized within Romania as Patriarchate. The supreme authority of the hierarchical, the kino and dogmatic of the church is its sacred sin. Geographically, the Church is weak for six of the estropolies, 12 archaic and 15 Bishops, with a total of 13,527 district churches and other small churches, in which the Crusaders 14,513 priests and priests serving in 15,218 churches and monasteries. Fans living in other European countries have three estropolitics (complexed from 3 archaic and 6 hypocritical). There is one epic in America and the Romanian languages of Australia and New Zealand. In 2004, there were 15 Orthodox theologians in Romania, with over 10,000 students, including students from Serbia, north of Bukovina and Serbia who enjoyed Romanian scholarships. In 2006, there were 631 monasteries in Romania, where 3,500 monks and 5,000 nuns lived.
Below are the metropolitan details of the Romanian Orthodox Patriarchate in the