Ebrarian Orthodox Catholic Church: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
Line 87: Line 87:
''See also: [[wikipedia:Western_Rite_Orthodoxy|Western Rite Orthodoxy]]''
''See also: [[wikipedia:Western_Rite_Orthodoxy|Western Rite Orthodoxy]]''


The liturgy of the ECOE is a version of the [[Ebrarian liturgical rites|Ebrarian Rite]], an adaptation of the Aroman-style liturgy used by the Orthodox Christian church in Ebrary before the [[Amendant|Amendant Reformation]]. After the Reformation, the liturgy was informally maintained for centuries until it was codified by a council of Adherentes Antiquate scholars in the Church of Ebrary during the 18th century, which created an Orthodox-aligned form of Christian liturgy. This was codified in the [[Adherentes Antiquate|''Prayer Guide of the Old-Fashioned Adherents'']]. In 1963, the ECOE published an updated version of the liturgy which attempted to bring the liturgy of the church back in line with mainstream Orthodoxy while simultaneously preserving the Ebrarian character inherited from the liturgy of the Adherentes Antiquate. This liturgy, outlined in the "Ebrarian Orthodox Prayerbook", has continued to be used up to the current year with only minor revisions and is known as the Ebrarian Rite. Service is generally conducted in Ebrarese, but Laimiaic and Fragran are permitted in exceptional circumstances.
The liturgy of the ECOE is a version of the [[Ebrarian liturgical rites|Ebrarian Rite]], an adaptation of the Aroman-style liturgy used by the Orthodox Christian church in Ebrary before the [[Ebrarian Reformation]]. After the Reformation, the liturgy was informally maintained for centuries until it was codified by a council of Adherentes Antiquate scholars in the Church of Ebrary during the 18th century, which created an Orthodox-aligned form of Christian liturgy. This was codified in the [[Adherentes Antiquate|''Prayer Guide of the Old-Fashioned Adherents'']]. In 1963, the ECOE published an updated version of the liturgy which attempted to bring the liturgy of the church back in line with mainstream Orthodoxy while simultaneously preserving the Ebrarian character inherited from the liturgy of the Adherentes Antiquate. This liturgy, outlined in the "Ebrarian Orthodox Prayerbook", has continued to be used up to the current year with only minor revisions and is known as the Ebrarian Rite. Service is generally conducted in Ebrarese, but Laimiaic and Fragran are permitted in exceptional circumstances.

Revision as of 16:53, 18 July 2022

Ebrarian Orthodox Catholic Church
Ecclesia Catholic Orthodoxe Ebrarian
Urtedo Cathedral
Urtedo Cathedral
AbbreviationECOE
OrientationOrthodox
ScriptureBible
PolityEpiscopal
PrimateJohn Pius
Metropolitan of Urtedo, Archbishop of All Ebrary
LanguageEbrarese, Fragran, Laimiaic
LiturgyEbrarian
Origin1940
Separated fromChurch of Ebrary

The Ebrarian Orthodox Catholic Church, abbreviated ECOE and also known simply as the Ebrarian Orthodox Church, is an autocephalous Orthodox Christian church located in Ebrary. The ECOE is consists of parishes, missions, communities, monasteries and institutions in Ebrary.

The ECOE was formed by the Eccetista, or iconodulist, faction of the Adherentes Antiquate in an amicable split from the Church of Ebrary in 1940. Due to this history, members of the ECOE are sometimes still called Eccetistas and the church is occasionally referred to as the Eccetist Church.

Theology

Main article: Orthodox theology

Liturgy

See also: Western Rite Orthodoxy

The liturgy of the ECOE is a version of the Ebrarian Rite, an adaptation of the Aroman-style liturgy used by the Orthodox Christian church in Ebrary before the Ebrarian Reformation. After the Reformation, the liturgy was informally maintained for centuries until it was codified by a council of Adherentes Antiquate scholars in the Church of Ebrary during the 18th century, which created an Orthodox-aligned form of Christian liturgy. This was codified in the Prayer Guide of the Old-Fashioned Adherents. In 1963, the ECOE published an updated version of the liturgy which attempted to bring the liturgy of the church back in line with mainstream Orthodoxy while simultaneously preserving the Ebrarian character inherited from the liturgy of the Adherentes Antiquate. This liturgy, outlined in the "Ebrarian Orthodox Prayerbook", has continued to be used up to the current year with only minor revisions and is known as the Ebrarian Rite. Service is generally conducted in Ebrarese, but Laimiaic and Fragran are permitted in exceptional circumstances.