Orthodox Aroman Church in Ebrary

Revision as of 03:49, 11 October 2021 by Ebrary (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Orthodox Aroman Church in Ebrary
Ecclesia Aroman Orthodoxe de Ebraria
ClassificationAroman
PolityEpiscopal
PrimateBishop Jon Baran
LanguageEbrarese
LiturgyEbrarian
Origin1939
Separated fromChurch of Ebrary

The Orthodox Aroman Church in Ebrary (Ebrarese: Ecclesia Aroman Orthodoxe de Ebraria), abbreviated EAOE and also known in Ebrary simply as the Orthodox Church, is an autonomous Christian church located in Ebrary. It is headed by the Bishop of Laverna and headquartered in the Church of the Pentecost in Ceres. As an autonomous church and not an autocephalous church, the Bishop of Laverna is confirmed by Patriarch of Europatorion, head of the Aroman Church.

The Aroman church has a long tradition in Ebrary, but its presence was effectively ended after the Amendant Reformation in Ebrary. Most ancient and medieval cathedrals and churches are today used by the Ecclesiastical Amendant Church (formerly the Church of Ebrary), which evolved from an autocephalous Christian church into a state church and then again into an independent, Amendant denomination. However, priests and churchgoers with sympathies to the Orthodox (sic) tradition persisted in the church for centuries, under the moniker Ebraro-Orthodox. The Ebraro-Orthodox parishes and priests continued to use various forms of Aroman liturgy, and the practice was tolerated to varying degrees by the church hierarchy. Due to this history, the EAOE is sometimes referred to as the Ebraro-Orthodox Church

During the Republic of Ebrary, the Church of Ebrary became disestablished and there was, for the first time in centuries, no established church in the country. In 1939, the Ebraro-Orthodox elements of the church and the more traditionally Amendant elements voted to separate the majority of Ebraro-Orthodox dominated parishes and the historic Church of the Pentecost in Ceres from the main Church of Ebrary to form the new Orthodox Aroman church. The separation was largely amicable due to the differences between the two factions in the church, and separation was arguably postponed for decades due to the fact the Church of Ebrary was under the control of the government which opposed such a move.

Liturgy

The liturgy of the EAOE is an adaptation of the old Aroman Rite used by the Christian church in Ebrary before the Amendant Reformation. After the Reformation, the liturgy was informally maintained for centuries until it was codified by a council of Ebraro-Orthodox ministers in the Church of Ebrary during the 19th century, which created an Ebraro-Orthodox form of the main Ebraricist liturgy. In 1950, the EOE 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 Church of Ebrary. This liturgy, outlined in the "Ebraro-Orthodox Prayer Guide", has continued to be used up to the current year with only minor revisions and is known as the Ebrarian Rite.