Russian Church cuts links with Alexandria patriarch for recognizing Ukrainian Church

Russian Church cuts links with Alexandria patriarch for recognizing Ukrainian Church

The Russian Orthodox Church has severed ties with the head of the Eastern Orthodox Patriarchate in Alexandria following the latter's decision to re

Economic confidence reaches 15-month high
Nedret Ersanel: NATO’nun yeni ‘öcü’sü…
مدن فرنسية تشهد احتجاجات ضد خطة لإصلاح نظام التقاعد

The Russian Orthodox Church has severed ties with the head of the Eastern Orthodox Patriarchate in Alexandria following the latter’s decision to recognize Ukraine’s newly independent Orthodox Church.

The Russian Orthodox Church’s Holy Synod ruled late Thursday to cut links with Patriarch Theodore II of Alexandria and All Africa.

It noted, however, that it will remain in communion with those clerics of his church who did not back the decision.

The Holy Synod also decided that its parishes in Africa will be removed from the Patriarchate of Alexandria’s jurisdiction and made directly subordinate to the head of the Russian Orthodox Church, Patriarch Kirill.

The move follows January’s decision by Constantinople Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, who is considered first among equals in the Orthodox Patriarchy, to grant independence to the new Orthodox Church of Ukraine, severing its centuries-long ties with the Russian Orthodox Church.

Many Ukrainians had resented the status of the Moscow-affiliated church. The push for a full-fledged Ukrainian church intensified amid a tug-of-war between the two ex-Soviet neighbors that followed Moscow’s 2014 annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea and its support for a separatist insurgency in eastern Ukraine.

The Constantinople Patriarch’s move has angered the Russian Orthodox Church, which cut ties with the Istanbul-based Patriarchate. The decision to grant independence to Ukraine’s church has split the Orthodox world, with some churches in support and others criticizing the move.

The Eastern Orthodox Church in Africa represents a small fraction of Egypt’s Orthodox Christians, the majority of whom belong to the Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria.

The Coptic church’s followers are believed to constitute 10% of Egypt’s 100 million population. The official spokesman of the Coptic church, Paul Halim, told The Associated Press on Friday that his church never discussed whether to recognize the Ukraine’s church and that the Coptic Pope Tawadros II maintains “excellent relations” with the Russian Orthodox Church.

Several European and Egyptian media outlets had mistakenly reported that the Russian Orthodox Church severed ties with the Coptic Pope.