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MACEDONIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH
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MACEDONIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH
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The Macedonian people has re-established its church as one of the fundamental features of its national identity on the foundations of the Archbishopric of Ohrid. This autocephalous church has existed, first at Prespa and then in Ohrid, since the time of Czar Samuil and his descendants as the spiritual institution of that empire. It was legally strengthened by the Byzantine Emperor Basil II as an ecumenical Christian institution immediately after his defeat of Samuil's state in 1018. The administrative, economic and cultural measures then instituted by Byzantium were adapted to the local traditions. A leader of Slav Macedonian origin was retained at the head of the Archbishopric. At the time when the archiepiscopal leadership considered that the ecumenical Patriarchate in Nicaea had, at the beginning of the 13th century, infringed the autocephalous rights of the Archbishopric of Ohrid there was a fiery reaction from its Archbishop, Demetrius Homatian, who in large measure laid down the ecclesiastical and canonical aims of his ecclesiastical institution which would later be the canon law foundation for other archbishoprics as well. |
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In the 13th century at the time of the Bulgarian Emperor Ivan Asen II, in addition to the church at Trnovo, the older Ohrid Church was also an object of respect. This was also the case under the rule of the Serbian sovereign, Stefan Dushan: in addition to his church at Pec, he treated the Archbishopric of Ohrid with equal respect. After the proclamation of the Serbian Patriarchate in 1346 and its expulsion from the ecumenical body, the Patriarchate in Constantinople, the archbishops of Ohrid were engaged in a process of reconciliation for the return of Serbia into the orthodox community. With the fall of Ohrid under Ottoman rule at the close of the 14th century the Archbishopric of Ohrid was legalized before the Turkish authorities |
| St. Naum |
| and strengthened its rights, as had the Patriarchate of Constantinople after 1453, and for a period in the 15th century both the territory of Serbia and a part of Bulgaria came under its ecclesiastical jurisdiction. |
| In the Ottoman state the archbishops of Ohrid, particularly in the 17th and 18th centuries, took on the role of popular leaders in the movement for liberation, carrying on talks, predominantly with Austria, concerning the formation of a state for the captive Christians, primarily the Macedonians. |
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Despite the fact that Orthodox Albanians, Vlachs and Greeks from Epirus came into the Ohrid diocese in the course of the 18th century, all of these were deeply linked to the traditions of the Ohrid Church, guarding its autocephalous nature jealously. In the first half of the 18th century, therefore, virtually an the Lives and Services of the saints of its Church, starting with the Slavonic educators of the 9th and 10th centuries, were published in Macedonian Slavic. In 1767, the financial difficulties of the Archbishopric of Ohrid were used as a pretext and it was discontinued by agreement of the Patriarchate of Constantinople and the Ottoman authorities. This dealt a grievous blow to the centuries-long ecclesiastical and cultural traditions maintained in Macedonia and the neighboring regions. |
| St Climent |
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Throughout the long life of this extremely distinguished institution, lasting nearly eight centuries, the Archbishopric of Ohrid had not lost its autocephalous status, regardless of changes in the political situation under Byzantine, Bulgarian and Serbian rule or during the engthy period of Ottoman Turkish rule. Other peoples and their parts of the Balkans had come under the diocese of the Archbishopric of Ohrid, which was extremely large, up to the 13th century and under Ottoman rule (15th and 16th centuries), but throughout the whole of its existence the Macedonians formed the basic zone of its eparchies and the main body of the faithful. The guardian and patron saint of the Church was the first pupil of Ss. Cyril and Methodius, St. Clement of Ohrid, one of the founders of Slavonic culture and literacy. His work was celebrated by distinguished Greek archbishops (e.g. Theophilact and Homatian), who respected the traditions of their flock, during the Byzantine period. The language of this institution of public worship was Slavonic, established by Ss. Cyril, Methodius and Clement and also ancient Greek which, together with Latin, was treated as a language of the entire Christian world. |
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In the 20th century, during the period of the Second World War and the course of the military actions of the struggle for Macedonian statehood, the Macedonians put the question of an autocephalous church. In 1943, when the national liberation movement became a massive uprising and when the first liberated territory was established in the village of Izdeglavje in the Debar district of the Ohrid region, the First Assembly of Macedonian Clergy was held on 21st October and a decision was taken to form an Archpriests' Governership with the aim of its developing into an autocephalous Macedonian church. In October 1944, in the village of Gorno Vranovel in the Veles district, a Preliminary Committee for the organization of church life in Macedonia was formed. The first Church-and-People Assembly was held in Skopje in March 1945, when 300 delegates, all clergyman and laymen from whole of Macedonia declared themselves in favor of the realization of the aims expressed at Izdeglavje for the formation of an autocephalous Macedonian Orthodox Church with Macedonian Archiepriests. On 8th May 1946, only fourteen months after the first Church-and- People Assembly, a new Assembly of the Clergy took place in Skopje as a reaction to the fact that the decisions passed at the first Church-and-People Assembly had met with no understanding at the Holy Synod of the Serbian Orthodox Church.
After a year of negotiations, the Holy Synod of Archpriests of the Serbian Orthodox Church agreed to the secession of the three Macedonian eparchies order to form an independent Macedonian Church and stated that the regulations and the Constitution of the Serbian Orthodox Church ceased to be valid in the Macedonian Church. In accordance with this decision, the Serbian archpriests took part in the consecration of the first Macedonian archpriests The Patriarch German employs the title of Patriarch of Serbia and Macedonia''. Since the Serbian Church did not proclaim the state of affairs that had come to pass, the Holy Synod of the Macedonian Orthodox Church caned its third Church-and-People Assembly on 17th-18th July 1967 in Ohrid and discarded the personal union of the Macedonian and the Serbian Orthodox Churches. The Macedonian Orthodox Church is administered by an assembly and consists of the Eparchies of Skopje, Prespa and Bitola, Debar and Kicevo, Bregalnica, Polog and Kumanovo, Vardar, Strumica, the American and Canadian Eparchy and the Australian Eparchy, while a European Macedonian Eparchy is in the process of formation. In its concern for the faithful beyond their fatherland, the Church endeavors to organize them into Macedonian church districts. The first such district came into being in 1958, immediately after the holding of the second Church-and-People Assembly. Today there are more than forty Macedonian church districts in the U.S.A.. Canada, Australia and Europe in which virtually all the Macedonian emigrants are enrolled. The education, training and renewal of the clergy of the Macedonian Orthodox Church is undertaken through the St. Clement of Ohrid Theological College, founded in 1964 and, since 1377. a Theological Faculty has also been operative. The Constitution of the Republic of Macedonia is clear, and states the following: |
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In the cultural traditions of the Ohrid School, especially in its art, portraits of the first Slavonic educators from the 9th and 10th centuries have been created over a period of a thousand years, and many hundreds of representations of them have been preserved in churches. Macedonia was a center of the iconography of the old Slavonic period right up to the end of the 19th century.
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| It is quite comprehensible that in the 19th century, in the struggle for cultural emancipation in Macedonia, the question of the revival of the Archbishopric of Ohrid was also posed. In the course of their struggle for their own language, the ecclesiastical and educational districts in Macedonia from the mid-19th century onwards sought also the revival of the ecclesiastical institution which had been discontinued in 1767. Starting out from the fact that neither the Bulgarian nor the Serbian authorities had in earlier periods discontinued the Archbishopric of Ohrid, but rather recognized its autocephalous nature, there existed certain suppositions, both legal and ecclesiastical, concerning its revival; but the prevailing political and military conditions and above an the activities of neighboring propaganda rendered this impossible. |
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St. Bogorodica |
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"The freedom of religious confession is guaranteed. The right to express one's faith freely and publicly, individually of with others, is guaranteed." |
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Therefore Macedonian citizens are granted free religious beliefs and activities: they can openly and publicly, individually or in association with others, express their religious faith. The Macedonian Orthodox Church, as well as the other religious communities and groups, are separated from the state and are equal in terms of the legislation. In accordance with this basis, there are more than forty active religious communities in Macedonia which build relations of mutual respect and tolerance. Two-thirds of the population of Macedonia are Orthodox Christians, 30% are Moslems, 0.5% Roman Catholics and 2.8% are of other religious affiliations. The Macedonian Orthodox Church has played an important role in the long struggle of the Macedonian people for the preservation of its national identity, as well as in its education and culture. Its roots are ancient. The Archbishopric of Ohrid was the first autocephalous Slav Church. It was established by St. Clement and St. Naum, outstanding students of the brothers Ss. Cyril and Methodius. In 893 A.D., St. Clement of Ohrid became the first Slav archbishop. Today the Macedonian Orthodox Church continues the traditions of St. Clement's Archbishopric of Ohrid. It is headed by the Archbishop of Ohrid and Macedonia and a Holy Synod of Bishops consisting of six bishops. The number of church eparchies in Macedonia a is the same. |
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The Macedonian Orthodox Church has played an extremely important role in uniting and organizing Macedonian expatriates in Australia, the United States and Canada, and recently also in West European countries. The Australian Eparchy and the Canado-American Eparchy comprise 44 churches and 2 monasteries. The activity of the Macedonian Orthodox Church in foreign countries is of exceptional educational and cultural assistance and of irreplaceable importance for the unity of Macedonians, their better mutual understanding and the preservation of their national traditions and constant concern about their national identity. Together with the Association of Expatriates, the Macedonian Orthodox Church plays decisive role in the maintenance of constant links betwee n the expatriates and their homeland. The activities of the Macedonian Orthodox Church, like those of all religious communities in Macedonia, are financed from its own sources. |
| St Climent Ohridski, Skopje |
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From the funds it has raised among its believers, the Macedonian Orthodox Church has built a large number of churches throughout the world, including the Cathedral of St. Clement of Ohrid in Skopje. Macedonia has about 1,200 churches and 425 mosques. There is a Roman Catholic church in Skopje, and the other religious communities have their own places of worship in the capital and in other towns in the Republic. |
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