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  1. Any Eastern Orthodox church building that has a capacity of 3,000 people or more, can be added to this page. Entries are included even if a premises otherwise meeting the criterion currently does not function as a church. For example, the Hagia Sophia in Turkey is included – it was originally built as a church but was later converted into a ...

  2. Emanation in the Eastern Orthodox Church. Emanation (literally "dripping") is a belief, found in Neoplatonism, that the cause of certain beings or states of being consists of an overflow from the essence of God or other higher spiritual beings, as opposed to a special act [vague] of creation. This overflow is usually conceived in a non-temporal ...

  3. Eastern Orthodox. Sui iuris church. Autonomous church of Eastern Orthodoxy under the omophorion of the Russian Orthodox Church. Language. Russian, Thai and English. Website. www .orthodox .or .th. Eastern Orthodox Christianity in Thailand has been represented since 1999 by the Representative Office of the Russian Orthodox Church, including the ...

  4. Saint Sophia Basilica Church (5th–6th century), Nesebar. The Bulgarian Orthodox Church has its origin in the flourishing Christian communities and churches set up in the Southeast Europe as early as the first centuries of the Christian era. Christianity was brought to Thracian lands by the apostles Paul and Andrew in the 1st century AD, when ...

  5. The Orthodox Church of the Czech Lands and Slovakia ( Czech: Pravoslavná církev v Českých zemích a na Slovensku; Slovak: Pravoslávna cirkev v českých krajinách a na Slovensku) is a self-governing body of the Eastern Orthodox Church that territorially covers the countries of the Czech Republic and Slovakia.

  6. Cyril and Methodius Prague, Czechia. Marriage in the Eastern Orthodox Church is a holy mystery (sacrament) in the Eastern Orthodox Church in which a priest officiates a marriage between a man and a woman. The typical Byzantine Rite liturgy for marriage is called the Mystery of Crowning, where the couple is crowned.

  7. Here is an example of false "strictness:” "spiritual teachers" who claim that the Russian Church has been wrong in approving mixed marriages, and that it is better for spouses to live in sin, if one of them is not Orthodox, in or outside a secular marriage, than to enter into a "mixed marriage" as permitted by the Russian Church: since in their view a mixed marriage would be unacceptable.