Lusitanian Orthodox Church
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lusitanian Catholic Orthodox Church (inPortuguese: Igreja Católica Ortodoxa Lusitana is a Catholic and Orthodox denomination in Portugal.
Contents |
[edit] History
The Lusitanian Catholic Orthodox Church identifies its origins in the original undivided Christian community founded by Jesus for salvation, with its traditions first established by the Twelve Apostles.
Christianity came to Portugal with Saint Peter of Bragra, a disciple of Saint James, who ordered him between years 45 and 60.
The legend says that Saint James, one of the apostles of Christ visited the northwest of the Iberian Peninsula in 44 AD. One his supposed visits was to Serra de Rates, in the current municipality of Póvoa de Varzim. During his visit, the apostle is to have ordained the local Peter of Rates as the first bishop of Braga. It is believed that Saint Peter of Rates was beheaded while converting believers of the Roman religion to the Christian faith.
The first historically recorded bishop of Braga was Paterno, who took part of the Council of Toledo in the year 400. The Metropolita of Braga had spiritual supremacy over the dioceses of Conímbriga, Viseu, Dume, Lamego, Porto, and Egitânia. The South part of Portugal was under the Bishop of Evora and Lisbon.
In the year 1054, the Bishop of Rome, claiming authority over all West, and adding the "Filioque" in the Nicene Creed, severed ties with Universal Christianity. In some places in the West, such as in Southern Italy, many bishops resisted but were persecuted. Orthodox Christianity continued in the East, while the West developed into many new doctrines and culminated in the schism with Protestantism.
In the XIX century many priests dissent from the Roman Catholic Church in Portugal. Some of them joined the Lusitanian Catholic Evangelical Church, others remained independent Catholics, celebrating mass underground. In the 1980's some of these priests received episcopal ordination through Rapoza's line and the Old Calendarist Greek Orthodox Church and rebuilt the Orthodox Catholicism in Portugal.
[edit] Doctrine
The Lusitanian Orthodox Church accepts the seven ecumenical councils. The Lusitanian Orthodox Church keeps the original Nicene Creed, accepted universally by the Church, East and West, during the first millennium without the addition of Filioque.
The Holy Communion is celebrated with both wine and bread, with the anamnesis, the Words of Institution and the Epiclesis of the Holy Spirit is a "consecrating formula".
The Lusitanian Orthodox Church believes the Original Sin has consequences in death, concupiscence and tendency toward sin in human nature, but not inheritting guilty for Adam's faults.
The Lusitanian Orthodox Church has always believed that the Mother of God (Theodokos) is the highest person above all humanity and the angels owing to her role as Mother of the Word Incarnate. But does not believe in her Immaculate Conception nor Assumption into Heaven.
The Lusitanian Orthodox Church believes the Holy Spirit act in the humanity (Theosis) through the Incarnation, Death and Resurrection of our Lord, God and Saviour Jesus Christ wo sends the Comforter. This dynamic view of salvation is characteristic of the Orthodox Church, while in the Roman Catholicism, Christ's death on the Cross was offended by the sins of humanity. In Eastern Icons, the halo is always part of the body of the saint. In Western saints' pictures, the halo is often disconnected from the body and is above the head - this illustrates different views of salvation by both Churches.
The Lusitanian Orthodox Church rejects the idea of a purgatory.
[edit] Liturgy
It follows the ancient Braga Rite celebrated in Portuguese, with churches having iconostasis, facing East, the icons are painted rather than sculped.
In the Orthodox Liturgy, the bread of the Eucharist is leavened, and every member take part of the wine and the bread.
Children are baptized by immersion.
It follows the Julian calendar of the Liturgic Year.
[edit] Hierarchy
The Lusitanian Orthodox Church is headed by the Metropolitan Archebishop of Braga; aided by the titular bishops of Conímbriga, Viseu, Dume, Lamego, Evora, and Egitânia. The Portuguese territory is divided in three eparchies: the Eparchy of Lisbon, covering the south of Portugal, Azores, and Madeira; the Eparchy of Porto, serving the North of Portugal and Gallicia; and the Metropolitan Eparchy, that besides spiritual oversee of the whole church take care of expatriate parishes and missions in London, Brussels, Lille, Paris, Geneve, Cambridge, Mass. Sao Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Mississauga, Canada, and Capetown, South Africa.
The presbyters and deacons may marry before ordination.
There is one order of monastic life, the Ordem de Sao Basilio, with eight monks and five nuns.
There are about 2,000 members and sympathizers, mostly in the Northern part of Portugal.
The LOC has full communion with the Italo-Greek Orthodox Church, and the Milanese Apostolic Catholic Church.