Archbishop Jovan (John) VI of Ohrid

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Part of the series on
Eastern Christianity

Eastern Christianity Portal

History
Byzantine Empire
Crusades
Ecumenical council
Baptism of Bulgaria
Baptism of Kiev
East-West Schism
By region
Asian - Copts
Eastern Orthodox - Georgian - Ukrainian

Traditions
Oriental Orthodoxy
Coptic Orthodox Church
Armenian Apostolic Church
Syriac Christianity
Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo Church
Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church
Assyrian Church of the East
Eastern Orthodox Church
Eastern Catholic Churches

Liturgy and Worship
Sign of the cross
Divine Liturgy
Iconography
Asceticism
Omophorion

Theology
Hesychasm - Icon
Apophaticism - Filioque clause
Miaphysitism - Monophysitism
Nestorianism - Theosis - Theoria
Phronema - Philokalia
Praxis - Theotokos
Hypostasis - Ousia
Essence-Energies distinction
Metousiosis

This box: view  talk  edit

Archbishop Jovan (John) VI (Macedonian: Архиепископ Јован Вранишковски) (born as Zoran Vraniškovski on 28 February 1966 in Bitola, Republic of Macedonia) is the head of the Orthodox Ohrid Archbishopric. He studied at the Faculty of Civil Engineering in Skopje in 1990 and enrolled the Faculty of Theology in Belgrade the same year (graduated in June, 1995) when he started his master’s studies. He is now working on his doctoral dissertation: "The Unity of the Church and the Contemporary Ecclesiological Problems."

Vraniskovski became a monk in February 1998 and in July 1998 was promoted into a bishop.

In March 2000, he was elected the Bishop of Veles Eparchy. As the negotiations between the Serbian Orthodox Church and the unrecognised Macedonian Orthodox Church suspended (the latter declared itself autocephalous in 1967 with the endorsement of the then communist authorities), Archbishop Jovan is the head of the only Canonical Orthodox Church in Macedonian; the Orthodox Ohrid Archbishopric. Archbishop Jovan suffers political prosecution from the authorities. He was jailed for 18 months for misuse of church funds [1]. He was on trial for embezzling 325,000 euros of funds from the Macedonian Orthodox Church, but declared innocent.

The Macedonian State Religion Commission denies the Orthodox Ohrid Archbishopric registration as a religious group, stating that only one group may be registered for each confession and that the name was not sufficiently distinct from that of the state Macedonian Orthodox Church, which is a position completely at odds with world Orthodoxy.

[edit] External links