Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem

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A diagram of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre based on a german documentary, claimed to be the site of Calvary and the Tomb of Jesus.
A diagram of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre based on a german documentary, claimed to be the site of Calvary and the Tomb of Jesus.
Reenacting the Stations of the Cross in Jerusalem on the Via Dolorosa from the Lions' Gate to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.
Reenacting the Stations of the Cross in Jerusalem on the Via Dolorosa from the Lions' Gate to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.

The Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem is the head bishop of the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Jerusalem, ranking fourth of nine Patriarchs in the Eastern Orthodox Church.

Until 451, Jerusalem was a Christian bishopric, but it was recognized as a patriarchate by the Council of Chalcedon that year, see also Pentarchy. The first bishop was James the Just, martyred ca 62. After the Arab conquest in the 7th century, Muslims recognized Jerusalem as the seat of Christianity and the Patriarch as its leader. In 1099 the Crusaders appointed a Latin Patriarch instead of the Greek Patriarch, who lived in Constantinople until 1187. Today the headquarters of the patriarchate is the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem. It is there that the Patriarchs have obtained the miraculous Holy Fire for more than a millennium.

The majority of the Orthodox faithful in the area under the Patriarch of Jerusalem's jurisdiction are Palestinian Arabs, though there are many Russians, Romanians, and Georgians living there as well. The Patriarchate's hierarchy is dominated by Greeks, which in effect excludes the Arab-speaking majority of the region's Orthodox faithful from the Church's upper ranks; this is a point of endless contention between Greeks in the Patriarchate, who are backed by the Greek government in this regard, and the Palestinians, many of whom have left the Church for U.S.-influenced Evangelical churches or other faiths in recent decades.

The Patriarchate was recently the venue for a significant controversy. His Beatitude Patriarch Irenaios, elected in 2001, was deposed, on decisions of the Holy Synod of Jerusalem, in the aftermath of a scandal involving the sale of church land in East Jerusalem to Israeli developers; the move enraged many Orthodox Palestinians, since the land was in an area that most Palestinians hope will someday become part of a Palestinian state. On May 24, 2005 a special Pan-Orthodox Synod was convened in Constantinople (İstanbul) to review the decisions of the Holy Synod of Jerusalem. The Pan-Orthodox Synod under the presidency of the Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, voted overwhelmingly to confirm the decision of the Brotherhood of the Holy Sepulcher and to strike Irenaios' name from the diptychs, and on May 30, Jerusalem's Holy Synod chose Metropolitan Cornelius of Petra to serve as locum tenens pending the election of a replacement for Irenaios. On August 22, 2005, the Holy Synod of the Church of Jerusalem unanimously elected Theophilus, the former Archbishop of Tabor, as the 141st Patriarch of Jerusalem.

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[edit] Bishops of Jerusalem

According to Eusebius' History of the Church Book IV, chapter V, verses 3-4: "But since the bishops of the circumcision ceased at this time [after Bar Kokhba's revolt ], it is proper to give here a list of their names from the beginning. The first, then, was James, the so-called brother of the Lord; the second, Symeon; the third, Justus; the fourth, Zacchaeus; the fifth, Tobias; the sixth, Benjamin; the seventh, John; the eighth, Matthias; the ninth, Philip; the tenth, Seneca; the eleventh, Justus; the twelfth, Levi; the thirteenth, Ephres; the fourteenth, Joseph; and finally, the fifteenth, Judas. These are the bishops of Jerusalem that lived between the age of the apostles and the time referred to, all of them belonging to the circumcision." See also Jewish Christianity.

[edit] Bishops of Aelia Capitolina

See also: Aelia Capitolina
  • Marcus (135-???)
  • Cassianus (???-???)
  • Poplius (???-???)
  • Maximus I (???-???)
  • Julian I (???-???)
  • Gaius I (???-???)
  • Symmachus (???)
  • Gaius II (???-162)
  • Julian II (162-???)
  • Capion (???-???)
  • Maximus II (???-???)
  • Antoninus (???-???)
  • Valens (???-???)
  • Dolichianus (???-185)
  • Narcissus (185-???)
  • Dius (???-???)
  • Germanion (???-???)
  • Gordius (???-211)
  • Narcissus (restored) (???-231)
  • Alexander (231-249)
  • Mazabanis (249-260)
  • Imeneus (260-276)
  • Zamudas (276-283)
  • Ermon (283-314)
  • Macarius I (314-333), since 325 Bishop of Jerusalem

[edit] Bishops of Jerusalem

[edit] Patriarchs of Jerusalem

[edit] See also

[edit] External links