The pope is the same as a Patriarch.
There were five patriarchs Christianity. They are in Rome, Jerusalem, Antioch, Alexandria, and Constantinople. In the past they were considered first among equals. In other words they were first in the given geographic area they were given.There were different events, that I will not go into, and the Patriarch of Rome (also called the Pope) started to consider himself first among all Patriarch. The other Patriarchs did not accept that and that is the reason the churches separated.
The are some minor religious differences and practices. First of all, the relationship between the Father, Son, and the Holy Spirit. Catholics believe that the Father and the Son can send the Holy Spirit, while Eastern Orthodox claim that only the Father can do it.
Secondly is the use of unleavened bread in communion (bread that does not contain yeast). Catholicism accepts it, Orthodox rejects it.
Thirdly, is the use of Icons and statues of religious figures. Orthodoxy uses more Icons and rejects statues, while Catholicism has the reverse.
Fourth. Orthodoxy allows married men to become priests (but once married they cannot be ordained); they allow up to three divorces.
These are the major one I can think of.
2007-01-01 07:53:12
·
answer #1
·
answered by Steve P 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
I swear this question has already been asked recently...have you looked in "closed answers" for this?
Many of the 'forms' of worship are different - EOC tends to be more ritualized.
The EOC 'calender' is slightly different, their Easter is always more in line with the Jewish Passover festival.
The theological differences are actually fairly small. The Great Scism occured when the legitimacy of the line of Popes was questioned....It was almost more political than religious (as was the English/Anglican split with the RCC).
2007-01-01 07:19:56
·
answer #2
·
answered by harpertara 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
The Roman Catholic Church permitted no dissent whatsoever. Jews and heretics were slaughtered! The Eastern Church permitted differing denominations with differing beliefs and allowed others to live in peace. The Roman Catholic Church killed all heretics until the arrival of Martin Luther in the 16th century.
.
2007-01-01 07:25:44
·
answer #3
·
answered by Hatikvah 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
the two had uncomplicated messages of discarding the complicated dogmas of their make certain's faith and focusing on truthfully being a extra helpful individual. the two had human beings coming after them that re-complexified what they mentioned. regrettably, their similarities are lost on maximum present day Christians who view their own dogma as something that would desire to settle for his or her timeless loyalty, as detrimental to a reasoned set of regulations that would desire to make experience (and that i basically factor to Christians as a results of fact Buddhists do not tend to assert issues like "there isn't any similarity").
2016-10-19 07:58:28
·
answer #4
·
answered by ? 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
Orthodox have "mitropolit", one for each country
for theological differences, check wikipedia.org or religionfacts.com
2007-01-01 07:07:57
·
answer #5
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋