Why did orthodox Christians disagree with Catholic Christians?
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Why did orthodox Christians disagree with Catholic Christians?
The Catholic Church believes the pope to be infallible in matters of doctrine. Orthodox believers reject the infallibility of the pope and consider their own patriarchs, too, as human and thus subject to error. In this way, they are similar to Protestants, who also reject any notion of papal primacy.
How do Orthodox and Catholics differ?
The Catholic Church believes the pope to be infallible in matters of doctrine. Orthodox believers reject the infallibility of the pope and consider their own patriarchs, too, as human and thus subject to error. Most Orthodox Churches have both ordained married priests and celibate monastics, so celibacy is an option.
How do Orthodox differ from Protestants?
Main differences: Orthodox Christianity originated in the 11th century and the Protestantism in the 16th century. Orthodox Christians consider Apocrypha as divinely inspired and important- Protestants don’t. Orthodox Christians have the concept of deification and purgatory while the Protestants reject both.
Why is the King James Bible considered the most accurate?
Published in 1611, the King James Bible spread quickly throughout Europe. Because of the wealth of resources devoted to the project, it was the most faithful and scholarly translation to date—not to mention the most accessible.
Why is Orthodox Easter different than Catholic?
Did you know that there are two different dates for the Easter holiday? There is one for the Catholic Church and one for the Orthodox Church. On rare occasions the two dates fall on the same day. The reasoning behind the different dates comes down to the church and the modern day calendar.
Why do Orthodox Christians have a different calendar?
Because the Russian Orthodox Church still observes the Julian calendar. Because the Julian calendar has a leap year in all years divisible by four—without excepting centurial years not divisible by 400, the way the Gregorian calendar does—the discrepancy between the Julian and Gregorian calendar changes periodically.