Former priests of the Russian Orthodox Church. There are more and more dissident priests in the Russian Orthodox Church

The hierarchical principle and structure must be observed in any organization, including the ROC, which has its own church hierarchy. Surely every person attending divine services or otherwise involved in the activities of the church paid attention to the fact that each clergyman has a certain rank and status. This is expressed in a different color of attire, a type of headdress, the presence or absence of jewelry, the right to conduct certain sacred rites.

Hierarchy of clergy in the Russian Orthodox Church

The clergy of the Russian Orthodox Church can be divided into two large groups:

  • white clergy (those who can marry and have children);
  • black clergy (those who renounced worldly life and took monastic orders).

Ranks in the white clergy

Even in the Old Testament scripture it is said that before Christmas, the prophet Moses appointed people whose task was to become an intermediate link in God's communication with people. In the modern church system, this function is performed by white priests. The lower representatives of the white clergy do not have a holy order, they include: an altar boy, a psalmist, a subdeacon.

altar boy- a person who helps the clergyman in conducting services. Also, such people are called sexton. Staying in this rank is a mandatory step before receiving the holy dignity. The person who performs the duties of an altar boy is worldly, that is, he has the right to leave the church if he changes his mind about connecting his life with the service of the Lord.

His responsibilities include:

  • Timely lighting of candles and lamps, control over their safe burning;
  • Preparation of robes of priests;
  • Offer prosphora, Cahors and other attributes of religious rites in time;
  • Light a fire in a censer;
  • Bring a towel to your lips during communion;
  • Maintaining internal order in church premises.

If necessary, the altar boy can ring the bells, read prayers, but he is forbidden to touch the throne and be between the altar and the Royal Doors. The altar boy wears ordinary clothes, a surplice is put on top.

Acolyte(otherwise - a reader) - another representative of the white lower clergy. His main duty: reading prayers and words from Holy Scripture (as a rule, they know 5-6 main chapters from the Gospel), explaining to people the basic postulates of the life of a true Christian. For special merits, he may be ordained a subdeacon. This procedure is carried out by a clergyman of a higher rank. The clerk is allowed to wear a cassock and a skuf.

subdeacon- Father's assistant in conducting services. His attire: surplice and orarion. With the blessing of the bishop (he can also elevate the psalm-reader or altar boy to the rank of subdeacon), the subdeacon receives the right to touch the throne, as well as enter the altar through the Royal Doors. His task is to wash the hands of the priest during divine services and give him the items necessary for the rites, for example, ripida and trikiriya.

Church orders of the Orthodox Church

The above ministers of the church do not have a holy order, and, therefore, are not clergymen. These are ordinary people living in the world, but wanting to get closer to God and church culture. They are accepted to their positions with the blessing of the clergy who are higher in rank.

Diaconal Degree of Churchmen

Deacon- the lowest rank among all churchmen with a holy dignity. His main task is to be an assistant to the priest during worship, they are mainly engaged in reading the gospel. Deacons do not have the right to conduct worship on their own. As a rule, they carry out their service in parish churches. Gradually, this church rank loses its significance, and their representativeness in the church is steadily declining. Deacon ordination (the procedure for ordination to church rank) is carried out by a bishop.

Protodeacon- chief deacon at the temple or church. In the last century, this rank was obtained by a deacon for special merits; at present, 20 years of service in the lower church rank are required. The protodeacon has a characteristic attire - an orarion with the words “Holy! Holy! Holy." As a rule, these are people with a beautiful voice (they sing psalms and sing at divine services).

Pastoral Degree of Ministers

Priest in Greek means "priest". Junior title of the white clergy. The ordination is also carried out by the bishop (bishop). The duties of a priest include:

  • Conducting sacraments, divine services and other religious rites;
  • Conducting communion;
  • Carry the covenants of Orthodoxy to the masses.

A priest does not have the right to consecrate antimensions (clothes of matter made of silk or linen with a particle of the relics of an Orthodox martyr sewn into it, located in the altar on the throne; a necessary attribute for holding a full liturgy) and to conduct the sacraments of ordination of the priesthood. Instead of a klobuk, he wears a kamilavka.

Archpriest- a title awarded to representatives of the white clergy for special merits. The archpriest, as a rule, is the rector of the temple. His attire during worship and church sacraments is an epitrachelion and a riza. An archpriest who has been awarded the right to wear a miter is called a mitre.

Several archpriests can serve in one cathedral. The consecration to the archpriest is carried out by the bishop with the help of chirotesia - the laying on of hands with prayer. Unlike ordination, it is held in the center of the temple, outside the altar.

Protopresbyter- the highest rank for white clergy. Assigned in exceptional cases as an award for special services to the church and society.

The highest church ranks belong to the black clergy, that is, such dignitaries are forbidden to have a family. A representative of the white clergy can also take this path if he renounces worldly life, and his wife supports her husband and becomes a nun.

Also on this path are dignitaries who have become widowers, since they do not have the right to remarry.

The ranks of the black clergy

These are people who have taken monastic vows. They are forbidden to marry and have children. They completely renounce worldly life, giving vows of chastity, obedience and non-possession (voluntary renunciation of wealth).

The lower ranks of the black clergy have many similarities with the corresponding ranks of the white. Hierarchy and responsibilities can be compared using the following table:

Corresponding rank of white clergy The rank of the black clergy A comment
Altar-reader/Church-reader Novice A worldly person who has made the decision to become a monk. By decision of the abbot, he is enrolled in the brethren of the monastery, given a cassock and assigned a probationary period. At the end of it, the novice can decide whether to become a monk or return to lay life.
subdeacon monk (monk) A member of a religious community who has made three monastic vows, leading an ascetic lifestyle in a monastery or on his own in solitude and hermitage. He does not have a holy order, therefore, he cannot perform divine services. Monastic tonsure is performed by the abbot.
Deacon Hierodeacon Monk in the rank of deacon.
Protodeacon Archdeacon Senior deacon in the black clergy. In the Russian Orthodox Church, an archdeacon serving under a patriarch is called a patriarchal archdeacon and belongs to the white clergy. In large monasteries, the chief deacon also holds the rank of archdeacon.
Priest Hieromonk A monk who has the rank of a priest. You can become a hieromonk after the ordination procedure, and white priests - through monastic vows.
Archpriest Initially - the abbot of an Orthodox monastery. In the modern Russian Orthodox Church, the rank of hegumen is given as a reward for a hieromonk. Often the rank is not connected with the management of the monastery. The consecration to the abbot is made by the bishop.
Protopresbyter Archimandrite One of the highest monastic ranks in the Orthodox Church. The conferral of dignity takes place through chirothesia. The rank of archimandrite is associated with administrative management and monastic superiors.

Episcopal degree of clergy

Bishop belongs to the category of bishops. In the process of ordination, they received the highest Lord's grace and therefore have the right to conduct any sacred actions, including the ordination of deacons. All bishops have the same rights, the eldest of them is the archbishop (has the same functions as the bishop; raising to the rank is carried out by the patriarch). Only the bishop has the right to bless the service with the antimis.

He wears a red robe and a black hood. The following appeal is accepted to the bishop: "Vladyka" or "Your Eminence."

He is the head of the local church - the diocese. Chief pastor of the district. Elected by the Holy Synod by order of the Patriarch. If necessary, a vicar bishop is appointed to assist the diocesan bishop. Bishops wear a title that includes the name of the cathedral city. A candidate for bishopric must be a member of the black clergy and over 30 years of age.

Metropolitan is the highest title of a bishop. Reports directly to the patriarch. He has a characteristic attire: a blue mantle and a white hood with a cross made of precious stones.

San is given for high services to society and the church, is the oldest, if you start counting from the formation of Orthodox culture.

Performs the same functions as the bishop, differing from him in the advantage of honor. Before the restoration of the patriarchate in 1917, there were only three episcopal sees in Russia, with which the rank of metropolitan was usually associated: St. Petersburg, Kiev and Moscow. There are currently over 30 metropolitans in the Russian Orthodox Church.

Patriarch- the highest rank of the Orthodox Church, the chief priest of the country. Official representative of the ROC. From the Greek patriarch is translated as "the power of the father." He is elected at the Bishops' Council, to which the patriarch reports. This is a life-long dignity, the deposition and excommunication of the person who received it, is possible only in the most exceptional cases. When the place of the patriarch is not occupied (the period between the death of the previous patriarch and the election of a new one), his duties are temporarily performed by the appointed locum tenens.

He has the primacy of honor among all the bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church. Carries out the management of the church together with the Holy Synod. Contacts with representatives of the Catholic Church and the highest dignitaries of other faiths, as well as with state authorities. Issues decrees on the election and appointment of bishops, directs the institutions of the Synod. Accepts complaints against bishops, giving them a move, rewards clerics and laity with church awards.

A candidate for the patriarchal throne must be a bishop of the Russian Orthodox Church, have a higher theological education, be at least 40 years of age, and enjoy a good reputation and the trust of the church and people.

The Russian Orthodox Church (ROC) has about 40,000 priests. About 20 thousand of them serve in Russia. This means that since the collapse of the USSR, the number of clergy has more than tripled. Who are all these people?

To answer this question, I did a little - who serve in three typical Russian dioceses (Tver, Ufa and Kurgan). It turned out that the priests for the most part are middle-aged people: 69% are now between the ages of 37 and 60, and another 13% are over 60. They are well educated - almost 40% graduated from secular universities, often in Moscow and St. Petersburg. Ironically, this share in the clergy is about twice as high as in the episcopate, which is put in charge of it. But, as you might guess, people with secondary and incomplete secondary education (school, vocational school or technical school) prevail - more than 60% of them. As a rule, they received additional education in a seminary or an Orthodox university. But there are those who managed without it.

The numbers, of course, tell us little about why people choose to make worship their profession. According to my observations, there are three main motives and, accordingly, social types of the clergy.

Requirement executors

Demand executors are the basis of the clergy as a corporation. They came to the church in order to perform the proper rituals without any special ideological "shrinking", to realize their purpose and abilities and receive money for it. As a rule, these are direct and "concrete" people in their words and desires, with a secular education of a low level. Among them there are people from priestly families; from villages that traditionally produce a large number of priests (there are many of them in Western Ukraine and Moldova); from working and peasant families; as well as former "people in uniform" and provincial cultural workers.

Their life path is usually also straight. In Soviet times, these were 8-10 grades of a school, then a vocational school or a technical school, then an urgent one in the army. Here a fork arose: dusty work in a working profession (among the priests of the Ufa Metropolis there are former car mechanics, a tailor, an assistant driver, an electrician, etc.), leaving for a professional army-militia-bandits or serving in a church.

Requirement executors are limited, but active - they build temples, find money, take care of social groups from which they themselves came out - the military, Cossacks, prisoners

The “entrance ticket” to the priesthood in the late 1980s and 1990s did not cost anything - they took all the men who were without external flaws and obvious mental abnormalities. And he gave dignity a lot. In a year, one could become a respected person in the district from a young locksmith. This did not even require a seminary (then four, now five years of study), since there were not enough priests. "Pious tractor drivers" (church meme) were ordained without any "spiritual education."

If you do not pay attention to the homophobic rhetoric of ROC officials, in practice for homosexuals the ROC is a rather open and friendly world. As a rule, rejected by his peers, "not like everyone else" the boy finds a warm welcome in the temple, where children and teenagers are always needed for various obediences. And already from the middle classes of the school he begins to make a career in the temple.

If you do not pay attention to the homophobic rhetoric of officials, for homosexuals, the ROC is a rather open and friendly world

Since there are many “such” in the church environment, the young man joins the system of informal contacts, which quickly determines his place in the sun. As a rule, within a few years, from the beginning of an independent life, he becomes a member of a homogeneous youth male company, hanging out with an influential priest or bishop. The earliest such company that I found dates back to the mid-1960s - critics within the church in a letter to the Moscow Patriarchate directly called it a "harem".

The evidence collected by Kuraev and my interviews and observations suggest that this type of social organization is observed in dozens of dioceses. For young people, the positions of the Bishop's driver, subdeacon, choir director, and singers of the bishops' choir are reserved. The favorite often holds the position of personal secretary or cell attendant of the bishop (batman, with the sanctioned church practice the right to stay overnight in the same room with the boss), less often the secretary of the diocesan administration. At this level, a certain separation occurs - someone, having turned around, leaves the church forever, someone goes to monasteries, others receive an education and become parish priests.

This is especially true for the “violet” - this is how the church calls those “blues” who are so unable to hide their orientation that the diocesan leadership becomes embarrassed in front of sponsors, and it tries to fuse overly outspoken gays to come to the grandmothers who do not understand anything, capable of interpreting any behavior in pious church terminology.

The most sensible and accurate become middle managers in the diocesan administration or go with patrons to make a career - to Moscow, to a new diocese, where at the age of 20 you can officially become a “second person” and “drive” “venerable archpriests” (quote from my interview with one such church official in 1997, now he himself is a “venerable archpriest” in one of the regions of the Volga region).

(32 votes : 3.8 out of 5 )

Y. Ruban

HIERARCHY(Greek ἱεραρχία - literally means "hierarchy") - a term used in Christian theological terminology in a double meaning.

1) "Heavenly hierarchy" - a set of heavenly forces, angels, presented in accordance with their traditional gradation as intermediaries between God and people.

2) “Church hierarchy”, which, according to Pseudo- (who used this term for the first time), is a continuation of the heavenly hierarchy: a three-level sacred order, whose representatives communicate divine grace to the church people through worship. At present, the hierarchy is a “class” of clergy (clergy) divided into three degrees (“rank”) and in a broad sense corresponds to the concept of clergy.

The structure of the modern hierarchical ladder of the Russian Orthodox Church for greater clarity can be represented by the following table:

Hierarchical degrees

White clergy (married or celibate)

Black clergy

(monastic)

III

episcopate

(bishopric)

patriarch

metropolitan

archbishop

bishop

II

Presbytery

(priest)

protopresbyter

archpriest

priest

(presbyter, priest)

archimandrite

hegumen

hieromonk

I

diaconate

protodeacon

deacon

archdeacon

hierodeacon

The lower clerics (clerks) are outside this three-stage structure: subdeacons, readers, singers, altar servers, sexton, church watchmen and others.

Orthodox, Catholics, as well as representatives of the ancient Eastern (“pre-Chalcedonian”) Churches (Armenian, Coptic, Ethiopian, etc.) base their hierarchy on the concept of “apostolic succession”. The latter is understood as a retrospective continuous (!) sequence of a long chain of episcopal consecrations, going back to the apostles themselves, who ordained the first bishops as their sovereign successors. Thus, "apostolic succession" is a concrete ("material") succession of episcopal ordination. Therefore, the bearers and custodians of the internal "apostolic grace" and the external hierarchical authority in the Church are the bishops (hierarchs). Based on this criterion, Protestant confessions and sects, as well as our non-priest Old Believers, do not have a hierarchy, since representatives of their “clergy” (leaders of communities and liturgical meetings) are only elected (appointed) for church-administrative service, but do not have an internal gift of grace communicated in the sacrament of the priesthood and the only one giving the right to perform the sacraments. (A special issue is the legitimacy of the Anglican hierarchy, which has long been debated by theologians.)

Representatives of each of the three degrees of priesthood differ among themselves "by grace" granted to them during the elevation (consecration) to a specific degree, or "impersonal holiness", which is not related to the subjective qualities of the clergyman. The bishop, as the successor of the apostles, has full liturgical and administrative powers within his diocese. (The head of a local Orthodox Church, whether autonomous or autocephalous, is an archbishop, metropolitan or patriarch, is only "first among equals" within the episcopate of his Church). He has the right to perform all the sacraments, including successively raising to the sacred degrees (ordaining) representatives of his clergy and clergy. Only the consecration of a bishop is performed by a "sobor" or at least two other bishops, as determined by the head of the Church and the synod that is under him. A representative of the second degree of the priesthood (priest) has the right to perform all the sacraments, except for any ordination or ordination (even as a reader). His complete dependence on the bishop, who in the Ancient Church was the predominant performer of all the sacraments, is also expressed in the fact that he performs the sacrament of chrismation in the presence of the chrism previously consecrated by the patriarch (replacing the laying on of hands of the bishop on the head of a person), and the Eucharist only in the presence of the antimension received by him from the ruling bishop. The representative of the lowest degree of the hierarchy, the deacon, is only a co-servant and assistant to the bishop or priest, who does not have the right to perform a single sacrament and divine service according to the “priestly order”. In case of emergency, he can only baptize according to the "worldly order"; and he performs his cell (home) prayer rule and divine services of the daily cycle (Hours) according to the Book of Hours or the “worldly” Prayer Book, without priestly exclamations and prayers.

All representatives within the same hierarchical degree are equal to each other “by grace”, which gives them the right to a strictly defined circle of liturgical powers and actions (in this aspect, a newly ordained village priest is no different from a deserving protopresbyter - rector of the main parish church of the Russian Church). The difference is only in administrative seniority and honor. This is emphasized by the ceremony of successive elevation to the ranks of one degree of priesthood (deacon - to protodeacon, hieromonk - to abbot, etc.). It occurs at the Liturgy during the entrance with the Gospel outside the altar, in the middle of the temple, as when rewarding with some element of vestment (gaiter, club, miter), which symbolizes the preservation of the level of “impersonal holiness” given to him during ordination. At the same time, the elevation (consecration) to each of the three degrees of the priesthood takes place only inside the altar, which means the transition of the ordained to a qualitatively new ontological level of liturgical existence.

The history of the development of the hierarchy in the most ancient period of Christianity has not been fully elucidated, only the firm formation of the modern three degrees of priesthood by the 3rd century is indisputable. with the simultaneous disappearance of the early Christian archaic degrees (prophets, didaskalov- "charismatic teachers", etc.). Much longer was the formation of the modern order of "ranks" (ranks, or gradations) within each of the three degrees of the hierarchy. The meaning of their original names, reflecting a specific activity, has changed significantly. So, hegumen (gr. egu?menos- letters. ruling,leading, - of the same root as "hegemon" and "hegemon"!), Initially - the head of a monastic community or monastery, whose power is based on personal authority, a spiritually experienced person, but the same monk as the rest of the "brethren", who does not have any sacred degree. At present, the term "abbot" indicates only a representative of the second rank of the second degree of priesthood. At the same time, he can be the rector of a monastery, a parish church (or an ordinary priest of this church), but also just a staff member of a theological educational institution or an economic (or other) department of the Moscow Patriarchate, whose duties are not directly related to his holy dignity. Therefore, in this case, promotion to the next rank (rank) is simply an increase in rank, an official award “for length of service”, for an anniversary or for another reason (similar to the assignment of another military degree not for participation in military campaigns or maneuvers).

3) In scientific and general speech usage, the word "hierarchy" means:
a) the arrangement of parts or elements of the whole (any construction or a logically complete structure) in descending order - from the highest to the lowest (or vice versa);
b) a strict arrangement of service ranks and ranks in the order of their subordination, both civil and military ("hierarchical ladder"). The latter are typologically the closest to the sacred hierarchy and also a three-degree structure (rank and file - officers - generals).

Lit.: The clergy of the ancient universal Church from the time of the apostles to IXav. M., 1905; Zom R. Lebedev A.P. On the Origin of the Early Christian Hierarchy. Sergiev Posad, 1907; Mirkovich L. Orthodox Liturgy. Prvi opshti deo. Another edition. Beograd, 1965 (in Aserb.); Felmi K. H. Introduction to Modern Orthodox Theology. M., 1999. S. 254-271; Afanasiev N., prot. Holy Spirit. K., 2005; The Study of Liturgy: Revised edition / Ed. by C. Jones, G. Wainwright, E. Yarnold S. J., P. Bradshaw. – 2nd ed. London - New York, 1993 (Chap. IV: Ordination. P. 339-398).

BISHOP

ARCHIER (gr. archiereus) - in pagan religions - "high priest" (this is the literal meaning of this term), in Rome - Pontifex maximus; in the Septuagint - the highest representative of the Old Testament priesthood - the high priest (). In the New Testament - the naming of Jesus Christ (), who did not belong to the Aaronic priesthood (see Melchizedek). In the modern Orthodox Greek-Slavic tradition, the generic name for all representatives of the highest degree of hierarchy, or "episcopate" (that is, the bishops proper, archbishops, metropolitans and patriarchs). See Episcopate, Clergy, Hierarchy, Clergy.

DEACON

DEACON, DEACON (gr. diakonos- "servant", "servant") - in the ancient Christian communities - an assistant to the bishop heading the Eucharistic meeting. The first mention of D. - in the messages of St. Paul (and). His closeness to a representative of the highest degree of priesthood was expressed in the fact that the administrative powers of D. (actually - the archdeacon) often placed him above the priest (especially in the West). The church tradition, genetically elevating the modern diaconate to the "seven men" of the book of the Acts of the Apostles (6:2-6, - not named at all here by D.!), is very vulnerable in scientific terms.

At present, D. is a representative of the lower, first degree of the church hierarchy, “a minister of the word of God,” whose liturgical duties consist mainly in loud reading of the Holy Scriptures (“evangelism”), proclaiming on behalf of the praying litanies, and incense of the temple. The church charter provides for his assistance to the priest performing the proskomedia. D. does not have the right to perform a single divine service and even independently put on his liturgical clothes, but must each time ask for this "blessing" of the clergyman. The purely auxiliary liturgical function of D. is emphasized by his elevation to this rank at the Liturgy after the Eucharistic canon (and even at the Liturgy of the Presanctified Gifts, which does not contain the Eucharistic canon). (At the request of the ruling bishop, this can also happen at other times.) He is only a “servant (servant) during the priesthood” or “Levite” (). A priest can do without D. at all (this takes place mainly in poor rural parishes). Liturgical vestments D.: surplice, orarion and handrails. Out-of-service clothing, like that of a priest, is a cassock and a cassock (but without a cross over the cassock worn by the latter). The official address to D., found in the old literature, “Your good news” or “Your blessing” (now not used). The appeal “Your Reverend” can be considered competent only in relation to the monastic D. The everyday appeal is “Father D.” or "father name", or simply by name and patronymic.

The term "D.", without specification ("simply" D.), indicates his belonging to the white clergy. A representative of the same lower rank in the black clergy (monastic D.) is called a “hierodeacon” (lit. “priest deacon”). He has the same vestments as D. from the white clergy; but outside of worship he wears clothes common to all monks. The representative of the second (and last) rank of the deaconate among the white clergy is the “protodeacon” (“first D.”), historically the eldest (in the liturgical aspect) among several D. serving together in a large temple (cathedral). It is distinguished by a "double orarion" and a purple kamilavka (given as a reward). The rank of protodeacon itself is currently a reward, so there can be more than one protodeacon in one cathedral. The first among several hierodeacons (in a monastery) is called an “archdeacon” (“senior D.”). A hierodeacon who constantly serves with a bishop is also usually elevated to the rank of archdeacon. Like the protodeacon, he has a double orarion and a kamilavka (the latter is black); non-liturgical clothes - the same as those of a hierodeacon.

In ancient times, there was an institution of deaconesses ("servants"), whose duties consisted mainly in caring for sick women, in preparing women for baptism, and in serving priests at their baptism "for the sake of propriety." St. (+403) explains in detail the special position of deaconesses in connection with their participation in this sacrament, while decisively excluding them from participation in the Eucharist. But, according to the Byzantine tradition, the deaconesses received a special ordination (similar to the deacon's) and participated in the communion of women; at the same time, they had the right to enter the altar and take St. bowl directly from the throne (!). The revival of the institution of deaconesses in Western Christianity has been observed since the 19th century. In 1911, the first community of deaconesses in Moscow was supposed to be opened. The issue of the revival of this institution was discussed at the Local Council of the Russian Orthodox Church in 1917-18, but, due to the circumstances of the time, no decision was made.

Lit.: Zom R. Church system in the first centuries of Christianity. M., 1906, p. 196-207; Kirill (Gundyaev), archim. To the question of the origin of the diaconate // Theological works. M., 1975. Sat. 13, p. 201-207; IN. Deaconesses in the Orthodox Church. SPb., 1912.

DIACONATE

DIACONATE (DIACONATE) - the lowest degree of the Orthodox church hierarchy, including 1) deacon and protodeacon (representatives of the "white clergy") and 2) hierodeacon and archdeacon (representatives of the "black clergy". See Deacon, Hierarchy.

EPISCOPATH

EPISCOPATH is the collective name of the highest (third) degree of priesthood of the Orthodox church hierarchy. Representatives of E., also collectively referred to as bishops or hierarchs, are currently distributed, in order of administrative seniority, into the following ranks.

Bishop(Greek episkopos - lit. overseer, guardian) - an independent and authorized representative of the "local church" - the diocese headed by him, therefore called the "diocese". His distinctive non-liturgical clothing is the cassock. black hood and staff. Appeal - Your Eminence. A special variety - the so-called. vicar bishop (lat. vicarius- deputy, governor), who is only an assistant to the ruling bishop of a large diocese (metropolis). He is in his direct jurisdiction, executing orders for the affairs of the diocese, and bears the title of one of the cities in its territory. There may be one vicar bishop in a diocese (in the St. Petersburg Metropolis, with the title of "Tikhvinsky") or several (in the Moscow Metropolis).

Archbishop("senior bishop") - a representative of the second rank E. The ruling bishop is usually elevated to this rank for some merit or after a certain time (as a reward). He differs from the bishop only in the presence of a pearl cross sewn on a black klobuk (above the forehead). Appeal - Your Eminence.

Metropolitan(from Greek. meter- "mother" and polis- "city"), in the Christian Roman Empire - the bishop of the metropolis ("mother of cities"), the main city of a region or province (diocese). A metropolitan can also be the head of a Church that does not have the status of a patriarchate (until 1589 the Russian Church was ruled by a metropolitan with the title first of Kiev and then of Moscow). The rank of metropolitan is currently bestowed on a bishop either as a reward (after the rank of archbishop) or in the case of transfer to a cathedra with the status of a metropolia (St. Petersburg, Krutitskaya). A distinctive feature is a white hood with a pearl cross. Appeal - Your Eminence.

Exarch(Greek head, leader) - the name of the church-hierarchical degree, dating from the 4th century. Initially, this title was borne by representatives of only the most prominent metropolises (some later turned into patriarchates), as well as by extraordinary representatives of the patriarchs of Constantinople, who were sent by them to the dioceses on special assignments. In Russia, this title was first adopted in 1700, after the death of Patr. Adrian, locum tenens of the patriarchal throne. The head of the Georgian Church (since 1811) was also called an exarch during the period of its entry into the Russian Orthodox Church. In the 60s - 80s. 20th century some parishes abroad of the Russian Church were united on a territorial basis into the exarchates "Western European", "Central European", "Central and South American". The ruling hierarchs could be in rank below the metropolitan. A special position was occupied by the Metropolitan of Kiev, who bore the title "Patriarchal Exarch of Ukraine". Currently, only the Metropolitan of Minsk (“Patriarchal Exarch of All Belarus”) bears the title of exarch.

Patriarch(lit. "ancestor") - a representative of the highest administrative rank E., - the head, otherwise the primate ("standing in front"), of the Autocephalous Church. A characteristic distinguishing feature is a white headdress with a pearl cross fixed above it. The official title of the head of the Russian Orthodox Church is "His Holiness Patriarch of Moscow and All Rus'". Appeal - Your Holiness.

Lit.: Charter on the administration of the Russian Orthodox Church. M., 1989; see article Hierarchy.

PRIEST

JEREY (gr. hiereus) - in a broad sense - "sacrificer" ("priest"), "clergyman" (from hiereuo - "sacrifice"). In Greek language is used both to refer to the servants of pagan (mythological) gods, and the true One God, i.e., Old Testament and Christian priests. (In the Russian tradition, pagan priests are called "priests".) In the narrow sense, in Orthodox liturgical terminology, I. is a representative of the lowest rank of the second degree of the Orthodox priesthood (see table). Synonyms: priest, presbyter, priest (obsolete).

IPODEACON

SUBDEACON, SUBDEACON (from the Greek. hupo- "under" and diakonos- "deacon", "servant") - an Orthodox clergyman, occupying a position in the hierarchy of the lower clergy below the deacon, his assistant (which fixes the naming), but above the reader. At the initiation into I., the initiate (reader) is dressed over the surplice in a cross-shaped orarion, and the bishop reads a prayer with the laying of his hand on his head. In ancient times, I. was ranked among the clergy and no longer had the right to marry (if he was single before being elevated to this rank).

Traditionally, I.'s duties included taking care of sacred vessels and altar covers, guarding the altar, taking catechumens out of the church during the Liturgy, and others. and are associated with the custom of the Roman Church not to exceed the number of deacons in one city above seven (see). At present, subdeacon service can only be seen during the bishop's service. Subdeacons are not in the clergy of one church, but are assigned to the staff of a certain bishop. They accompany him on his obligatory trips to the temples of the diocese, serve during the divine service – they dress him before the start of the service, supply water for washing his hands, participate in specific ceremonies and activities that are absent during regular worship, and also perform various extra-church assignments. Most often, I. are students of theological educational institutions, for whom this service becomes a necessary step towards further ascent along the hierarchical ladder. The bishop himself tonsures his I. into monasticism, ordains them to the holy order, preparing them for further independent service. An important succession can be traced in this: many modern hierarchs have gone through the “subdeacon schools” of prominent bishops of the older generation (sometimes even pre-revolutionary ordination), inheriting their rich liturgical culture, system of church theological views and manner of communication. See Deacon, Hierarchy, Consecration.

Lit.: Zom R. Church system in the first centuries of Christianity. M., 1906; Veniamin (Rumovsky-Krasnopevkov V. F.), archbishop. The New Tablet, or the Explanation of the Church, the Liturgy, and all services and church utensils. M., 1992. T. 2. S. 266-269; The writings of the blessed Simeon, archbishop Thessalonian. M., 1994. S. 213-218.

CLERGY

CLIR (Greek - “lot”, “share inherited by lot”) - in a broad sense - a set of clergy (clergy) and clergy (subdeacons, readers, singers, sexton, altars). “Clerics are so called because they are elected to church degrees in the same way that Matthias, appointed by the apostles, was chosen by lot” (Bless Augustine). In relation to the temple (church) ministry, people are divided into the following categories.

I. In the Old Testament: 1) "clergy" (high priests, priests and "Levites" (lower ministers) and 2) the people. The principle of hierarchy here is “tribal”, therefore, “clerics” are only representatives of the “tribe” (tribe) of Levi: the high priests are direct representatives of the Aaron clan; priests - representatives of the same kind, but not necessarily direct; Levites are representatives of other genera of the same tribe. "People" - representatives of all other tribes of Israel (as well as non-Israelis who accepted the religion of Moses).

II. In the New Testament: 1) "clergy" (priests and clergy) and 2) the people. The national criterion is abolished. All male Christians who meet certain canonical standards can become priests and clergymen. The participation of women is allowed (auxiliary positions: “deaconesses” in the Ancient Church, singers, servants in the temple, etc.), while they are not considered “clerics” (see Deacon). The “people” (laity) are all other Christians. In the Ancient Church, the "people", in turn, was divided into 1) laymen and 2) monks (when this institution arose). The latter differed from the "laity" only in their way of life, occupying the same position in relation to the clergy (taking holy orders was considered incompatible with the monastic ideal). However, this criterion was not absolute, and soon the monks began to occupy the highest church positions. The content of the concept of K. has changed over the centuries, acquiring rather contradictory meanings. So, in the broadest sense, the concept of K. includes, along with priests and deacons, the higher clergy (episcopate, or bishopric), - so for: clergy (ordo) and laity (plebs). On the contrary, in a narrow sense, also recorded in the first centuries of Christianity, K. are only clergy below the deacon (our clerks). In the Old Russian Church, the clergy is a combination of altar and non-altar ministers, with the exception of the bishop. Modern K. in a broad sense includes both clergy (ordained clergy) and clergy, or clerks (see Pritch).

Lit.: On the Old Testament Priesthood // Christ. Reading. 1879. Part 2; , holy Controversy on the question of the Old Testament priesthood and the essence of priestly ministry in general. SPb., 1882; and under the article Hierarchy.

LOCAL tenens

LOCAL tenens - a person temporarily acting as a high-ranking state or church figure (synonyms: governor, exarch, vicar). In the Russian church tradition, only “M. patriarchal throne,” a bishop who governs the Church after the death of one patriarch until the election of another. The best known in this capacity are Mr. , mitp. Peter (Polyansky) and Met. Sergius (Stragorodsky), who became Patriarch of Moscow and All Rus' in 1943.

PATRIARCH

PATRIARCH (PATRIARCHI) (gr. patriarches-“ancestor”, “forefather”) is an important term of the biblical-Christian religious tradition, used mainly in the following meanings.

1. The Bible calls P.-mi, firstly, the ancestors of all mankind (“antediluvian P.-i”), and secondly, the ancestors of the people of Israel (“forefathers of the people of God”). All of them lived before the Law of Moses (see the Old Testament) and therefore were the exclusive guardians of the true religion. The first ten P., from Adam to Noah, whose symbolic genealogy is represented by the book of Genesis (Chapter 5), were endowed with extraordinary longevity, necessary for the preservation of the promises entrusted to them on this first earthly history after the fall. Of these, Enoch stands out, who lived “only” 365 years, “because God took him” (), and his son Methuselah, on the contrary, lived longer than others, 969 years, and died, according to Jewish tradition, in the year of the flood (hence the expression “Methuselah, or Methuselah, age”). The second category of biblical P. begins with Abraham, the founder of a new generation of believers.

2. P. - a representative of the highest rank of the Christian church hierarchy. The title of P. in a strict canonical sense was established by the Fourth Ecumenical (Chalcedon) Council of 451, which assigned it to the bishops of the five main Christian centers, determining their order in diptychs according to the "seniority of honor." The first place belonged to the bishop of Rome, followed by the bishops of Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch and Jerusalem. Later, the title of P. was also given to the heads of other Churches, and the Constantinopolitan P., after breaking with Rome (1054), received primacy in the Orthodox world.

In Rus', the patriarchate (as a form of government by the Church) was established in 1589. (prior to this, the Church was ruled by metropolitans with the title first "of Kiev", and then "of Moscow and all Rus'"). Later, the Russian patriarch was approved by the eastern patriarchs as the fifth in seniority (after Jerusalem). The first period of patriarchy lasted 111 years and actually ended with the death of the tenth Patriarch Adrian (1700), and legally - in 1721, with the abolition of the very institution of patriarchy and its replacement by a collective body of church government - the Holy Governing Synod. (From 1700 to 1721 the Church was ruled by Metropolitan Stefan Yavorsky of Ryazan with the title of "locum tenens of the patriarchal throne".) The second patriarchal period, which began with the restoration of the patriarchate in 1917, continues to the present.

Currently, there are the following Orthodox Patriarchates: Constantinople (Turkey), Alexandria (Egypt), Antioch (Syria), Jerusalem, Moscow, Georgian, Serbian, Romanian and Bulgarian.

In addition, the heads of some other Christian (Eastern) Churches have the title of P. - the Armenian (P.-Catholicos), Maronite, Nestorian, Ethiopian, and others. "Latin patriarchs" who are in the canonical subordination of the Roman Church. The same title, in the form of an honorary distinction, has some Western Catholic bishops (Venetian, Lisbon).

Lit.: Old Testament doctrine in the time of the patriarchs. SPb., 1886; Roberson R. Eastern Christian Churches. SPb., 1999.

SEXTON

SEXTON (or "paramonar" - Greek. paramonarios,- from paramone, lat. mansio - "stay", "finding“) is a church clerk, a lower servant (“deacon”), who originally performed the function of a watchman of sacred places and monasteries (outside and inside the fence). P. is mentioned in the 2nd canon of the IV Ecumenical Council (451). In the Latin translation of church rules - "mansionary" (mansionarius), the gatekeeper in the temple. considers it his duty to light the lamps during worship and calls him "the guardian of the church." Perhaps, in ancient times, Byzantine P. corresponded to the Western villicus (“manager”, “manager”) - a person who controlled the choice and use of church things during worship (our later sacristan or sakellarium). According to the “Instructive News” of the Slavic Missal (calling P. “the servant of the altar”), his duties are to “... bring prosphora, wine, water, incense and fire into the altar, light and extinguish candles, prepare and serve the priest a censer and warmth, often and reverently clean and clean the entire altar, as well as the floors from all dirt and the walls and ceiling from dust and cobwebs ”(Sluzhebnik. Part II. M., 1977. S. 544-545). In the Typicon, P. is called "paraecclesiarch" or "candilo-igniter" (from kandela, lampas - "lamp", "lamp"). The northern (left) doors of the iconostasis, leading to that part of the altar where the indicated ponomari accessories are located and which are mainly used by P., are therefore called “ponomarskie”. Currently, in the Orthodox Church, there is no special position of P.: in monasteries, the duties of P. mainly lie with novices and simple monks (who do not have ordination), and in parish practice they are distributed among readers, altar servers, watchmen and cleaners. Hence the expression "read like a sexton" and the name of the watchman's room at the temple - "office mark".

PRESBYTER

presbyter (gr. presbuteros-"elder", "elder") - in the liturgical. terminology - a representative of the lowest rank of the second degree of the Orthodox hierarchy (see table). Synonyms: priest, priest, priest (obsolete).

presbytery

PRIEST (priest, priesthood) - the common (generic) name of representatives of the second degree of the Orthodox hierarchy (see table)

PRIT

PRICHT, or CHURCH RECEPTION (glor. pricht- "composition", "assembly", from Ch. wail- "rank", "attach") - in the narrow sense - the totality of the lower clergy, outside the three-level hierarchy. In a broad sense - a combination of both clergy, or clergy (see clergy), and actually clerks, together making up the staff of one orthodox. temple (church). The latter include a psalmist (reader), sexton, or deacon, priest-bearer, and singers. In prerev. In Russia, the composition of the P. was determined by the states approved by the consistory and the bishop, and depended on the size of the parish. A parish with a population of up to 700 souls, male. the floor was supposed to be P. from the priest and psalmist, for a parish with a large population - P. from the priest, deacon and psalmist. P. populous and wealthy parishes could consist of several. priests, deacons and clerks. The bishop requested the permission of the Synod to establish a new P. or change states. Incomes P. developed ch. arr. from the payment for the commission of P. rural churches were provided with land (at least 33 tithes per P.), some of them lived in the church. houses, that is. part with ser. 19th century received a government salary. According to the church The charter of 1988 defines P. as a priest, a deacon, and a psalmist. The number of members of the P. changes at the request of the parish and in accordance with its needs, but cannot be less than 2 people. - a priest and a psalmist. The head of P. is the rector of the temple: a priest or archpriest.

PRIEST - see Priest, Presbyter, Hierarchy, Clear, Consecration

CHIROTESIA - see Chirotonia

HIROTONIA

HIROTONY - the external form of the sacrament of the priesthood, in fact, its culminating moment - the action of the laying on of hands on the rightly chosen protege being elevated to the priesthood.

In ancient Greek language word cheirotonia means giving votes in the popular assembly through a show of hands, i.e. elections. In modern Greek language (and church usage) we find two close terms: cheirotonia, consecration - "ordination" and cheirothesia, chirothesia - "laying on of hands". The Greek Euchologion refers to each appointment (ascension to the rank) - from the reader to the bishop (see Hierarchy) - X. In the Russian Official and liturgical manuals, they are used as Greek left without translation. terms, as well as their glory. equivalents, which are artificially distinguished, although not completely strictly.

Appointment 1) of a bishop: ordination and H.; 2) presbyter (priest) and deacon: ordination and H.; 3) subdeacon: H., initiation and ordination; 4) reader and singer: initiation and chirothesia. In practice, one usually speaks of the "ordination" of a bishop and the "ordination" of a priest and a deacon, although both words have an identical meaning, going back to the same Greek. term.

T. arr., X. communicates the grace of the priesthood and is the elevation ("ordination") to one of the three degrees of the priesthood; it is performed in the altar and at the same time the prayer "Divine grace ..." is read. Hirotesia, however, is not “ordination” in the proper sense, but only serves as a sign of the admission of a person (clerk, - see) to the performance of some lower church service. Therefore, it is performed in the middle of the temple and without reading the prayer “Divine grace ...” An exception to this terminological differentiation is allowed only in relation to the subdeacon, which for the present time is an anachronism, a reminder of his place in the ancient church hierarchy.

In the ancient Byzantine manuscript Euchologies, the rank of Ch. deaconess, once widespread in the Orthodox world, is preserved, similar to Ch. deacon (also in front of the holy throne and with the reading of the prayer “Divine grace ...”). Printed books no longer contain it. Euchologion J. Goar gives this order not in the main text, but among the variants of the manuscripts, the so-called. variae lectiones (Goar J. Eucologion sive Rituale Graecorum. Ed. secunda. Venetiis, 1730, pp. 218-222).

In addition to these terms for designating ordination to fundamentally different hierarchical degrees - actually priestly and lower "clerical", there are also others that indicate the elevation to various "church ranks" (ranks, "positions") within one degree of priesthood. “The work of the archdeacon, ... abbot, ... archimandrite”; "Following the hedgehog to create a protopresbyter"; "The Elevation of an Archdeacon or Protodeacon, Protopresbyter or Archpriest, Hegumen or Archimandrite".

Lit.: Protege. Kyiv, 1904; Neselovsky A. Orders of ordinations and ordinations. Kamenetz-Podolsk, 1906; A guide to the study of the Rule of Divine Services of the Orthodox Church. M., 1995. S. 701-721; Vagaggini C. L » ordinazione delle diaconesse nella tradizione greca e bizantina // Orientalia Christiana Periodica. Roma, 1974. No. 41; or T. under the articles Bishop, Hierarchy, Deacon, Priest, Priesthood.

APPLICATION

ENOCH

INOK - Old Russian. the name of a monk, otherwise - black. Well. R. - a monk, we are modern. - nun (nun, blueberry).

The origin of the name is explained in two ways. 1. I. - "lonely" (as a translation of the Greek monos - "one", "lonely"; monachos - "hermit", "monk"). “A monk will be called, one who converses with God day and night” (“Pandekty” by Nikon Chernogorets, 36). 2. Another interpretation derives the name of I. from a different way of life who has become a monk: he “otherwise should lead his life from worldly behavior” ( , holy Complete Church Slavonic Dictionary. M., 1993, p. 223).

In modern Russian Orthodox church usage, “monk” is not called a monk in the proper sense, but cassock(Greek “wearing a cassock”) of a novice, until he is tonsured into the “small schema” (due to the final acceptance of monastic vows and the naming of a new name). I. - as if "novice monk"; in addition to the cassock, he also receives a kamilavka. I. retains a worldly name and is free to stop his obedience at any time and return to his former life, which, according to Orthodox laws, is no longer possible for a monk.

Monasticism (in the old sense) - monasticism, blueberry. To be monastic is to lead a monastic life.

LAYMAN

LAYER - one who lives in the world, a secular ("worldly") person who does not belong to the clergy and to monasticism.

M. is a representative of the church people, who takes part in prayer in church services. At home, he can perform all the services listed in the Book of Hours, Prayer Book or other liturgical collection, omitting priestly exclamations and prayers, as well as deacon litanies (if they are contained in the liturgical text). In case of emergency (in the absence of a clergyman and mortal danger), M. can perform the sacrament of baptism. In the first centuries of Christianity, the rights of the laity incomparably surpassed modern ones, extending to the election not only of the rector of the parish church, but even of the diocesan bishop. In ancient and medieval Rus', M. were subject to the general princely judicial administration. institutions, in contrast to the people of the church, who were under the jurisdiction of the metropolitan and bishop.

Lit.: Afanasiev N. Ministry of the Laity in the Church. M., 1995; Filatov S."Anarchism" of the Laity in Russian Orthodoxy: Traditions and Perspectives // Pages: Journal of Bibl.-Bogosl. in-ta ap. Andrew. M., 1999. N 4: 1; Minney R. Lay Participation in Religious Education in Russia // Ibid.; Laity in the Church: Proceedings of the International. theological conf. M., 1999.

SACRISTAN

PRINTER (Greek sakellarium, sakellarios):
1) head of royal clothes, royal bodyguard; 2) in monasteries and cathedrals - the custodian of church utensils, the dean.

Every Orthodox person meets with clergy who speak publicly or conduct services in the church. At first glance, you can understand that each of them wears some special rank, because it’s not for nothing that they have differences in clothes: different-colored mantles, hats, someone has jewelry made of precious stones, while others are more ascetic. But not everyone is given to understand the ranks. To find out the main ranks of clergy and monks, consider the ranks of the Orthodox Church in ascending order.

It should immediately be said that all ranks are divided into two categories:

  1. Secular clergy. These include ministers who may have a family, wife, and children.
  2. Black clergy. These are those who accepted monasticism and renounced worldly life.

Secular clergy

The description of people who serve the Church and the Lord comes from the Old Testament. The scripture says that before the birth of Christ, the prophet Moses appointed people who were supposed to communicate with God. It is with these people that today's hierarchy of ranks is connected.

Altar boy (novice)

This person is a lay assistant to a clergyman. His responsibilities include:

If necessary, a novice can ring bells and read prayers, but it is strictly forbidden for him to touch the throne and walk between the altar and the Royal Doors. The altar boy wears the most ordinary clothes, he puts a surplice on top.

This person is not elevated to the rank of clergy. He must read prayers and words from scripture, explain them to ordinary people and explain to children the basic rules of the life of a Christian. For special zeal, the clergyman may ordain the psalmist as a subdeacon. From church clothes, he is allowed to wear a cassock and a skuf (velvet hat).

This person also does not have a holy order. But he can wear a surplice and orarion. If the bishop blesses him, then the subdeacon can touch the throne and enter the altar through the Royal Doors. Most often, the subdeacon helps the priest perform the service. He washes his hands during divine services, gives him the necessary items (tricirium, ripids).

Church orders of the Orthodox Church

All the ministers of the church listed above are not clergymen. These are simple peaceful people who want to get closer to the church and the Lord God. They are accepted to their positions only with the blessing of the priest. We will begin to consider the ecclesiastical ranks of the Orthodox Church from the lowest.

The position of a deacon has remained unchanged since ancient times. He, just as before, must help in worship, but he is forbidden to independently perform church services and represent the Church in society. His main duty is to read the Gospel. At present, the need for the services of a deacon disappears, so their number in churches is steadily declining.

This is the most important deacon at the cathedral or church. Previously, this dignity was received by the protodeacon, who was distinguished by a special zeal for service. To determine that you have a protodeacon in front of you, you should look at his vestments. If he is wearing an orarion with the words “Holy! Holy! Holy," then it is he who is in front of you. But at present, this dignity is given only after the deacon has served in the church for at least 15–20 years.

It is these people who have a beautiful singing voice, know many psalms, prayers, and sing at various church services.

This word came to us from the Greek language and in translation means "priest". In the Orthodox Church, this is the smallest rank of priest. The bishop gives him the following powers:

  • perform worship and other sacraments;
  • carry the teachings to people;
  • conduct communion.

It is forbidden for a priest to consecrate antimensions and conduct the sacrament of ordination of priesthood. Instead of a hood, his head is covered with a kamilavka.

This dignity is given as a reward for some merit. The archpriest is the most important among the priests and concurrently the rector of the temple. During the celebration of the sacraments, the archpriests put on a robe and stole. In one liturgical institution, several archpriests can serve at once.

This dignity is given only by the Patriarch of Moscow and All Rus' as a reward for the most kind and useful deeds that a person has done in favor of the Russian Orthodox Church. This is the highest rank in the white clergy. It will no longer be possible to earn a rank higher, since then there are ranks that are forbidden to start a family.

Nevertheless, many, in order to get a promotion, give up worldly life, family, children, and go permanently into the monastic life. In such families, the spouse most often supports her husband and also goes to the monastery to take a monastic vow.

Black clergy

It includes only those who have taken monastic vows. This hierarchy of ranks is more detailed than that of those who preferred family life to monastic life.

This is a monk who is a deacon. He helps the clergy conduct the sacraments and perform services. For example, he takes out the vessels necessary for rituals or makes prayer requests. The most senior hierodeacon is called "archdeacon".

This is a person who is a priest. He is allowed to perform various sacred ordinances. This rank can be received by priests from the white clergy who have decided to become monks, and those who have undergone ordination (giving a person the right to perform the sacraments).

This is the abbot or abbess of a Russian Orthodox monastery or church. Previously, most often, this rank was given as a reward for services to the Russian Orthodox Church. But since 2011, the patriarch decided to give this rank to any abbot of the monastery. At the consecration, the abbot is given a staff, with which he must go around his possessions.

This is one of the highest ranks in Orthodoxy. Upon receiving it, the clergyman is also awarded a miter. The archimandrite wears a black monastic robe, which distinguishes him from other monks in that he has red tablets on it. If, moreover, the archimandrite is the abbot of any temple or monastery, he has the right to carry a wand - a staff. He should be addressed as "Your Reverend".

This dignity belongs to the category of bishops. When they were ordained, they received the most High grace of the Lord and therefore they can perform any sacred rites, even ordain deacons. According to church laws, they have equal rights, the archbishop is considered the eldest. According to ancient tradition, only a bishop can bless a service with the help of an antimis. This is a square scarf, in which part of the relics of a saint is sewn.

Also, this clergyman controls and takes care of all the monasteries and churches that are located on the territory of his diocese. The common address for a bishop is "Vladyka" or "Your Eminence".

This is a spiritual dignity of high rank or the highest title of a bishop, the most ancient on earth. He submits only to the patriarch. It differs from other ranks in the following details in clothing:

  • has a blue mantle (the bishops have red ones);
  • a white hood with a cross trimmed with precious stones (the rest have a black hood).

This dignity is given for very high merit and is a distinction.

The highest rank in the Orthodox Church, the chief priest of the country. The word itself combines two roots "father" and "power". He is elected at the Council of Bishops. This dignity is for life, only in the most rare cases is it possible to depose and excommunicate from. When the place of the patriarch is empty, a locum tenens is appointed as temporary executor, who does everything that the patriarch should do.

This position bears responsibility not only for itself, but also for the entire Orthodox people of the country.

The ranks in the Orthodox Church in ascending order have their own clear hierarchy. Despite the fact that we call many clergy "father", every Orthodox Christian should know the main differences between ranks and positions.

Every denomination in the world has a leader, for example, the head of the Orthodox Church is Patriarch Kirill of Moscow and All Rus'.

But besides it, the church has another leadership structure.

Who is the head of the Russian Orthodox Church

Patriarch Kirill is the head of the Russian Orthodox Church.

Head of the Russian Orthodox Church Patriarch Kirill

He leads the church life of the country, as well as the Patriarch - the head of the Trinity-Sergius Lavra and several other monasteries.

What is the hierarchy of the ROC among the clergy

In fact, the church has a rather complex structure and hierarchy. Each priest fulfills his role and takes his assigned place in this system.

The scheme of the Orthodox Church has three levels, which were created at the very beginning of the birth of the Christian religion. All servants are divided into the following categories:

  1. Deacons.
  2. Priests.
  3. Bishops.

In addition, they are divided into "black" and "white" clergy. The "black" refers to the monks, and to the "white" lay clergy.

Structure of the ROC - scheme and description

Due to some complexity of the church structure, it is worth considering in more detail, for a deep understanding of the algorithms of the work of priests.

Ranks of bishops

These include:

  1. Patriarch: the main title of the leader of the Russian Orthodox Church for life, at the moment in Rus' it is Kirill.
  2. Vicar: the right hand of the bishop, his deputy, but he does not have his own diocese and cannot manage the diocese of the bishop.
  3. Metropolitan: a vicegerent in charge of metropolises, including those outside the Russian Federation.
  4. Archbishop: The title of senior bishop is considered an honorary title.
  5. Bishop: The third level of priesthood in the Orthodox hierarchy, often holds the title of bishop, governs a diocese and is appointed by the Holy Synod.

Ranks of priests

Priests are divided into "black" and "white".

Consider the "black" clergy:

  1. Hieromonk: a monk-clergyman, it is customary to address him with the words: “Your Reverend”.
  2. Hegumen: head (abbot) of the monastery. Until 2011 in Russia, this title was honorary and did not necessarily correspond to the post of head of any monastery.
  3. Archimandrite: the highest title for a clergyman who has taken monastic vows. Often he is the rector of large monastic cloisters.

The "white" ranks include:

  1. Protopresbyter: the highest rank of the Russian Orthodox Church in its "white" part. It is given as a reward for special service in some cases and only at the request of the Holy Synod.
  2. Archpriest: senior priest, the wording may also be used: senior priest. Most often, the archpriest leads a church. You can get such a position not earlier than five years of faithful service after receiving a pectoral cross and not earlier than ten years after ordination.
  3. Priest: junior clergy rank. The priest may be married. It is customary to address such a person like this: “Father” or “Father, ...”, where after the father comes the name of the priest.

Ranks of deacons

This is followed by the step of deacons, they are also divided into "black" and "white" clergy.

List of "Black" clergy:

  1. Archdeacon: senior rank among deacons in a monastic community. It is given for special merits and length of service.
  2. Hierodeacon: priest-monk of any monastery. You can become a hierodeacon after the sacrament of consecration and tonsure as a monk.

"White":

  1. Protodeacon: the main diocesan deacon, it is customary to address him, like the archdeacon, with the words: “Your high gospel.”
  2. Deacon: a priest who stands at the very beginning of the hierarchy of the ROC. These are assistants for the rest, higher ranks of the clergy.

Conclusion

The ROC has at the same time a complex but logical organization. The main rule should be understood: its structure is such that it is impossible to get from the “white” clergy to the “black” without monastic vows, and it is also impossible to occupy many high positions in the hierarchy of the Orthodox Church without being a monk.