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      • In 2017, Pew Research Center found that 88% of the Serbian population identified as ‘Orthodox’. 5 In post-Yugoslav Serbia, as in other traditionally Orthodox countries, confessional and ethnic identities have come to be broadly interchangeable. 6 Yet the percentage of the Serbian population which regularly participates in liturgies and strives to live in accordance with other tenets of their faith is miniscule.
  1. Sep 29, 2017 · Members of the Serbian Orthodox church are part of Eastern Orthodoxy in which their head bishop holds utmost authority. The head bishop is called the patriarch and he presides over the Holy Synod, a group of all the bishops of Serbian Orthodox faith.

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    The Serbian Orthodox Church, which is part of the Eastern Orthodox Church, was founded in 1219 by Saint Sava. Also known as the Orthodox Catholic Church, the Eastern Orthodox Church is the second largest Christian church in the world, with followers estimated to number between 200 and 260 million. As a theologically independent and autocephalous in...

    The number of Serbians who belong to the Roman Catholic Church currently stands at approximately 356,957. The majority of Catholics in Serbia live in the northern part of the country, particularly in Vojvodina, an autonomous Serbian province established in 1944. This region is known for its mix of ethnic minorities, which include Hungarians, Croats...

    The majority of Protestants currently living in Serbia are members of the Lutheran Church. Slovaks make up the largest population within Serbia's Protestant church, with over 50,000 members residing in the province of Vojvodina. The second largest Protestant denomination in Serbia is Calvinism, which is primarily practiced by members of the Reforme...

    Islam has a population of approximately 222,282 followers in Serbia, people making it the nation’s third largest religion. The majority of Muslims live in the southwestern parts of the country, particularly in the region of Raška. Serbia’s largest community of Islamic followers are Bosniaks or Bosnians, who are an ethnic group made up of South Slav...

    Although the history of Judaism in Serbia dates approximately two thousand years, few Jewish communities currently exist throughout the country. Prior to the onset of World War II, it is estimated that 33,000 Jewish residents lived in the nation, but two-thirds of this population were killed during the Holocaust. Today, it is estimated that Serbia’...

  3. Feb 18, 2021 · The Serbian Orthodox Church is an autocephalous, or ecclesiastically independent, member of the Orthodox communion, located primarily in Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia and the Republic of Macedonia.

    • 1219 (lost in 1766), again in 1879
    • Patriarch Porfirije
    • 1219 by Constantinople, again in 1879
    • Apostle Andrew, St. Sava of Serbia
  4. The Serbian Orthodox Church is an autocephalous, ecclesiastically independent member of the Orthodox communion, located primarily in Serbia and Montenegro and in the other republics of ex-Yugoslavia. Since many Serbs have migrated, there are numerous Serbian Orthodox communities in the USA, Australia, South Africa and Europe.

  5. The Serbian Orthodox Church Today. The Serbian Orthodox Church is headed by His Holiness, the Archbishop of Pe é, Metropolitan of Beograd-Karlovci, and Serbian Patriarch. The patriarch is elected from the number of those Serbian bishops who have administered a diocese at least five years.

  6. Feb 1, 2024 · The Orthodox Church of Serbia The origin of Christianity in Serbia is obscure. But there is a tradition that Christianity on the Dalmatian coast can be traced back directly to the Apostle Paul.

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