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  1. The Russian Orthodox Church (ROC; Russian: Русская православная церковь, romanized: Russkaya pravoslavnaya tserkov', abbreviated as РПЦ), alternatively legally known as the Moscow Patriarchate (Russian: Московский патриархат, romanized: Moskovskiy patriarkhat), [12] is an autocephalous Eastern Orthodox Christian church.

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  3. For a thousand years, even fragments from the Gospel have been read in churches in a very beautiful, but strange-sounding language to Russians nowadays. It is calledChurch Slavonic’.

    • is the russian orthodox church a slavic language called1
    • is the russian orthodox church a slavic language called2
    • is the russian orthodox church a slavic language called3
    • is the russian orthodox church a slavic language called4
    • is the russian orthodox church a slavic language called5
  4. Sep 15, 2024 · Russian Orthodox Church, one of the largest autocephalous, or ecclesiastically independent, Eastern Orthodox churches in the world. Its membership is estimated at more than 90 million. For more on Orthodox beliefs and practices, see Eastern Orthodoxy.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Church Slavonic [a] [b] is the conservative Slavic liturgical language used by the Eastern Orthodox Church in Belarus, Bulgaria, North Macedonia, Montenegro, Poland, Ukraine, Russia, Serbia, the Czech Republic and Slovakia, Slovenia and Croatia.

  6. May 29, 2020 · Church Slavonic continued as the common liturgical language of the Orthodox Churches of the Slavic area including the Russian, Bulgarian, and Serbian churches even as the common spoken languages of the people changed.

  7. The Church Slavonic is an artifical language created by orthodox missioners. It was based on southern-bulgarian dialect of slavonic language native to Saints Cyril and Methodius who created it. Its grammar is influenced by Greek language in both sentence structure and word structure.

  8. Subsequently, East Slavic vernacular languages evolved into Ukrainian, Belorussian, and (Great) Russian, whereas the language of the church, known today as Old Church Slavonic (or Slavic), remained fixed. Thus did the East Slavs adopt Christianity in a language that grew to be archaic in the early modern period.

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