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List of Eastern Orthodox churches in Toronto
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The following list presents Eastern Orthodox churches in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. As of January 2010, there are 28 Orthodox churches within Toronto, 9 Mission stations, 4 Chapels, and 1 monastery, for a total of 42 canonical Orthodox sanctuaries.
The first Orthodox community established in the city of Toronto was the Greek Orthodox Community of St. George, founded in 1909, presently located on Bond Street in the heart of downtown Toronto.[1][note 1] This was followed by Sts. Cyril and Methodius Macedono-Bulgarian Church, founded one year later in 1910, presently located on Dundas and Sackville Streets, and the Russian Orthodox Church of Christ the Saviour in 1915, of the Orthodox Church in America (OCA).
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Canonical Orthodox Churches[note 2]
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Ecumenical Patriarchate
Greek Orthodox Metropolis of Toronto (Canada)
Ukrainian Orthodox Church of Canada (UOCC)
(Diocese: Toronto and the Eastern Eparchy)
American Carpatho-Russian Orthodox Diocese (ACROD)
Bulgarian Eastern Orthodox Diocese of the USA, Canada, and Australia
Macedonian Orthodox Church - Ohrid Archbishopric
Orthodox Church in America (OCA)
OCA - Archdiocese of Canada
OCA - Romanian Episcopate
Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia (ROCOR)
- (Diocese: The Montreal and Canada Diocese)
Patriarchal Representation of the Russian Orthodox Church in Toronto
Serbian Orthodox Diocese of Canada
Romanian Orthodox Archdiocese in the Americas
Georgian Orthodox Diocese of America and Canada
Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese of North America
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Not members of the Canadian Conference of Orthodox Bishops
Old Calendar Jurisdictions or Traditional Orthodox Churches[note 21]
Metropolitan Bishop Akakios (Ntouskos) of Canada
Metropolis of the Genuine Greek Orthodox Church (GOC) of America
- (Florinite, 1937-)[59]
- (Holy Metropolis of Toronto, under Metropolitan Moses)[note 22]
- (A Metropolis of the Genuine Orthodox Church of Greece, under Archbishop Kallinikos of Athens and All Greece (2010-present))
True Orthodox Church of Greece ("Makarian (Lamian) Synod")
- (Florinite, 1995-)
- (True Orthodox Church of Greece under Archbishop Makarios of Athens and All Greece (2004-present))
Matthewite True Orthodox Christians in the United States
- (Matthewite)[note 25]
- (Genuine Orthodox Church of Greece, under Archbishop Nicholas of Athens and All Greece)
Unrecognized Independent Churches
Belarusian Autocephalous Orthodox Church
Free Serbian Orthodox Church
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See also
Toronto Church Lists
- List of Anglican churches in Toronto
- List of Presbyterian churches in Toronto
- List of Roman Catholic churches in Toronto
- List of United Church of Canada churches in Toronto
- List of Synagogues in Toronto
Other Church Lists
- List of Coptic Orthodox Churches in Canada (Non-Chalcedonian)
- List of Greek Orthodox churches in the United States
General
Notes
- The first immigrant of Greek origin is reportedly Dr. Peter Constantinides[2] who came to Toronto in 1864 to attend the Medical School at the University of Toronto. On May 21st 1909 a meeting was held at the Y.M.C.A. attended by about 200 Greeks living in Toronto. They constituted themselves into a corporate body identified as the "St. George Greek Orthodox Community of Ontario".[3][4]
- Members of the Canadian Conference of Orthodox Bishops.
- "An important part can be played by the Christian church in helping to bring about a peaceful settlement of the world's problems, according to Most Rev. R. Athenagoras, of New York, head of the Greek Orthodox church in North and South America. Archbishop Athenagoras is in Toronto to officiate at the dedication tomorrow of the new Greek church on Bond St. In spite of various modernistic ideas, religion never changes, the archbishop declared. He was met at Union station by 150 representative Greeks of Toronto and vicinity. A vesper service will be held at the Bond street church tonight and the dedication service will start tomorrow at 10 a.m."[7]
- A photograph in The Globe and Mail is described as follows:
- "...Top centre shows a part of the procession when Most Rev. R. Athenagoras of Long Island, New York, dedicated the old Holy Blossom Synagogue, Bond Street, in the rites and to the services of the Greek Orthodox Church..."[8]
- The Pachomaioi are perhaps best known for their work on the Basilica church of Saint Demetrios, Thessalonike. They have also painted the convent church of Panaghia Malevi in Kynouria, Greece.[10]
- George Martell Miller (1854/5-1933) was born in Port Hope and educated at the School of Practical Science, University of Toronto, working for Charles Walton in 1883-5. In practice on his own by 1886, he designed a number of important buildings and was also the supervising architect for the construction of Massey Hall. Many of Miller's drawings are held in the Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library, University of Toronto.[12]
- (in Greek)
"Τῇ 14ῃ Νοεμβρίου 1967
Άγαπητοί, Μετά βαθείας πατρικῆς χαρᾶς ἀγγέλομεν ὑμῖν, ὅτι ἀνεκηρύξαμεν τόν Ἱερον Κοινοτικόν ὑμῶν Ναόν τοῦ Εὐαγγελισμοῦ τῆς Θεοτόκου, Καθεδρικόν Ναόν τῆς Θ.’ Ἀρχιεπισκοπικῆς ὑμῶν Περιφερείας. Τούτον θά καθιερώση εἰς Καθεδρικόν, ἐντός ὀλίγων ἡμερῶν, ὁ νέος Βοήθος ὑμῶν Ἐπίσκοπος ἐν τῇ ὑμετέρα Θ’ Ἀρχιεπισκοπικῇ Περιφερείᾳ, ὁ θεοφιλέστατος Ἐπίσκοπος Ἀγκῶνος κ. Θεοδόσιος. Συγχαίροντες ὑμῖν ἐπί τούτῳ, ἐκφράζομεν τήν βεβαίαν ἐλπίδα ὅτι προθύμως θά παρέχητε τῷ θεοφιλεστάτῳ Ἐπισκόπῳ ὑμῶν Ἀγκῶνος κ. Θεοδοσίῳ, πᾶσαν δυνατήν συμπαράσρασιν καί βοήθειαν εἰς ἀνάδειξην τοῦ νέου Καθεδρικοῦ ὑμῶν Ναοῦ καί δι’αὐτοῦ τῆς Ἁγίας ὑμῶν Ὀρθοδόξου Πίστεως καί Ἐκκλησίας ἐν τῇ πόλει καί Περιφερείᾳ ὑμῶν, καί διατελοῦμεν.
Μετά πολλῆς ἐν Κυρίῳ ἀγαπής
καί θερμῶν πατρικῶν εὐχῶν πρός πάντας
Ο ΑΡΧΙΕΠΙΣΚΟΠΟΣ
Ο ΑΜΕΡΙΚΗΣ ΙΑΚΩΒΟΣ"[13] - The exquisite Byzantine Icons in the Altar were painted by the master icon painter Father Theodore Koufos, while the Baroque wooden iconostasis, Altar Table, Cantor’s Stand and Bishop’s Throne were hand-carved by Master Wood Sculptor Stylianos Kavroulakis of Crete. The Cathedral holds over 850 seated worshippers, and has parking facilities for 50 cars.
- Patriarch Bartholomew visited Toronto May 30–31, 1998 as part of his first-ever visit to Canada.[21]
- Merged with West United Church in 1928, then became the home of Dewi Sant Welsh United Church.
- The building itself houses:
- The Youth Centre "Megas Alexandros"
- The offices for the Church
- Offices for the Greek Community Social Services
- Offices for Olympic Flame Soccer club
- A multi-purpose room
- The Church, with a seating capacity of 450, and room to accommodate an additional 400 people on major feast days.
- United Church, located at 40 Donlands Avenue in Toronto, was established in 1925, formerly Methodist. It began a portable mission at Langford and Danforth Avenues in 1914. The church relocated to corner of Donlands Avenue and Strathmore Blvd. in 1923. It joined the United Church of Canada in 1925. In 1984 it amalgamated with Eastminster United Church in the Eastminster building.[28]
- "In 1972 the Sveta Troica (Holy Trinity) Macedono-Bulgarian Eastern Orthodox Church was established in Toronto, mostly for political reasons. Many members belonged to the Bulgarian National Front (BNF) and the Macedonian Patriotic Organization (MPO) and firmly believe that Slavic Macedonians are part of the Bulgarian nationality. The parish was initially within the Bulgarian diocese of the Orthodox Church in America, during the late 1970s within the Russian Church Abroad, and since 1982 under the Holy Synod in Bulgaria. It has about 150 members and is strongly committed to promoting Bulgarian identity and language."[37]
- On November 2, 1949, Archbishop Joasaph of Edmonton, representing the synod of bishops of the Russian Orthodox church outside of Russia, appointed Father Mathew Andrushenko as rector of the new parish. Reminiscent of the early days of Christianity, the small community gathered in a rented loft above a laundry on Parliament Street near Queen. Here they brought beautiful icons and began holding services. The very first took place on December 15, 1949 with Father Mathew. Eleven people were present at that service.[40]
- A small church was built by the hands of the first parishioners on Richmond Street just west of Berkeley, in Cabbagetown. It was begun in the autumn of 1952 and was consecrated on September 6, 1953, by Archbishop Vitaly.[40]
- The Beth Jacob Synagogue was the first synagogue to be built by a Jewish architect in the city.[51] One of the founders of the synagogue was Samuel Tepperman (d. March 1, 1960).[52]
- Bishop Hilarion Alfeyev later became the Archbishop of Volokolamsk, and chairman of the Department of External Church Relations (DECR) of the Russian Orthodox Church).
- The Old Calendar schism occurred in 1935, when three bishops (Germanos of Demetrias, the former Metropolitan of Florina, Chrysostom (Kavouridis), and Chrysostomos (Demetriou) of Zakynthos) declared their separation from the official Church of Greece stating that the calendar change that had been implemented in 1924 was a schismatic act. Greek Old Calendarist groups maintain that they have not separated over a mere calendar, rather that the calendar is a symptom of what has been called "the pan-heresy of ecumenism."
- See also:
- Parish Directory. Holy Metropolis of the G.O.C. of America.
- NORTH AMERICAN EPARCHIAL SYNOD. Genuine Greek Orthodox Church of America (Toronto Church website).
- See: Parishes and Monasteries abroad. Confessor (Unofficial site).
- In 1995, a resistance faction of six bishops formed within the Old Calendar Florinte Synod of Archbishop Chrysostom (Kiousis) (Church of the Genuine Orthodox Christians of Greece) and separated itself over what they claimed to be a series of canonical infractions, headed by Metropolitan Kallinikos (Hatzis) of Lamia. By early 1997, the movement had fragmented into three groups, one of which reconciled with Archbishop Chrysostom (Kiousis). A second group, led by Paisios Loulourgas (Met. of America) and Vikentios Malamatenios (titular Bp. of Avlona), submitted to the Ecumenical Patriarchate (in 1998).[62] Later in 1997, Kallinikos of Lamia and Euthymios of Thessaloniki proceeded to ordain five titular bishops in an attempt to create a new synod; in 2003, they finally decided to elect a primate, and elected Makarios (Kavakides) of Athens.
- The first Primate of Athens selected by the Matthewites was Agathangelos of Athens in 1958, who reposed in 1967. His successor was Archbishop Andreas of Athens who was elected to the primacy in 1972, retiring in 2003 (+2005). In 2003 Archbishop Nicholas of Athens was elected, considered by many to have a progressive vision for the Matthewite church.
- This was a recent architectural project (2002-2005), to partially demolish, totally renovate, and add to, an existing 500 sm, circa 1890, church, in order to create a 1,700 sm/18,000 sf, universally-accessible, barrier-free, 4-storey, single-aisled, basilica and community centre. Stylistically, the building synthesizes Serbian late-Byzantine architectural-styles and icon styles. It has many copper domes, cupolas, and trim; and great lighting & wood panels.[64]
- As a result of an internal conflict ca.late 2009/early 2010, this parish was transferred out of the Serbian Orthodox Diocese of Canada , and placed under the Archdiocese of Etna (California) . The first Liturgy under the new jurisdiction was on Sunday April 11, 2010.
- Transfers to the Metropolis of the Genuine Greek Orthodox Church (GOC) of America.
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