Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | city, governed by its own bishop; to assist the ~bishop there
2 I, 1 | own bishop; to assist the ~bishop there were presbyters or
3 I, 1 | letters which Saint Ignatius, Bishop of Antioch, wrote about
4 I, 1 | things in particular, the bishop and the Eucha-~rist; he
5 I, 1 | hierarchical and sacramental. .The bishop in each Church,. he ~wrote, .
6 I, 1 | the Church ~ 6~without the bishop. Wherever the bishop appears,
7 I, 1 | the bishop. Wherever the bishop appears, there let the people
8 I, 1 | Catholic Church.. And it is the bishop.s primary and distinctive
9 I, 1 | community gathered round its bishop; and at every local celebration
10 I, 1 | Communion, the ~Mass), when the bishop stands at the beginning
11 I, 1 | of Antioch.s idea of the bishop as the center of unity in
12 I, 1 | writings of another martyr bishop, Saint Cyprian of Carthage (
13 I, 1 | single whole, in which ~each bishop enjoys full possession.
14 I, 1 | under the presidency of the bishop of the capital, who was
15 I, 2,1 | those present, Eu-~sebius, Bishop of Caesarea, expressed it.
16 I, 2,2 | and above Alexandria. .The Bishop of Constantinople ~shall
17 I, 2,2 | prerogatives of honor after the Bishop of Rome, because Constantinople
18 I, 2,2 | deposition and exile of the Bishop of Constantinople, Saint ~
19 I, 2,2 | about the fall of another Bishop of Constan-~tinople, Nestorius,
20 I, 2,2 | risen from ~the dead. The bishop in each of these cities
21 I, 2,2 | opinion: ~every diocesan bishop has the right to attend
22 I, 2,2 | regard the Pope as ~the bishop .who presides in love,.
23 I, 2,2 | martyred, and where Peter was bishop. ***The Or-~thodox Church
24 I, 2,2 | would say that not only the Bishop of Rome but all ~bishops
25 I, 2,2 | same time admit that the Bishop of Rome ~is Peter.s successor
26 I, 2,2 | to the Pope. Not only the Bishop of Rome, but every bishop,
27 I, 2,2 | Bishop of Rome, but every bishop, is appointed by ~God to
28 I, 2,2 | bishops. The Pope is the first bishop in the Church . but he is
29 I, 2,4 | Spirit. ~ The Byzantine bishop was not only a distant figure
30 I, 3,1 | edged the Pope as the first bishop in the Church, but saw him
31 I, 3,2 | This Canon states that a bishop, if under sentence of ~condemnation,
32 I, 3,2 | to that of the condemned bishop. Nicholas, so the Byzantines
33 I, 3,2 | chief of them being Humbert, Bishop of Silva ~Candida. The choice
34 I, 3,3 | Palamas (1296-1359), Arch-~bishop of Thessalonica. He upheld
35 I, 4,2 | Russia. Around 864 he sent a bishop to Rus-~sia, but this first
36 I, 4,2 | seen in others, for example Bishop Luke of Vladimir ~(died
37 I, 4,2 | the solemn greeting to a ~bishop, eis polla eti, despota (.
38 I, 4,3 | Mitrophan went as ~missionary bishop to Sarai, the Tartar capital
39 I, 4,3 | ministered. ~ Saint Stephen, Bishop of Perm (1340?-1396), worked
40 I, 5,1 | exacting a fee from each bishop ~before instituting him
41 I, 6,3 | represented one type of Russian bishop, but there were other bish-~
42 I, 6,3 | of Zadonsk ~(1724-1783), Bishop of Voronezh. A great preacher
43 I, 6,3 | Slavonic translation by Paissy. Bishop Theophan ~the Recluse (1815-
44 I, 6,3 | Veniaminov, 1797-1879), Bishop of ~Kamchatka and the Aleutian
45 I, 7,3 | not limited solely to the Bishop of Rome. The Patri-~arch
46 I, 7,4 | the Lebanon, Father (now Bishop) George ~Khodre, said: .
47 I, 7,6 | often in reality, the Greek bishop is not merely a distant ~
48 I, 7,6 | spiritual advice. The Greek bishop delegates far less to his
49 I, 7,6 | his parish clergy than a bishop in the ~west, and in particular
50 I, 7,6 | cases they will ~work on the bishop.s staff, or perhaps become
51 I, 7,9 | 1944), the first Rector; Bishop Cassian ~(1892-1965), his
52 I, 7,9 | as a priest and then as ~bishop. He translated Saint Mathew.
53 I, 7,9 | York, although an auxiliary bishop was still attached ~ 75~
54 I, 7,9 | Patriarch Tikhon was Arch-~bishop of North America for nine
55 I, 7,9 | for many years headed by Bishop Jean de S. Denys (Evgraph
56 I, 7,10| least one Chinese Orthodox ~bishop, with some 20,000 faithful;
57 I, 7,10| first Japanese ~Orthodox bishop, John Ono (consecrated 1941),
58 I, 7,10| Mukasa Spartas (born 1899, bishop 1972, died ~1982) and his
59 I, 7,10| 1982, after the death of Bishop Rauben, there were two African
60 II, 0,12| Council or an individual bishop are~always liable to error;
61 II, 1,3 | True God and true man; as Bishop Theophan the Recluse put
62 II, 2,1 | so in the Church no one bishop can claim to wield an absolute
63 II, 2,2 | Orthodox do not~believe any bishop to be endowed with universal
64 II, 2,2 | faithful, gathered round their bishop and celebrating the Eucharist;~
65 II, 2,2 | severs communion with his bishop; a bishop ceases to~be a
66 II, 2,2 | communion with his bishop; a bishop ceases to~be a member of
67 II, 2,3 | bishops. ‘The dignity of the bishop is so necessary in the Church,’
68 II, 2,3 | If any are not with~the bishop,’ said Cyprian, ‘they are
69 II, 2,3 | consecration an Orthodox bishop is endowed with the threefold
70 II, 2,3 | celebrating the sacraments.~1. A bishop is appointed by God to guide
71 II, 2,3 | 2. At his consecration a bishop receives a special gift
72 II, 2,3 | ministry of teaching the bishop performs above all~at the
73 II, 2,3 | speaking they act as the bishop’s delegates. But~although
74 II, 2,3 | delegates. But~although the bishop has a special charisma,
75 II, 2,3 | not expel the human. The bishop remains a man, and as such
76 II, 2,3 | personal infallibility.~3. The bishop, as Dositheus put it, is ‘
77 II, 2,3 | Eucharist was normally the bishop, and even today a priest,
78 II, 2,3 | is really acting as the bishop’s deputy.~But the Church
79 II, 2,3 | as well as~by priest or bishop. Seraphim of Sarov and the
80 II, 2,3 | both.~We have called the bishop a ruler and monarch, but
81 II, 2,3 | exercising his powers the bishop is guided by the Christian~
82 II, 2,3 | Gospel.’~The authority of the bishop is fundamentally the authority
83 II, 2,3 | the~prerogatives of the bishop may be, he is not someone
84 II, 2,3 | an~office in the Church. Bishop and people are joined in
85 II, 2,3 | people there can be no true bishop. ‘The Church,’ said Cyprian, ‘
86 II, 2,3 | the people~united to the bishop, the flock clinging to its
87 II, 2,3 | clinging to its shepherd. The bishop is in the Church and the~
88 II, 2,3 | Church and the~Church in the bishop’ (Letter 66, 8).~The relation
89 II, 2,3 | The relation between the bishop and his flock is a mutual
90 II, 2,3 | flock is a mutual one. The bishop is the divinely~appointed
91 II, 2,3 | the truth, but it is the bishop’s particular~office to proclaim
92 II, 3,2 | against the wall is set the bishop’s throne.~Orthodox Churches
93 II, 3,2 | is not~one, even for the bishop; you see the people all
94 II, 4,1 | normally be performed by a bishop or a priest. In cases of
95 II, 4,2 | west, it is normally the bishop in person who confers Confirmation;
96 II, 4,2 | first have been~blessed by a bishop. (In modern Orthodox practice,
97 II, 4,2 | Orthodox practice, only a bishop who is head of an autocephalous~
98 II, 4,2 | both in east and west the bishop is involved~in the second
99 II, 4,5 | in the Orthodox Church, Bishop, Priest, and Deacon; and~
100 II, 4,5 | deacon, one priest, and one bishop can be~ordained at any single
101 II, 4,5 | single Liturgy). Only a bishop has power to ordain (In
102 II, 4,5 | Archpriest, acting as the bishop’s delegate, can ordain a
103 II, 4,5 | the consecration of a new~bishop must be performed by three
104 II, 4,5 | while performed by the bishop, also requires the consent
105 II, 4,5 | a widower can be made a bishop if he takes monastic vows.
106 II, 4,5 | In the early Church the bishop was elected by the people
107 II, 4,5 | Originally a Metropolitan was the bishop of the capital of a~province,
108 II, 4,5 | Metropolitan to every diocesan bishop, and call by the title Archbishop~
109 II, 5,1 | including, more than one bishop) continued to follow~the
110 II, 6,2 | Nestorian, Mar Ivanios, bishop of Urumia in Persia, together
111 II, 6,2 | meeting~an Assyrian Orthodox bishop, originally from the Urumia
112 II, 6,2 | priest, he had become a bishop after the death of his wife.
113 II, 6,2 | undivided Church.’ One thinks of Bishop Pearson in the seventeenth
114 II, 6,2 | look to antiquity.’ Or of~Bishop Ken, the Non-Juror, who
115 II, 7,5 | Grisbrooke, London, 1967.~ Bishop Alexander (Semenoff-Tian-Chansky),
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