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L'Orthodoxie en Chine : « L’église orthodoxe de Harbin ouvre à nouveau ! »

Source orthodoxie.com

et http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/1097519.shtml




About 100 worshippers attend sacred ceremony

An Eastern Orthodox Church reopened for worship on Saturday in Harbin, the icy city in Northeast China's Heilongjiang Province about 600 kilometers from the Russian border.

For Orthodox Christmas in January, worshippers had borrowed a nearby Catholic church.

But on Saturday, a congregation of about 100 flocked to the Protection (Pokrov) of the Theotokos Church to worship for the first time since it was closed for repair in 2014, the provincial bureau of religious affairs reported on Tuesday.

"There are now about 100 Orthodox believers in Harbin, with one priest and one church," a bureau official, who refused to be named, told the Global Times on Wednesday. "We helped fund the repairs."

Priest Yu Shi led more than four hours of ceremonies including scripture reading, psalms, confession, prayer and Holy Communion.

Yu is China's first Orthodox priest in 60 years. He was ordained in 2015 after he finished theological study at St. Petersburg, Russia, the AFP news agency reported.

"Yu was permitted by the  State Administration for Religious Affairs and recognized by the Russian Orthodox Church," Zhang Baichun, a Beijing Normal University professor who specializes in the Orthodox religion, told the Global Times.

Russian Orthodox Christianity is not included in China's five major religions: Buddhism, Catholicism, Taoism, Islam and Protestantism.

"On the Orthodox Church issue, China and Russia do not have problems of principles," Zhang said, "but some small questions remain to be resolved such as the ordination of priests, whether to send more clergy to Russia and Orthodox gatherings in some cities."

Religion is not that obvious an issue among the massive scope of Sino-Russian relations, he noted, but Russia pays significant attention to it and China needs to be prepared to face it.

According to Zhang, the biggest Orthodox group is a community of 3,000 to 4,000 people in the city of Ergun in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, where some Russians settled and married.

A theology student from Ergun, Sun Ming, is now studying in Russia and expected to follow in Yu's footsteps, said Zhang.

There are 15,000 Orthodox Christians in China today, according to a Russian Orthodox Church report. Chinese scholars believe there are probably a few thousand.

Lire la suite sur : http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/1097519.shtml


lire aussi :

https://chine.in/guide/eglise-orthodoxe_2536.html

https://www.egliserusse.eu/blogdiscussion/Nouveau-depart-pour-l-Eglise-orthodoxe-de-Chine_a4296.html

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