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From these visits he developed a deep interest in the Eastern Orthodox Church, and, while still a teenager, converted to Orthodoxy and joined the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia. He married and attended the Holy Trinity Seminary as a married seminarian. In January 1974, Theodore Jurewicz was ordained priest.
Holy Trinity, Hospitality of Abraham; by Andrei Rublev; c. 1411; tempera on panel; 1.1 x 1.4 m (4 ft 8 in x 3 ft 8 3 ⁄ 4 in); Tretyakov Gallery (Moscow). Russian icons represent a form of religious art that developed in Eastern Orthodox Christianity after Kievan Rus' adopted the faith from the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire in AD 988. [1]
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Aleksei Sokolov (1787 – after 1833) was a Russian Orthodox priest. He was the first priest to arrive in Sitka, Alaska from Russia in 1816. [1] He brought the festival icon of St. Michael and the silver-plated icon to the St. Michael's Cathedral.
Priest Leonty Pimenov, a spiritual guide of Metropolitan Cornelius and an influential priest in the Russian Orthodox Old-Rite Church from the late 1980s to the late 2010s He took part in the activities of the regional local history association "Radunitsa", [ 4 ] established in 1997.
Ivan Alexandrovich Kochurov (Russian: Иван Александрович Кочуров, also known as John Kochurov, Russian: Иоанн Кочуров) was a priest of the Russian Orthodox Church. He was one of a number of young educated priests who came to the United States in the late 1890s as missionaries among the émigrés from ...
He was awarded the kamilavka and gold pectoral cross on January 6, 2013, by the Synod of Bishops, and a few months later accompanied the Kursk-Root Icon to the Montreal and Canadian Diocese. In November 2013, was a delegate accompanying the Icon to Japan and to the Primorye Metropoliate of the Russian Orthodox Church.
Ecclesia militans, one of the largest icons in existence. Blessed Be the Host of the Heavenly Tsar (Russian: Благословенно воинство Небесного Царя), also known as the Ecclesia militans ("The Church Militant"), is a grand Russian Orthodox icon commemorating the conquest of Kazan by Ivan IV of Russia (1552).