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WHO IS NIKON

I found this in a search, though you'd all enjoy it:

Nikon (1605-81), patriarch of Moscow and all Russia and initiator of a
series of liturgical reforms that led to a major schism in the Russian
Orthodox church. A married priest in Moscow for ten years, Nikon, after his
wife died, became a  monk and was eventually elevated to the positions of
archbishop of Novgorod (1649) and patriarch (1652). Enjoying
the friendship of Tsar Alexis I, he affirmed the absolute superiority of
the church over the state and swore the tsar to obedience. Nikon proceeded
to establish an opulent patriarchal court that rivaled the tsar's. At the
same time, he undertook to make Russian liturgical practices conform to the
contemporary usage of the Greek church. Through these reforms, which
included a revision of all liturgical books, he believed that Russia would
become the spiritual as well as the political bulwark of orthodoxy.

Several leading members of the clergy and millions of the faithful rejected
the reforms, however, and the resulting schism of so-called Old Believers
weakened the church in its relations with the government and led to the
development of numerous anti-institutional sects. The opposition to Nikon's
reforms was based in part on unenlightened conservatism, but also on the
belief that Russia, after the Turkish conquest (1453) of Constantinople
(present-day Istanbul), should no longer be bound by the example of the
Greek church. Nikon's authoritarian and arbitrary methods intensified the
opposition. When the tsar was in Poland (1654-56), Nikon served as coruler
and alienated the boyars and other state officials. The tsar was finally
persuaded to depose him in 1658, and Nikon retired to a monastery, but his
reforms were confirmed by the Great Council of Moscow (1666-67).


Contributed By: Rev. John Meyendorff, B.D., D.Litt.
Late Professor of Patristics and Church History, and Dean, St. Vladimir's
Orthodox Theological Seminary. Professor of Byzantine History, Fordham
University. Author of The Orthodox Church, Byzantine Theology, and other books.

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