UGCC: The future patriarch must be elected by both Orthodox and Catholics
Head of the UGCC Sviatoslav Shevchuk and President of the Institute of Ecumenical Studies of the UCU Ivan Datsko at a conference in Kiev. Photo: a screenshot of the video from the Zhyve.tv Facebook page
The Orthodox and Catholics in Ukraine should jointly elect a single patriarch, said the President of the Institute of Ecumenical Studies of the Ukrainian Catholic University, a priest of the UGCC, Ivan Datsko, during a joint conference of representatives of the UGCC, Phanar and the OCU in Kyiv, a recording of which was posted on the Zhyve.tv Facebook page.
He believes that in order to elect a common patriarch, the Ukrainian Orthodox and Catholics must take communion together. “I am convinced that the future Ukrainian patriarch needs to be elected by both Orthodox and Catholics. One, we do not need 5-10 patriarchates in Kyiv, one and all. But we must make joint efforts to take the Eucharist of love together, and then elect,” said the priest of the UGCC.
At the same time, he spoke out that the new religious organization should be called "Orthodox" or "autocephalous", since the representatives of Orthodoxy in Ukraine are in the majority. “I’m not against it – let it be Orthodox, it is in the majority, even autocephalous, but one patriarch,” Datsko said.
As reported, a conference of the UGCC, Phanar and the OCU on the search for unity was held in Kyiv.
Read also
Tore down banners and assaulted people: Footage of OCU member shared online
The man in the footage is initially seen trampling on banners, assaulting believers, and later posing with a seized Orthodox relic and a candle.
Polish Church celebrates 100th anniversary of autocephaly
The official celebrations began with a Divine Liturgy at St. Mary Magdalene Cathedral in Warsaw, led by Metropolitan Sawa of Warsaw and All Poland.
Catholic hierarch: Vatican Synod is an abomination
Bishop Strickland urges U.S. bishops to oppose Pope Francis' teachings, calling them "deadly falsehoods."
KDA representative participates in International Forum on Tolerance
The event was attended by representatives of various religious organizations and national-cultural communities of Kyiv.
"Please die, human": AI gives unexpected response to user
The Gemini neural network politely asked a user to die, claiming humanity is a burden and waste of time and resources.
By 2025, artificial intelligence may spiral out of control
The head of OpenAI has announced that soon, artificial intelligence will be self-learning and capable of solving problems at the level of human cognition.