Job Getcha

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Job of Pisidia
Permanent Representative of the Ecumencical Patriarchate to the World Council of Churches
InstalledDecember 5, 2013
Term endedNovember 28, 2015
PredecessorGabriel of Comane
SuccessorJohn of Chariopoulis[1][2]
Orders
OrdinationJune 20, 2003
ConsecrationNovember 30, 2013
Personal details
Born
Ihor Wladimir Getcha

(1974-01-31) 31 January 1974 (age 50)
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
NationalityCanadian
DenominationEastern Orthodox
Alma materUniversity of Manitoba

Job of Pisidia (born Ihor Wladimir Getcha, Russian: Игорь Владимирович Геча; January 31, 1974) is an Eastern Orthodox Metropolitan of the Ecumenical Patriarchate who is the Permanent Representative of the Ecumenical Patriarchate to the World Council of Churches and the Dean of the Institute for Orthodox Theology Higher Studies at Chambésy, Switzerland. He was the Archbishop of Telmessos and was elected on July 22, 2022, as the new metropolitan of Pisidia

Biography[edit]

Born in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, a Canadian of Ukrainian descent, Ihor Getcha was educated at Collège Français (Montreal) and the University of Manitoba, Winnipeg. He studied theology at St. Andrew's College, Manitoba, and the Paris from which he was awarded a doctorate, jointly with the Institut Catholique de Paris, in 2003.

Upon completing his secondary education, he completed post-secondary studies in humanities at the University of Manitoba and theology at St. Andrew’s College in Winnipeg and at St. Sergius Orthodox Theological Institute in Paris, where, in 1998 he received his master's diploma. In 2003, he received his doctorate diploma from the above institute in cooperation with the Catholic University of Paris and in 2012 he got his habilitation in theology at the University of Lorraine in Metz. He was tonsured a monk and ordained deacon of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of Canada at Saint Sophia Cathedral, Montreal in 1996 by Metropolitan Wasyly of Winnipeg, subsequently serving in Paris. In 1998, he was tonsured in the Small Schema at the Monastery of St. Anthony the Great in Saint-Laurent-en-Royans, France and in 2003, in Paris, Archbishop Gabriel of Comana ordained him as Presbyter, eventually receiving the title of Archimandrite. Between 2001-2008 he lectured at St. Sergius Institute, where he has also served as Dean (2005-2008). Since 2003, he teaches liturgical theology at the Catholic University of Paris. In 2009 he was elected Professor of Liturgical and of Dogmatic Theology at the Institute of Graduate Studies of Orthodox Theology in Chambésy, Geneva, Switzerland.

The Archbishop has published a plethora of studies and articles related to liturgical theology and Orthodox spirituality. He speaks French, English, Ukrainian, Russian and Greek.

Election as Exarch of Russian Tradition in Western Europe and criticism[edit]

His election as Patriarchal Exarch for Orthodox Parishes of Russian Tradition in Western Europe in November 2013 was heavily influenced by the Ecumenical Patriarch, Bartholomew I of Constantinople, his consecration taking place on 30 November of the same year in the Patriarchal Church, by the Patriarch and by Synodal Hierarchs. As a consequence, the election of Archbishop Job was achieved after two unknown names were placed on the ballot at a late stage in the election process, inducing the electors to vote for Job Getcha. [1] Job Getcha’s tenure as archbishop was marked by deep divisions within the archdiocese concerning the manner in which he has discharged his pastoral responsibilities.[2]

Promotion to Patriarchate's representative[edit]

On 28 November 2015 the Holy Synod of the Ecumenical Patriarchate appointed Archbishop Job as the Patriarchate's representative to the World Council of Churches at Geneva and removed from the office of Exarch, thus remaining an Archbishop but free of any further pastoral or administrative role in the Archdiocese he formerly had in his care.[3] Representing the new generation of the ecumenical dialogue with the Christian Churches, Job Getcha is described as a discrete and serious theologian and much appreciated by his Latin Catholic counterparts of Commission for Theological Dialogue.[4]

On February 20, 2019, Archbishop Job was appointed Dean of the Institute for Orthodox Theology Higher Studies at Chambésy (Geneva).[5]

He is a patron of the Fellowship of Saint Alban and Saint Sergius.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Pastoral message from the locum-tenens, his Eminence John, bishop of Charioupolis".
  2. ^ "Communiqué of the Archdiocesan Administration of 25 April 2016".
  3. ^ "Archevêché des églises russes en Europe occidentale - Communiqué du 28 novembre 2015". www.exarchat.eu. Archived from the original on 2015-12-08.
  4. ^ "Orthodox and Catholics agree on document on Primacy and Synodality". LaStampa.it. 22 September 2016. Retrieved 2016-10-07.
  5. ^ "Archbishop Job appointed Dean of the Institute for Orthodox Theology Higher Studies at Chambésy". 20 February 2019.

External links[edit]