Glorification
Orthodox churches usually speak of glorification rather than centralized canonization. Saints are recognized through the life of the Church, liturgy, icons, and feast days, often with synodal confirmation.
Biblestudy & Church History
Orthodox Saints & Devotions
Apostolic and pre-schism
Local Church and synodal reception
Calendar and worship
The Jesus Prayer is a central Orthodox prayer of repentance, humility, and continual remembrance of Christ.
Akathists and hymnography are theology sung in prayer, linking doctrine to worship, memory, and praise.
Icons confess the incarnation and honor the saints while keeping worship directed to God alone.
Relics, feasts, and memorials are part of Orthodox holy memory and the Church's life in time.
Orthodox churches usually speak of glorification rather than centralized canonization. Saints are recognized through the life of the Church, liturgy, icons, and feast days, often with synodal confirmation.
Saints are honored as friends of God and members of the glorified Church. Worship belongs to God alone; honor is shown to the saints, their icons, and their relics.
The Orthodox Church prays with the saints as part of the one communion of the Church in Christ, living and departed together in his body.
Catholic canonization is normally a centralized papal act. Orthodox glorification is usually received through the life of the local and wider Church, especially in liturgy and devotion.
Orthodox Saints & Devotions
This hub highlights the shared ancient saints as well as Orthodox-specific patterns of glorification, feast days, liturgical memory, and prayer. It also clarifies the difference between Catholic canonization and Orthodox reception.
Apostolic and pre-schism
Catholic and Orthodox traditions share many saints from the ancient undivided Church: apostles, martyrs, bishops, confessors, and teachers.
Local Church and synodal reception
In Orthodox life, saints are often glorified through the lived reception of the Church, with liturgy, icons, feast days, and synodal recognition.
Calendar and worship
Orthodox devotion remembers saints in the liturgical calendar, troparia, kontakia, feast days, fasts, and holy images.
The Jesus Prayer is a central Orthodox prayer of repentance, humility, and continual remembrance of Christ.
Akathists and hymnography are theology sung in prayer, linking doctrine to worship, memory, and praise.
Icons confess the incarnation and honor the saints while keeping worship directed to God alone.
Relics, feasts, and memorials are part of Orthodox holy memory and the Church's life in time.