Due of how their holy leader favoring invading Ukraine proper, and how this effects on their Churches in unoccupied Ukrainian soil.
But clearly a secular Wikipedia website, where be providing non-biased sources from first and secondary accounts.
Now, I just wanted to make sure to be neutral, by moving another partially-recognized Orthodox Church into the right spot, as well put it's ambiguous rival at top OCA, based on how many members it has, not by holy recognition.
We should impose a limit on how far we break these down, because as stands the "Eastern Catholic Churches" section is an entire page of my browser.
Before User:Checco's edit, the article simply mentioned Protestantism in the lede and I have restored that.
As the closer of the RfC, User:StAnselm pointed out, it is problematic to mention the theory of a via media in the lede, which is not embraced by all Anglicans themselves (see Exhibit D), and which means different things to different Anglicans (historically, the via media referred to a middle way between Lutheranism and Reformed Christianity).
Thank you, AnupamTalk 17:55, 30 October 2024 (UTC)[reply] ReferencesThe pie chart based on World Christian Database, which has been repeatedly edited without consensus, is quite problematic.
-- Checco (talk) 21:48, 31 October 2024 (UTC)[reply] Additionally, as User:StAnselm indirectly pointed out, percentages are original research.
--Checco (talk) 22:05, 31 October 2024 (UTC)[reply] I noticed that Community of Christ is in the Nontrinitarian Restorationism category.
I'm not sure how to clearly represent this on the list... Contagious Owl (talk) 05:31, 7 November 2024 (UTC)[reply] The new 2024 is a bit odd… it numbers “independent” as different from Protestant, but that’s debatable, I guess.
That is why I proposed and enacted the rule according to which Protestant denominations should have at least 0.2 million members to be added to the list.