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[[wikipedia:List_of_languages_by_number_of_native_speakers|List of languages by number of native speakers]] | Wikipedia<br />
[[wikipedia:List_of_languages_by_number_of_native_speakers|List of languages by number of native speakers]] | Wikipedia<br />


To the great shame of Orthodox Christian expatriats, the languages of Orthodox Christian liturgical celebration (Koine Greek, Church Slavonic, Bulgarian, Romanian, Serbian, Georgian) rank nowhere near the top of either list. Yet, those are the languages of the Orthodox Church in foreign lands, rather than the languages native to those countries where Orthodox Christians have expatriated from Eastern Europe and the Balkans.
To the great shame of Orthodox Christian expatriats, the languages of Orthodox Christian liturgical worship (Koine Greek, Church Slavonic, Bulgarian, Romanian, Serbian, Georgian) rank nowhere near the top of these list. Yet, those languages of the Orthodox Church in Eastern Europe and the Balkans are the languages of the Orthodox Church in foreign lands where Orthodox Christians have expatriated instead of the native languages of those lands.


[[wikipedia:List_of_empires|List of Empires]] | Wikipedia
[[wikipedia:List_of_empires|List of Empires]] | Wikipedia