The fourteenth-century Greek hesychast and controversialist, Gregory Palamas, has been so successfully cast as 'the
other' in Western theological discourse that it can be difficult to gain a sympathetic hearing for him. In the first part of this book, Norman ...
In Memory Eternal, Sergei Kan combines anthropology and history, anecdote and theory to portray the
encounter between the Tlingit Indians and the Russian Orthodox Church in Alaska in the late 1700s and to analyze the indigenous Orthodoxy that developed over ...
Since its first publication thirty years ago, Timothy Ware’s book has become established throughout the
English-speaking world as the standard introduction to the Orthodox Church. Orthodoxy continues to be a subject of enormous interest among Western Christians, and the author ...
The Idea of Nicaea in the Early Church Councils examines the role that appeals to
Nicaea (both the council and its creed) played in the major councils of the mid-fifth century. It argues that the conflict between rival construals of ...
This book analyzes the ideologies of politicized Orthodox Christianity in today Russia including fundamentalism, pan-Slavism,
neo-Eurasianism, Orthodox communism and nationalism. Apart from textual analysis, the volume provides a description of the specific subculture of political Orthodoxy, i.e. its language, ...
From the depths of a Roman prison, words of encouragement and instruction flowed from the
tongue of the great Apostle Paul. Written down by scribes, his words went forth as a series of letters to Christian communities throughout the Roman ...