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Books > Christianity > Orthodox Churches
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A Solovyov Anthology
(Paperback)
Vladimir Solovyov; Edited by S.L. Frank; Translated by Natalie Duddington
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R552
Discovery Miles 5 520
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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The catholic, or general, epistles of the "other apostles"-James,
Peter, Jude and John-are sometimes overshadowed by the stirring
theology of the great Apostle to the Gentiles, St. Paul. But these
seven epistles are quiet gems of instruction, encouragement and
exhortation for all believers. Written at various times and
locations and to differing audiences, the general epistles
nevertheless share some common themes: endurance under persecution,
living out the Faith in a hostile society, discerning heresy by its
fruits-namely, immorality and lack of love-and resisting it,
holding fast to the apostolic faith. As Fr. Lawrence Farley deftly
shows in this commentary, all these are timely themes from which
believers today can richly profit.Working from a literal
translation of the original Greek, this commentary examines the
text section by section, explaining its meaning in everyday
language. Written from an Eastern Orthodox and patristic
perspective, it maintains a balance between the devotional and the
exegetical, feeding both the heart and the mind.
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Peter Chaadaev
(Paperback)
Artur Mrowczynski-Van Allen, Teresa Obolevitch, Pawel Rojek
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R758
Discovery Miles 7 580
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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Russian Orthodoxy and Secularism surveys the ways in which the
Russian Orthodox Church has negotiated its relationship with the
secular state, with other religions, and with Western modernity
from its beginnings until the present. It applies multiple
theoretical perspectives and draws on different disciplinary
approaches to explain the varied and at times contradictory facets
of Russian Orthodoxy as a state church or as a critic of the state,
as a lived religion or as a civil religion controlled by the state,
as a source of dissidence during Communism or as a reservoir of
anti-Western, anti-modernist ideas that celebrate the uniqueness
and superiority of the Russian nation. Kristina Stoeckl argues
that, three decades after the fall of Communism, the period of
post-Soviet transition is over for Russian Orthodoxy and that the
Moscow Patriarchate has settled on its role as national church and
provider of a new civil religion of traditional values.
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