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History of Eastern Orthodox theology in the 20th century

20th century Eastern Orthodox theology has been dominated by neo-Palamism, the revival of St. Palamas and hesychasm. John Behr characterizes Eastern Orthodox theology as having been "reborn in the twentieth century."[1] Norman Russell describes Eastern Orthodox theology as having been dominated by an "arid scholasticism" for several centuries after the fall of Constantinople. Russell describes the postwar re-engagement of modern Greek theologians with the Greek Fathers, which occurred with the help of diaspora theologians and Western patristic scholars.[2] A significant component of this re-engagement with the Greek Fathers has been a rediscovery of Palamas by Greek theologians; Palamas had previously been given less attention than the other Fathers.[3]

According to Michael Angold, the "rediscovery of [Palamas'] writings by theologians of the last century has played a crucial role in the construction of present-day [Eastern] Orthodoxy.[4]

Russian émigré theologians Edit

After the Russian Revolution, many Orthodox theologians fled Russia and founded centers of Orthodox theology in the West. The most notable of these were the St. Sergius Orthodox Theological Institute in Paris and Saint Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary in New York.[5] Daniel Payne asserts that, in the 1940s, "Russian émigré theologians rediscovered the ascetic-theology of St. Gregory Palamas." From this rediscovery, according to Payne, "Palamas' theology became the basis for an articulation of an Orthodox theological identity apart from Roman Catholic and Protestant influences. Florovsky and Lossky opposed the efforts of the Slavophile movement to identify a uniquely Russian approach to Orthodox theology. They advocated instead a return to the Greek fathers in what Florovsky called a "Neo-Patristic Synthesis".[6] Payne characterizes the work of Georges Florovsky and Vladimir Lossky as having "set the course for Orthodox theology in the twentieth century."[7]

Metropolitan Hilarion Alfayev identifies five main streams within the theology of the "Paris school".

The first, associated with the names of Archimandrite Cyprian (Kern), Fr. Georges Florovsky, Vladimir Lossky, Archbishop Basil (Krivocheine) and Fr. John Meyendorff, was dedicated to the cause of "Patristic revival."

The second stream, represented in particular by Fr. Sergius Bulgakov, is rooted in the Russian religious renaissance of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century; here, the influence of Eastern patristics was interwoven with German idealism and the religious views of Vladimir Soloviev stream.

The third prepared the ground for the "liturgical revival" in the Orthodox Church and is related to the names of Fr. Nicholas Afanassieff and Fr. Alexander Schmemann.

Characteristic of the fourth stream was an interest in Russian history, literature, culture and spirituality; to this stream belong G. Fedotov, K. Mochulsky, I. Kontzevich, Fr. Sergius Tchetverikoff, A. Kartashev and N. Zernov, to name but a few.

The fifth stream developed the traditions of Russian religious philosophical thought and was represented by N. Lossky, S. Frank, L. Shestoff and Fr. Basil Zenkovsky.

One of the central figures of "Russian Paris" was Nicholas Berdyaev, who belonged to none of these...[8]

According to Michael Gibson, "Lossky's paradigm pivots on a double-sided narrative that posits a theological failure of the West characterized as 'rationalist' and 'philosophical,' the antithesis of which is the unbroken Eastern theological tradition of pure apophaticism and mystico-ecclesial experience."[9]

Vladimir Lossky Edit

Vladimir Lossky's main theological concern was exegesis on mysticism in the Orthodox tradition. He stated in The Mystical Theology of the Eastern Church that the Orthodox maintained their mystical tenets while the West lost them after the East-West Schism. A loss of these tenets by the West was due to a misunderstanding of Greek terms such as ousia, hypostasis, theosis, and theoria. He cites much of the mysticism of the Eastern Orthodox Church as expressed in such works as the Philokalia, St John Climacus's Ladder of Divine Ascent, and various others by Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite, St Gregory of Nyssa, St Basil the Great, St Gregory Nazianzus, and St Gregory Palamas. Father Georges Florovsky termed V Lossky's Mystical Theology of the Eastern Church as a "neopatristic synthesis".[10]

Lossky's main tenet of the Mystical Theology was to show through reference to the Greek Fathers works of the ancient Church that their theosis was above knowledge (gnosis).[10] This was further clarified in his work Vision of God (or theoria). In both works Lossky shows some of the differences between Eastern Orthodoxy i.e. Saint Dionysius the Areopagite's work and Plotinus and the tenets of Neoplatonism. Asserting that Eastern Orthodoxy and Neoplatonism, though they share common culture and concepts, are not the same thing and have very different understandings of God and ontology.

Lossky, like his close friend Father Georges Florovsky, was opposed to the sophiological theories of Father Sergei Bulgakov and Vladimir Soloviev. In the words of Lossky's own father N. O. Lossky, "One characteristic of his theology that should be underscored, is that he was not, and always refused to be, a direct descendant of the famous Russian "religious philosophy"1. The term Russian religious philosophy being Neoplatonic as such, having its origin in the works of the slavophile movement and its core concept of sobornost, which was later used and developed by Vladimir Soloviev.

Postwar Greek theologians Edit

As the first generation of Russian emigre theologians died out, the torch was taken up by Greek theologians in the postwar period. Until the 1950s, Greek theology had tended towards a scholastic approach. David Ford characterizes it as "doctrinal 'capita' with patristic catenae added". The impact of Florovsky and Lossky began to spread beyond the Slavic Orthodoxy.[11]

According to Daniel Payne, "Romanides and Yannaras want(ed) to remove the Western and pagan elements from the Hellenic identity and replace it with the Orthodox identity rooted in Hesychast spirituality based on the teachings of Gregory Palamas."[7]

John Romanides developed a theology which was vehemently anti-Augustinian. His work had a significant influence on theological dialogue between the Eastern Orthodox Church and the Oriental Orthodox Churches.[12]

Christos Yannaras argues that the introduction of Western Scholasticism into Orthodox theology inevitably led to the confusion present in modern Hellenic identity. The adverse effects of this corruption of Greek Orthodox thought for the rise of Greek nationalism, the acceptance and formation of the modern Hellenic nation-state, and the establishment of the Church of Greece as an autocephalous national Church separate from the Patriarchate of Constantinople.[13]

John Zizioulas is arguably the most widely read Orthodox theologian in the West.[12]

Georges Florovsky Edit

During the 1930s, Georges Florovsky undertook extensive researches in European libraries and wrote his most important works in the area of patristics as well as his magnum opus, Ways of Russian Theology. In this massive work, he questioned the Western influences of scholasticism, pietism, and idealism on Russian theology and called for a re-evaluation of Russian theology in the light of patristic writings. One of his most prominent critics was Nikolai Berdyaev, the religious philosopher and social critic.

John Meyendorff Edit

John Meyendorff's doctoral dissertation on Palamas is considered to have transformed the opinion of the Western Church regarding Palamism. Before his study of Palamas, Palamism was considered to be a "curious and sui generis example of medieval Byzantium's intellectual decline". Meyendorff's landmark study of Palamas however, "set Palamas firmly within the context of Greek patristic thought and spirituality" with the result that Palamism is now generally understood to be "a faithful witness to the long-standing Eastern Christian emphasis on deification (theosis) as the purpose of the divine economy in Christ."[14]

Roman Catholic Jean-Yves Lacoste describes Meyendorff's characterization of Palamas' theology and the reception of Meyendorff's thesis by the Orthodox world of the latter half of the 20th century:

For J. Meyendorff, Gregory Palamas has perfected the patristic and concilar heritage, against the secularizing tide that heralds the Renaissance and the Reformation, by correcting its Platonizing excesses along biblical and personalist lines. Palamitism, which is impossible to compress into a system, is then viewed as the apophatic expression of a mystical existentialism. Accepted by the Orthodox world (with the exception of Romanides), this thesis justifies the Palamite character of contemporary research devoted to ontotheological criticism (Yannaras), to the metaphysics of the person (Clement), and to phenomenology of ecclesiality (Zizioulas) or of the Holy Spirit (Bobrinskoy).[15]

A number of notable Orthodox theologians, such as John Romanides have criticized Meyendorff's understanding of Palamas as flawed. Romanides argued that Meyendorff's entire characterization of Palamas' teachings was erroneous, criticizing what he called Meyendorff's "imaginative theories concerning Palamite monistic prayer and anthropology, and Incarnational and sacramental heart mysticism."[citation needed] According to Duncan Reid, the theme of the debate between Meyendorff and Romanides centered on the relationship between nominalism and Palamite theology.[16] Romanides characterized Meyendorff as engaged in an "obsessed struggle to depict Palamas as an heroic Biblical theologian putting to the sword of Christological Correctives the last remnants of Greek Patristic Platonic Aphophaticism and its supposed linear descendants, the Byzantine Platonic-nominalistic humanists."[citation needed] Orthodox theologians such as John Romanides, Alexander Golitzin, and Andrew Louth have argued against Meyendorff's interpretation of the works of Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite and have strenuously asserted the Orthodoxy of the Dionysian corpus.[17]

John Romanides Edit

John Romanides contributed many speculations, some controversial, about the cultural and religious differences between Eastern and Western Christianity, and how these divergences have impacted the Church's development and influenced the Christian cultures of East and West. He was especially concerned about ways in which Western intellectual culture had, in his view, compromised Greek national identity.

His theological works emphasize the empirical basis of theology called theoria, or vision of God, as the essence of Orthodox theology. He identified hesychasmas the core of Christian practice and studied extensively the works of 14th-century hesychast and theologian St. Gregory Palamas.

His research on dogmatic theology led him to examine the close links between doctrinal differences and historical developments. Thus, in his later years, he concentrated on historical research, mostly of the Middle Ages but also of the 18th and 19th centuries.

Romanides criticized Meyendorff's understanding of Palamas as flawed.[citation needed] Romanides described Myendorff as engaged in an "obsessed struggle to depict Palamas as an heroic Biblical theologian putting to the sword of Christological Correctives the last remnants of Greek Patristic Platonic Aphophaticism and its supposed linear descendants, the Byzantine Platonic-nominalistic humanists."[citation needed]

Christos Yannaras Edit

The main volume of Yannaras' work represents a long course on study and research of the differences between the Greek and Western European philosophy and tradition. Differences that are not limited at the level of theory only, but also define a mode (praxis) of life.

References Edit

  1. ^ Kallistos; John Behr; Andrew Louth; Dimitri E. Conomos (2003). Abba: the tradition of Orthodoxy in the West: festschrift for Bishop Kallistos (Ware) of Diokleia. St Vladimir's Seminary Press. p. 159. ISBN 978-0-88141-248-2.
  2. ^ Russell, Norman (2006). (PDF). Philosophy and Theology. 18 (1): 77. doi:10.5840/philtheol20061814. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-10-07. Retrieved 2012-07-27.
  3. ^ Chrysostomos of Etna; Auxentios of Photiki; Akakios. Contemporary Traditionalist Orthodox Thought (PDF). Etna, California: Center for Traditionalist Orthodox Studies. ...Saint Gregory is not well known to the common pious, and his study by theologians is scant compared to the tomes that have been dedicated to the other Fathers. In Greece, it was not until the recent past that anyone showed any critical attention toward a collection of the Saint's writings. And, greatly owing to his rejection by the West and the proverbial "Western captivity" of many Orthodox theologians, some Greek theologians have only a rudimentary familiarity with Saint Gregory and his importance to Orthodox thought. (Happily, the state of Palamite studies in the Slavic traditions is better developed and more profound.)
  4. ^ Angold, Michael (2006). Eastern Christianity. Cambridge University Press. p. 101. ISBN 978-0-521-81113-2.
  5. ^ Rahner, Karl (1975). Encyclopedia of theology: a concise Sacramentum mundi. Continuum International Publishing Group. p. 380. ISBN 978-0-86012-006-3.
  6. ^ Hastings, Adrian; Mason, Alistair; Pyper, Hugh S. (2000). The Oxford companion to Christian thought. Oxford University Press US. p. 185. Russian emigre theologians.
  7. ^ a b Payne, Daniel. The Revival of Political Hesychasm in Greek Orthodox Thought
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on 2010-09-14. Retrieved 2011-01-11.
  9. ^ Gibson, Michael. Either/Or: The Question of Identity and Eastern Orthodoxy in the Thought of Christos Yannaras.
  10. ^ a b History of Russian Philosophy By N.O. Lossky section on V. Lossky
  11. ^ Ford, David F. (30 January 1997). The Modern Theologians: An Introduction to Christian theology in the twentieth century, Second Edition. ISBN 978-0-631-19592-4.
  12. ^ a b Ford, David; Muers, Rachel (2005). The modern theologians: an introduction to Christian theology since 1918. iley-Blackwell. p. 584. ISBN 978-1-4051-0277-3.
  13. ^ Yannaras, Christos (2006). Orthodoxy and the West: Hellenic Self-Identity in the Modern Age. Brookline, MA: Holy Cross Orthodox Press.
  14. ^ Carey, Patrick W.; Lienhard, Joseph T. (2000). Biographical dictionary of Christian theologians. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 362. ISBN 978-0-313-29649-9.
  15. ^ Lacoste, Jean-Yves (2005). Encyclopedia of Christian Theology. CRC Press. p. 661. ISBN 978-0-203-31901-7.
  16. ^ Reid, Duncan (1997). nergies of the spirit: trinitarian models in Eastern Orthodox and Western theology. Oxford University Press US. p. 97. ISBN 978-0-7885-0345-0.
  17. ^ "The Areopagite in 20th Century Orthodoxy, V". 2008-04-01. Retrieved 2011-01-06.

Sources Edit

External links Edit

History
  • Jeffrey D. Finch, Neo-Palamism, Divinizing Grace, and the Breach between East and West (powerpoint)
  • Paul L. Gavrilyuk, The Orthodox Renaissance
  • Noble, Ivana / Noble, Tim: Orthodox Theology in Western Europe in the 20th Century, European History Online, Mainz: Institute of European History, 2013, retrieved: September 2, 2013.
Various

history, eastern, orthodox, theology, 20th, century, 20th, century, eastern, orthodox, theology, been, dominated, palamism, revival, palamas, hesychasm, john, behr, characterizes, eastern, orthodox, theology, having, been, reborn, twentieth, century, norman, r. 20th century Eastern Orthodox theology has been dominated by neo Palamism the revival of St Palamas and hesychasm John Behr characterizes Eastern Orthodox theology as having been reborn in the twentieth century 1 Norman Russell describes Eastern Orthodox theology as having been dominated by an arid scholasticism for several centuries after the fall of Constantinople Russell describes the postwar re engagement of modern Greek theologians with the Greek Fathers which occurred with the help of diaspora theologians and Western patristic scholars 2 A significant component of this re engagement with the Greek Fathers has been a rediscovery of Palamas by Greek theologians Palamas had previously been given less attention than the other Fathers 3 According to Michael Angold the rediscovery of Palamas writings by theologians of the last century has played a crucial role in the construction of present day Eastern Orthodoxy 4 Contents 1 Russian emigre theologians 1 1 Vladimir Lossky 2 Postwar Greek theologians 2 1 Georges Florovsky 2 2 John Meyendorff 2 3 John Romanides 2 4 Christos Yannaras 3 References 4 Sources 5 External linksRussian emigre theologians EditAfter the Russian Revolution many Orthodox theologians fled Russia and founded centers of Orthodox theology in the West The most notable of these were the St Sergius Orthodox Theological Institute in Paris and Saint Vladimir s Orthodox Theological Seminary in New York 5 Daniel Payne asserts that in the 1940s Russian emigre theologians rediscovered the ascetic theology of St Gregory Palamas From this rediscovery according to Payne Palamas theology became the basis for an articulation of an Orthodox theological identity apart from Roman Catholic and Protestant influences Florovsky and Lossky opposed the efforts of the Slavophile movement to identify a uniquely Russian approach to Orthodox theology They advocated instead a return to the Greek fathers in what Florovsky called a Neo Patristic Synthesis 6 Payne characterizes the work of Georges Florovsky and Vladimir Lossky as having set the course for Orthodox theology in the twentieth century 7 Metropolitan Hilarion Alfayev identifies five main streams within the theology of the Paris school The first associated with the names of Archimandrite Cyprian Kern Fr Georges Florovsky Vladimir Lossky Archbishop Basil Krivocheine and Fr John Meyendorff was dedicated to the cause of Patristic revival The second stream represented in particular by Fr Sergius Bulgakov is rooted in the Russian religious renaissance of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century here the influence of Eastern patristics was interwoven with German idealism and the religious views of Vladimir Soloviev stream The third prepared the ground for the liturgical revival in the Orthodox Church and is related to the names of Fr Nicholas Afanassieff and Fr Alexander Schmemann Characteristic of the fourth stream was an interest in Russian history literature culture and spirituality to this stream belong G Fedotov K Mochulsky I Kontzevich Fr Sergius Tchetverikoff A Kartashev and N Zernov to name but a few The fifth stream developed the traditions of Russian religious philosophical thought and was represented by N Lossky S Frank L Shestoff and Fr Basil Zenkovsky One of the central figures of Russian Paris was Nicholas Berdyaev who belonged to none of these 8 According to Michael Gibson Lossky s paradigm pivots on a double sided narrative that posits a theological failure of the West characterized as rationalist and philosophical the antithesis of which is the unbroken Eastern theological tradition of pure apophaticism and mystico ecclesial experience 9 Vladimir Lossky Edit Main article Vladimir Lossky Vladimir Lossky s main theological concern was exegesis on mysticism in the Orthodox tradition He stated in The Mystical Theology of the Eastern Church that the Orthodox maintained their mystical tenets while the West lost them after the East West Schism A loss of these tenets by the West was due to a misunderstanding of Greek terms such as ousia hypostasis theosis and theoria He cites much of the mysticism of the Eastern Orthodox Church as expressed in such works as the Philokalia St John Climacus s Ladder of Divine Ascent and various others by Pseudo Dionysius the Areopagite St Gregory of Nyssa St Basil the Great St Gregory Nazianzus and St Gregory Palamas Father Georges Florovsky termed V Lossky s Mystical Theology of the Eastern Church as a neopatristic synthesis 10 Lossky s main tenet of the Mystical Theology was to show through reference to the Greek Fathers works of the ancient Church that their theosis was above knowledge gnosis 10 This was further clarified in his work Vision of God or theoria In both works Lossky shows some of the differences between Eastern Orthodoxy i e Saint Dionysius the Areopagite s work and Plotinus and the tenets of Neoplatonism Asserting that Eastern Orthodoxy and Neoplatonism though they share common culture and concepts are not the same thing and have very different understandings of God and ontology Lossky like his close friend Father Georges Florovsky was opposed to the sophiological theories of Father Sergei Bulgakov and Vladimir Soloviev In the words of Lossky s own father N O Lossky One characteristic of his theology that should be underscored is that he was not and always refused to be a direct descendant of the famous Russian religious philosophy 1 The term Russian religious philosophy being Neoplatonic as such having its origin in the works of the slavophile movement and its core concept of sobornost which was later used and developed by Vladimir Soloviev Postwar Greek theologians EditAs the first generation of Russian emigre theologians died out the torch was taken up by Greek theologians in the postwar period Until the 1950s Greek theology had tended towards a scholastic approach David Ford characterizes it as doctrinal capita with patristic catenae added The impact of Florovsky and Lossky began to spread beyond the Slavic Orthodoxy 11 According to Daniel Payne Romanides and Yannaras want ed to remove the Western and pagan elements from the Hellenic identity and replace it with the Orthodox identity rooted in Hesychast spirituality based on the teachings of Gregory Palamas 7 John Romanides developed a theology which was vehemently anti Augustinian His work had a significant influence on theological dialogue between the Eastern Orthodox Church and the Oriental Orthodox Churches 12 Christos Yannaras argues that the introduction of Western Scholasticism into Orthodox theology inevitably led to the confusion present in modern Hellenic identity The adverse effects of this corruption of Greek Orthodox thought for the rise of Greek nationalism the acceptance and formation of the modern Hellenic nation state and the establishment of the Church of Greece as an autocephalous national Church separate from the Patriarchate of Constantinople 13 John Zizioulas is arguably the most widely read Orthodox theologian in the West 12 Georges Florovsky Edit Main article Georges Florovsky During the 1930s Georges Florovsky undertook extensive researches in European libraries and wrote his most important works in the area of patristics as well as his magnum opus Ways of Russian Theology In this massive work he questioned the Western influences of scholasticism pietism and idealism on Russian theology and called for a re evaluation of Russian theology in the light of patristic writings One of his most prominent critics was Nikolai Berdyaev the religious philosopher and social critic John Meyendorff Edit Main article John Meyendorff John Meyendorff s doctoral dissertation on Palamas is considered to have transformed the opinion of the Western Church regarding Palamism Before his study of Palamas Palamism was considered to be a curious and sui generis example of medieval Byzantium s intellectual decline Meyendorff s landmark study of Palamas however set Palamas firmly within the context of Greek patristic thought and spirituality with the result that Palamism is now generally understood to be a faithful witness to the long standing Eastern Christian emphasis on deification theosis as the purpose of the divine economy in Christ 14 Roman Catholic Jean Yves Lacoste describes Meyendorff s characterization of Palamas theology and the reception of Meyendorff s thesis by the Orthodox world of the latter half of the 20th century For J Meyendorff Gregory Palamas has perfected the patristic and concilar heritage against the secularizing tide that heralds the Renaissance and the Reformation by correcting its Platonizing excesses along biblical and personalist lines Palamitism which is impossible to compress into a system is then viewed as the apophatic expression of a mystical existentialism Accepted by the Orthodox world with the exception of Romanides this thesis justifies the Palamite character of contemporary research devoted to ontotheological criticism Yannaras to the metaphysics of the person Clement and to phenomenology of ecclesiality Zizioulas or of the Holy Spirit Bobrinskoy 15 A number of notable Orthodox theologians such as John Romanides have criticized Meyendorff s understanding of Palamas as flawed Romanides argued that Meyendorff s entire characterization of Palamas teachings was erroneous criticizing what he called Meyendorff s imaginative theories concerning Palamite monistic prayer and anthropology and Incarnational and sacramental heart mysticism citation needed According to Duncan Reid the theme of the debate between Meyendorff and Romanides centered on the relationship between nominalism and Palamite theology 16 Romanides characterized Meyendorff as engaged in an obsessed struggle to depict Palamas as an heroic Biblical theologian putting to the sword of Christological Correctives the last remnants of Greek Patristic Platonic Aphophaticism and its supposed linear descendants the Byzantine Platonic nominalistic humanists citation needed Orthodox theologians such as John Romanides Alexander Golitzin and Andrew Louth have argued against Meyendorff s interpretation of the works of Pseudo Dionysius the Areopagite and have strenuously asserted the Orthodoxy of the Dionysian corpus 17 John Romanides Edit Main article John Romanides John Romanides contributed many speculations some controversial about the cultural and religious differences between Eastern and Western Christianity and how these divergences have impacted the Church s development and influenced the Christian cultures of East and West He was especially concerned about ways in which Western intellectual culture had in his view compromised Greek national identity His theological works emphasize the empirical basis of theology called theoria or vision of God as the essence of Orthodox theology He identified hesychasmas the core of Christian practice and studied extensively the works of 14th century hesychast and theologian St Gregory Palamas His research on dogmatic theology led him to examine the close links between doctrinal differences and historical developments Thus in his later years he concentrated on historical research mostly of the Middle Ages but also of the 18th and 19th centuries Romanides criticized Meyendorff s understanding of Palamas as flawed citation needed Romanides described Myendorff as engaged in an obsessed struggle to depict Palamas as an heroic Biblical theologian putting to the sword of Christological Correctives the last remnants of Greek Patristic Platonic Aphophaticism and its supposed linear descendants the Byzantine Platonic nominalistic humanists citation needed Christos Yannaras Edit Main article Christos Yannaras The main volume of Yannaras work represents a long course on study and research of the differences between the Greek and Western European philosophy and tradition Differences that are not limited at the level of theory only but also define a mode praxis of life References Edit Kallistos John Behr Andrew Louth Dimitri E Conomos 2003 Abba the tradition of Orthodoxy in the West festschrift for Bishop Kallistos Ware of Diokleia St Vladimir s Seminary Press p 159 ISBN 978 0 88141 248 2 Russell Norman 2006 Modern Greek Theologians and the Greek Fathers PDF Philosophy and Theology 18 1 77 doi 10 5840 philtheol20061814 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 10 07 Retrieved 2012 07 27 Chrysostomos of Etna Auxentios of Photiki Akakios Contemporary Traditionalist Orthodox Thought PDF Etna California Center for Traditionalist Orthodox Studies Saint Gregory is not well known to the common pious and his study by theologians is scant compared to the tomes that have been dedicated to the other Fathers In Greece it was not until the recent past that anyone showed any critical attention toward a collection of the Saint s writings And greatly owing to his rejection by the West and the proverbial Western captivity of many Orthodox theologians some Greek theologians have only a rudimentary familiarity with Saint Gregory and his importance to Orthodox thought Happily the state of Palamite studies in the Slavic traditions is better developed and more profound Angold Michael 2006 Eastern Christianity Cambridge University Press p 101 ISBN 978 0 521 81113 2 Rahner Karl 1975 Encyclopedia of theology a concise Sacramentum mundi Continuum International Publishing Group p 380 ISBN 978 0 86012 006 3 Hastings Adrian Mason Alistair Pyper Hugh S 2000 The Oxford companion to Christian thought Oxford University Press US p 185 Russian emigre theologians a b Payne Daniel The Revival of Political Hesychasm in Greek Orthodox Thought Orthodox Theology on the Threshold of the 21st Century Archived from the original on 2010 09 14 Retrieved 2011 01 11 Gibson Michael Either Or The Question of Identity and Eastern Orthodoxy in the Thought of Christos Yannaras a b History of Russian Philosophy By N O Lossky section on V Lossky Ford David F 30 January 1997 The Modern Theologians An Introduction to Christian theology in the twentieth century Second Edition ISBN 978 0 631 19592 4 a b Ford David Muers Rachel 2005 The modern theologians an introduction to Christian theology since 1918 iley Blackwell p 584 ISBN 978 1 4051 0277 3 Yannaras Christos 2006 Orthodoxy and the West Hellenic Self Identity in the Modern Age Brookline MA Holy Cross Orthodox Press Carey Patrick W Lienhard Joseph T 2000 Biographical dictionary of Christian theologians Greenwood Publishing Group p 362 ISBN 978 0 313 29649 9 Lacoste Jean Yves 2005 Encyclopedia of Christian Theology CRC Press p 661 ISBN 978 0 203 31901 7 Reid Duncan 1997 nergies of the spirit trinitarian models in Eastern Orthodox and Western theology Oxford University Press US p 97 ISBN 978 0 7885 0345 0 The Areopagite in 20th Century Orthodoxy V 2008 04 01 Retrieved 2011 01 06 Sources EditThe Orthodox Church Ware Timothy Penguin Books 1997 ISBN 0 14 014656 3 The Orthodox Church 455 Questions and Answers Harakas Stanley H Light and Life Publishing Company 1988 ISBN 0 937032 56 5 The Spirituallity of the Christian East A systematic handbook by Tomas Spidlik Cistercian Publications Inc Kalamazoo Michigan 1986 ISBN 0 87907 879 0 Orthodox Dogmatic Theology A Concise Exposition Protopresbyter Michael Pomazansky St Herman of Alaska Brotherhood press 1994 ISBN 0 938635 69 7 The Mystical Theology of the Eastern Church Vladimir Lossky SVS Press 1997 ISBN 0 913836 31 1 James Clarke amp Co Ltd 1991 ISBN 0 227 67919 9 Orthodox Theology An Introduction Vladimir Lossky SVS Press 2001 ISBN 0 913836 43 5 In the Image and Likeness of God Vladimir Lossky SVS Press 1997 ISBN 0 913836 13 3 The Vision of God Vladimir Lossky SVS Press 1997 ISBN 0 913836 19 2 The Orthodox Way St Vladimir s Seminary Press 1995 ISBN 0 913836 58 3 The Inner Kingdom Collected Works Vol 1 St Vladimir s Seminary Press 2000 ISBN 0 88141 209 0 In the Image of the Trinity Collected Works Vol 2 St Vladimir s Seminary Press 2006 ISBN 0 88141 225 2 Communion and Intercommunion Light amp Life 1980 ISBN 0 937032 20 4 How Are We Saved The Understanding of Salvation in the Orthodox Tradition Light amp Life 1996 ISBN 1 880971 22 4 Orthodox Dogmatic Theology A Concise Exposition Protopresbyter Michael Pomazansky St Herman of Alaska Brotherhood press 1994 ISBN 0 938635 69 7 Online version 1 Let There Be Light An Orthodox Christian Theory of Human Evolution For the 21st Century Theandros Summer 2008 ISSN 1555 936X 2 External links EditHistoryJeffrey D Finch Neo Palamism Divinizing Grace and the Breach between East and West powerpoint Paul L Gavrilyuk The Orthodox Renaissance Noble Ivana Noble Tim Orthodox Theology in Western Europe in the 20th Century European History Online Mainz Institute of European History 2013 retrieved September 2 2013 VariousDirectory of Orthodox Internet Resources Archived 2009 02 10 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of Eastern Orthodox theology in the 20th century amp oldid 1177924631, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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