results
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Orthodox Christianity and Human Rights in Europe
A Dialogue Between Theological Paradigms and Socio-Legal Pragmatics©2018 Edited Collection -
In Pursuit of an Orthodox Christian Epistemology
A Conversation with Carl F. H. Henry©2020 Monographs -
Coping with Change
Orthodox Christian Dynamics between Tradition, Innovation,and Realpolitik©2020 Edited Collection -
Turns of Faith, Search for Meaning
Orthodox Christianity and Post-Soviet Experience©2014 Monographs -
The Orthodox Church in Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century
©2011 Monographs -
Orthodox Liturgy and Anti-Judaism
©2024 Edited Collection -
Bible in the Christian Orthodox Tradition
This series aims at exploring and evaluating the various aspects of biblical traditions as studied, understood, taught, and lived in the Christian communities that spoke and wrote – and some continue speaking and writing – in the Aramaic, Arabic, Armenian, Coptic, Georgian, Romanian, Syriac, and other languages of the Orthodox family of churches. A particular focus of this series is the incorporation of the various methodologies and hermeneutics used for centuries in these Christian communities, into the contemporary critical approaches, in order to shed light on understanding the message of the Bible. Each monograph in the series will engage in critical examination of issues raised by contemporary biblical research. Scholars in the fields of biblical text, manuscripts, canon, hermeneutics, theology, lectionary, Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha will have an enormous opportunity to share their academic findings with a worldwide audience. Manuscripts and dissertations, incorporating a variety of approaches and methodologies to studying the Bible in the Eastern and Oriental Orthodox traditions – including, but not limited to, theological, historiographic, philological and literary – are welcome. This series aims at exploring and evaluating the various aspects of biblical traditions as studied, understood, taught, and lived in the Christian communities that spoke and wrote – and some continue speaking and writing – in the Aramaic, Arabic, Armenian, Coptic, Georgian, Romanian, Syriac, and other languages of the Orthodox family of churches. A particular focus of this series is the incorporation of the various methodologies and hermeneutics used for centuries in these Christian communities, into the contemporary critical approaches, in order to shed light on understanding the message of the Bible. Each monograph in the series will engage in critical examination of issues raised by contemporary biblical research. Scholars in the fields of biblical text, manuscripts, canon, hermeneutics, theology, lectionary, Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha will have an enormous opportunity to share their academic findings with a worldwide audience. Manuscripts and dissertations, incorporating a variety of approaches and methodologies to studying the Bible in the Eastern and Oriental Orthodox traditions – including, but not limited to, theological, historiographic, philological and literary – are welcome. This series aims at exploring and evaluating the various aspects of biblical traditions as studied, understood, taught, and lived in the Christian communities that spoke and wrote – and some continue speaking and writing – in the Aramaic, Arabic, Armenian, Coptic, Georgian, Romanian, Syriac, and other languages of the Orthodox family of churches. A particular focus of this series is the incorporation of the various methodologies and hermeneutics used for centuries in these Christian communities, into the contemporary critical approaches, in order to shed light on understanding the message of the Bible. Each monograph in the series will engage in critical examination of issues raised by contemporary biblical research. Scholars in the fields of biblical text, manuscripts, canon, hermeneutics, theology, lectionary, Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha will have an enormous opportunity to share their academic findings with a worldwide audience. Manuscripts and dissertations, incorporating a variety of approaches and methodologies to studying the Bible in the Eastern and Oriental Orthodox traditions – including, but not limited to, theological, historiographic, philological and literary – are welcome.
6 publications
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Between Vox Populi and Vox Dei
The Orthodox Church and Embedding Democracy in Bulgaria and SerbiaThesis -
Between Vox Populi and Vox Dei
The Orthodox Church and Embedding Democracy in Bulgaria and Serbia©2025 Thesis -
The Development of Authority within the Russian Orthodox Church
A Theological and Historical Inquiry©2012 Monographs -
The Greek Orthodox Community of Mytilene
Between the Ottoman Empire and the Greek State, 1876-1912©2013 Monographs -
Festschrift in Honor of Professor Paul Nadim Tarazi
Volume 3- Studies in Intertestamental, Extra-Canonical, and Early Christian Literature-©2015 Monographs -
Pilgrimage to Mount Athos
©2023 Edited Collection -
Manna from Athos
The Issue of Frequent Communion on the Holy Mountain in the Late Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries©2006 Monographs -
Rightly Dividing the Word of Truth
Studies in Honour of Metropolitan Kallistos of Diokleia©2016 Others -
Studies in Eastern Orthodoxy
ISSN: 2235-1930
This series is concerned with Eastern Orthodox Christianity in its various manifestations. Originating as the church of the East Roman or Byzantine empire, Eastern Orthodoxy comprises the group of churches that owe allegiance to the Ecumenical Patriarchate in Constantinople. The Orthodox Church has exercised unparalleled influence over the history, thought, and culture of the region and remains one of the most dynamic and creative forces in Christendom today. The series will publish studies in English, both monographs and edited collections, in all areas of social, cultural, and political activity in which the Orthodox Church can be seen to have played a major role.
5 publications
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Exegesis and Hermeneutics in the Churches of the East
Select Papers from the SBL Meeting in San Diego, 2007©2009 Monographs