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Early Eastern Orthodox Church

A History, AD 60-1453

Early Eastern Orthodox Church

A History, AD 60-1453

This item is available to order.
Please allow 2-3 weeks for delivery.

Paperback / softback

£28.99

Publisher: McFarland & Co Inc
ISBN: 9781476674810
Number of Pages: 191
Published: 09/10/2018
Width: 15.2 cm
Height: 22.9 cm

"It seemed good to the Holy Spirit and to us," the apostles declared at the conclusion of their council described in Acts 15. This apostolic council was the first of many councils to come as Christians sought to discern the will of God in the midst of historic challenges.

The faithful continued to struggle to express their new apostolic faith in new words, new languages, new places and new times. Many issues--the interaction of science and faith, divinity and humanity, Church and State--continue to be pertinent today.

This book tells the story of these struggles from the days of the New Testament to the fall of the city of Constantinople in AD 1453. It focuses on the Christian community in the eastern Mediterranean which became known as the Byzantine Empire. Each chapter examines the personalities and theologies entwined at the heart of conflicts that shaped the medieval world as well as the modern cultures of Greece, the Middle East and Eastern Europe.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Before Nicea
2. Nicea
3. The Pneumatomachoi and the Second Ecumenical Council
4. Constantinople, Alexandria and the Mother of God
5. Chalcedon
6. Justinian and Theodora
7. Maximus the Confessor and the “One-Will” (Monothelite) Controversy
8. Icons and Iconoclasm
9. Iconoclasm, Part 2
10. Constantinople, Rome and Leo VI
11. Divisions, the Crusades and Reunion
12. Gregory Palamas, the Council of ­Ferrara-Florence and the Fall of the City
Conclusion
Chapter Notes
Bibliography
Index

Stephen Morris

Stephen Morris is an independent scholar who lives in New York City. He has studied Byzantine and medieval history and theology at Yale and St. Vladimir’s Orthodox Theological Academy and has written on patristic preaching and exegesis as well as medieval and Byzantine hagiography.