Rowman & Littlefield Publishers / Sheed & Ward
Pages: 288
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7425-3162-8 • Hardback • November 2003 • $144.00 • (£111.00)
978-0-7425-3163-5 • Paperback • October 2003 • $53.00 • (£41.00)
978-1-4616-1995-6 • eBook • October 2003 • $136.50 • (£105.00)
Michael P. Plekon is a professor in the department of sociology/anthropology and the program in religion and culture at Baruch College, City University of New York. He is also an ordained priest in the Orthodox Church in America.
Chapter 1 Introduction: Living the Tradition
Part 2 Nicolas Afanasiev
Chapter 3 Una sancta
Chapter 4 The Church's Canons: Changeable or Unchangeable?
Chapter 5 The Eucharist: The Principal Link between Catholics and the Orthodox
Part 6 Sergius Bulgakov
Chapter 7 By Jacob's Well
Chapter 8 Dogma and Dogmatic Theology
Part 9 Nicolas Berdiaev
Chapter 10 The Bourgeois Mind
Chapter 11 The Worth of Christianity and the Unworthiness of Christians
Part 12 Cyprian Kern
Chapter 13 Two Models of the Pastorate: Levitical and Prophetic
Part 14 John Meyendorff
Chapter 15 Church and Ministry: For an Orthodox-Lutheran Dialogue
Chapter 16 Does Christian Tradition Have a Future?
Part 17 Alexander Men
Chapter 18 Fifth Talk on the Creed
Chapter 19 Sixth Talk on the Creed: On Niacaeo, the Constantinopolitan Symbol
Part 20 Paul Evdokimov
Chapter 21 Christ and the Church
Part 22 Elisabeth Behr-Sigel
Chapter 23 The Energizing Force of Tradition
Part 24 Mother Maria Skobtsova
Chapter 25 Birth and Death
Part 26 Anton Kartashev
Chapter 27 The Paths Ttowards the Reunion of the Churches
Part 28 Lev Zander
Chapter 29 On the Essence of Ecumenical Participation
Part 30 Alexander Schmemann
Chapter 31 Palm Sunday
Chapter 32 Concerning the Personal Nature of Faith
Chapter 33 Be Like Children
Chapter 34 Conclusion
Michael Plekon has once again provided us with a splendid anthology of essays on the purpose and nature of tradition within the Eastern Orthodox theological milieu. This is a delightful, elegant book, which illuminates Merton's analysis that the simplicity found in the architectural aspects of both Shakers and Cistericians rests on the foundation of humility shared by these communities.
— Cistercian Studies Quarterly
This book deserves a wide readership…[it] is the sort of book parish book review and adult study groups ought to be tackling, and I, for one, hope that priests and lay teachers will suggest its use in that setting-after having read it themselves.
— St. Vladimir's Theological Quarterly
This is a real treasury. The most creative and profound names in modern Orthodox thinking are brought before us in magnificently accessible form, at the hands of a first-class scholar who has already written eloquently about many of them. The interest ofthis book goes far beyond specialists in Eastern Christianity alone: here is a symphony of thoroughly contemporary Christian voices who are at the same time steeped in the life of worship and tradition. A splendid collection....
— Dr. Rowan Williams, Archbishop of Canterbury
This is a real treasury. The most creative and profound names in modern Orthodox thinking are brought before us in magnificently accessible form, at the hands of a first-class scholar who has already written eloquently aboutmany of them. The interest of this book goes far beyond specialists in Eastern Christianity alone: here is a symphony of thoroughly contemporary Christian voices who are at the same time steeped in the life of worship and tradition. A splendid collection.
— Dr. Rowan Williams, Archbishop of Canterbury