Other Religions
Showing all 5 results
-
Eastern Orthodoxy In A Global Age
$111.00Add to cartForeword
Sabrina P. Ramet
PrefaceIntroduction: Eastern Orthodoxy In A Global Age: Preliminary Considerations
Alex Agadjanian And Victor Roudometof
East European ExperiencesGlobalization And Identity Discourse In Russian Orthodoxy
Alexander Agadjanian And Kathy Rousselet
From Hot War To Cold Integration? Serbian Orthodox Voices On Globalization And The European Union
Klaus Buchenau
Orthodoxy As Public Religion In Post-1989 Greece
Victor Roudometof
Church, Identity, Politics: Ecclesiastical Functions And Expectations Toward Churches In Post-1989 Romania
Gavril Flora And Georgina Szilagyi
Globalization, Nationalism, And Orthodoxy: The Case Of Ukranian Nation-Building
Victor Yelenski
Comparative Perspectives And Transnational ConnectionsOrthodox Christianity, Rationalization, Modernization: A Reassessment
Vasilos N. Makrides
A Transnational Religious Community Gathers Around An Icon: The Return Of The Tsar
Nina Schmit
Living Eastern Orthodox Religion In The United States
Dmitro Volkov
The Greek Orthodox Church In The US: Crisis Or Transition?
George Kouvetaris
Bibliographical NotesIndex
Additional Info
Despite over 200 million adherents, Eastern Orthodox Christianity attracts little scholarly attention. While more-covered religions emerge as powerful transnational forces, Eastern Orthodoxy appears doggedly local, linked to the ethnicity and land of the now marginalized Eastern Europe. But Eastern Orthodoxy in a Global Age brings together new and nuanced understandings of the Orthodox churches–inside and outside of Eastern Europe–as they negotiate an increasingly networked world. The picture that emerges is less of a people stubbornly refusing modernization, more of a people seeking to maintain a stable Orthodox identity in an unstable world. For anyone interested in the role of Eastern Orthodoxy in the 21st century, this volume provides the place to begin. -
Mystical Theology : The Science Of Love
$24.00Add to cartFrom the earliest centuries there has existed a Christian theology of mysticism, defining the state which Bernard Lonergan called a “being in love with God.” St. John of the Cross wrote such a theology for the sixteenth century, calling it “the science of love.” Now, William Johnston, one of the great spiritual writers of our time, attempts to do the same for the twenty-first century.
In Part One of Mystical Theology Johnston surveys Christian mysticism through the centuries. Johnson shows that such a theology today must dialogue with modern science and with Eastern religions. Part Two provides this dialogue, where Johnston engages Einstein’s theories as well as Zen Buddhism. In Part Three, it becomes clear how the “science of love” is no longer an esoteric discipline for monks and nuns. In Johnston’s writing it becomes accessible to all modern people grappling with problems of sexuality, social justice, world peace, and the protection of the environment.
Mystical Theology is indispensable to all those seeking guidance as well as intellectual and historical foundations of the Christian mystical experience today.
-
Christianity And World Religions
$33.00Add to cartKung joins with three esteemed colleagues to address the question: “Can we break through the barriers of noncommunication, fear, and mistrust that separate the followers of the world’s great religions?” The authors analyze the main lines of approach taken by Islam, Hinduism, and Buddhism, and give Christian responses to the values and challenges each tradition presents.