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Can a scientist believe in the Resurrection?

Can a scientist believe in the Resurrection?

Apr 23, 2009

The Surprising Character of Early Christian Hope: The foundation of my argument for what happened at Easter is the reflection that the Jewish expectation of resurrection has undergone remarkable modifications or mutations within early Christianity, which can be plotted consistently right across the first two centuries. And these mutations are so striking, in an area of human experience where societies tend to be very conservative, that they force the historian, not least the would-be scientific historian, to ask, Why did they occur?

Ancestral Versus Original Sin

Ancestral Versus Original Sin

Dec 22, 2008

As pervasive as the term original sin has become, it may come as a surprise to some that it was unknown in both the Eastern and Western Church until Augustine (c. 354-430). The concept may have arisen in the writings of Tertullian, but the expression seems to have appeared first in Augustine’s works...

Give me a word

Give me a word

Nov 17, 2008

A brother came to see Abba Macarius the Egyptian, and said to him, “Abba, give me a word, that I may be saved.”…

When peace of heart is a problem

When peace of heart is a problem

Nov 2, 2008

A brother said to an old man, "I see no warfare in my heart." The old man said to him, "You are a building open on all sides, and whoever wishes can pass through you and you are unaware of it. If you have a door, you should shut it, and not allow evil thoughts to enter through it; for then you will see them standing outside, banging on the door, and attacking you."

When Tradition Fractures

When Tradition Fractures

Oct 7, 2008

St. Augustine Lives on in the Great Theological Conflicts of Today. When it comes to St. Augustine, the great fifth-century bishop of Hippo, Protestants, Catholics, and Orthodox all have a similar reaction: none of us quite know what to do with him. Or at least that was my impression, based on the conference I attended at Fordham University last June.

From the Little Mountain

From the Little Mountain

Sep 30, 2008

From the Little Mountain takes you through a year at the Hermitage of the Holy Cross in West Virginia. This is a unique documentary of an Orthodox monastery in the 21st century...

The Spiritual Father in Orthodox Christianity

The Spiritual Father in Orthodox Christianity

Sep 16, 2008

One who climbs a mountain for the first time needs to follow a known route; and he needs to have with him, as companion and guide, someone who has been up before and is familiar with the way. To serve as such a companion and guide is precisely the role of the "Abba" or spiritual father...

The Monastic Call

The Monastic Call

Sep 15, 2008

The early monastics flew into the desert not to escape the city and its newly respectable churches but rather to seek salvation at a time when increasing wealth and prestige might have been the undoing of the Church through a subtle (and sometimes not so subtle!) compromise with worldliness. In this manner the Church’s integrity in both desert and city was preserved...

The Teaching of the Twelve Apostles

The Teaching of the Twelve Apostles

Sep 11, 2008

The Didachē is a short catechism, probably written in Syria during the second half of the 1st century. The Didachē is concerned with practical discipline and does not deliberately teach doctrine, but from the writer's assumptions we learn a great deal about the development of the early Church in his generation.

The River of God

The River of God

Aug 27, 2008

There's a river flowing through the Scriptures. Ezekiel saw it welling up under the temple of God. Zechariah saw the river flowing on earth at Christ's coming. John saw the same river at the end of time flowing from the throne of God...