Chapter, Paragraph
1 Fwd,1| fullest and most accurate traditions of all. The same readers
2 Fwd,3| but out of love for its traditions. Likewise, as a monk notes
3 1,1 | Some Beliefs, Customs and Traditions of the Church, p. 1].~ ~
4 1,1 | the influence of national traditions that were bound up with
5 2,6 | the Christian beliefs and traditions which had reached his age
6 4,12| ideas and a mixing of Church traditions with contemporary reality
7 6,9 | pretenses were contrary to the traditions and customs of the Church,
8 6,16| free of Western Christian traditions, were permitted to experiment
9 7,4 | Tradition rather than human traditions).~ ~
10 7,7 | stand firm and hold to the traditions which you were taught by
11 7,9 | to critically examine our traditions (customs) and distinguish
12 7,9 | while the observed human traditions that contradicted God's
13 7,9 | God, and hold fast to the traditions of men” (Mk 7:8, also 7:
14 7,9 | deplorable and unlawful traditions among the Pharisees, for
15 7,9 | It was these man-made traditions that Christ condemned by
16 7,9 | sacred. Concerning human traditions, he writes to the Colossians: “
17 7,9 | things and hold fast to the traditions [paradoseis] just as I delivered [
18 7,9 | what the source was of the traditions of the Pharisees was when
19 7,9 | when He called them “the traditions of men” (Mk 7:8).~ As for
20 7,9 | just where did he get these traditions in the first place? “I received
21 7,9 | revelation, whereas human traditions originate from mankind and
22 7,9 | had both oral and written traditions which they received from
23 7,11| Apostolic and Evangelical traditions, without understanding that
24 7,11| to abandon the unwritten traditions on the pretext that they
25 7,11| are gathered many ancient traditions of rite and dogma — in particular,
26 7,11| stand fast, and hold the traditions which ye have been taught,
27 7,21| the... beliefs and pious traditions bequeathed to us by the
28 9,42| question are the most ancient traditions of diverse peoples about
29 9,42| Comparative study of these traditions, the same professor writes,
30 9,42| Andreyev explains that:~ ~Dim traditions about Paradise and its loss
31 9,42| this teaching are met in traditions of people of Asia, Europe,
32 9,42| remarkable mutual accord in traditions of various peoples about
33 10,13| but out of love for its traditions. Orthodoxy has maintained
34 11,1 | and his followers from the traditions of the early Church. The
35 11,4 | different Orthodox national traditions, one finds that no two sound
36 11,4 | of church music. Of these traditions, the Russian is particularly
37 Ep | that time the morals and traditions of Christians and of the
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