Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I,Intro | Orthodox Church at first hand. Greeks journeying westward from
2 I, 3,1 | and Scythic tongue.. ~If Greeks wished to read Latin works
3 I, 3,1 | Church: he denounced the Greeks for not using the filioque
4 I, 3,1 | schools. From the start Greeks and Latins had each approached
5 I, 3,1 | of Roman law, while the Greeks un-~derstood theology in
6 I, 3,1 | the unity of the Godhead, Greeks with the threeness of the ~
7 I, 3,1 | primarily of Christ the Victim, ~Greeks of Christ the Victor; Latins
8 I, 3,1 | talked more of redemption, Greeks of deification; and so on. ~
9 I, 3,1 | was bound to arise. The Greeks assigned to the Pope a primacy
10 I, 3,1 | own pre-~ 25~rogative, the Greeks held that in matters of
11 I, 3,1 | controversy, accusing the Greeks of heresy because they recited
12 I, 3,1 | until after 850 that the Greeks paid much attention to the
13 I, 3,1 | between east and west: the Greeks ~allowed married clergy,
14 I, 3,1 | different rules ~of fasting; the Greeks used leavened bread in the
15 I, 3,2 | Creed, but not used by the Greeks. The chief point of trouble
16 I, 3,2 | a violent attack on the Greeks, singling out ~ 28~the points
17 I, 3,2 | between the Germans and the Greeks, was now neutral no longer. ~
18 I, 3,2 | Normans had been forcing the Greeks in Byzantine ~Italy to conform
19 I, 3,2 | ment, Humbert accused the Greeks of omitting the filioque
20 I, 3,2 | Daniel of Tchernigov, found Greeks and Latins worshipping together
21 I, 3,2 | shoulders.. What shocked the Greeks ~more than anything was
22 I, 3,2 | stolen. Can we ~wonder if the Greeks after 1204 also looked on
23 I, 3,3 | an end in 1261 when the Greeks recovered their capital.
24 I, 3,3 | it was difficult for the ~Greeks to discuss theology dispassionately,
25 I, 3,3 | uniformity was demanded: Greeks were allowed to use leavened
26 I, 4,1 | for the task two brothers, Greeks from Thessalonica, Constantine (
27 I, 4,1 | tual children,. the two Greeks from Thessalonica abundantly
28 I, 4,1 | at the same time. ~ The Greeks communicated this faith
29 I, 4,3 | sense of unity among the Greeks under Turkish rule. The
30 I, 4,3 | Two centuries later the Greeks after the ~Council of Florence
31 I, 5,1 | at Constantinople. To the Greeks, in 1453 it must also have
32 I, 5,1 | city. had fallen, and the Greeks were under the rule of the
33 I, 5,1 | Before the fall of the city, Greeks called him .the precursor
34 I, 5,1 | less likeli-~hood of the Greeks seeking secret aid from
35 I, 5,1 | strengthen a Church; but the Greeks in the Ottoman Empire were
36 I, 5,1 | all but impossible for the Greeks to distinguish between Church
37 I, 5,1 | or language; but to the Greeks of the ~Turkish Empire .
38 I, 5,1 | better days to come. The Greeks clung with miraculous tenacity ~
39 I, 5,1 | and difficult period the Greeks did in faces main-~tain
40 I, 5,1 | standard of scholarship. Greeks who ~wished for a higher
41 I, 5,1 | There was a real danger that Greeks who studied in the West,
42 I, 5,1 | must not be exaggerated. Greeks ~used the outward forms
43 I, 5,2 | of Reformation among the ~Greeks; as Crusius somewhat naively
44 I, 5,2 | the Papic ~Church. (as the Greeks termed it) he should have
45 I, 5,2 | islands under Venetian rule, Greeks and Latins shared in one
46 I, 5,2 | lack of money, and the ~Greeks found the food and lodging
47 I, 5,2 | Martyrs: many of them were Greeks who became Mohammedan ~and
48 I, 6,2 | in all respects copy the Greeks. But was not ~Russia an
49 I, 6,2 | reverence for contemporary Greeks. They remembered the .apostasy.
50 I, 6,2 | remembered the .apostasy. of the Greeks at ~Florence, and they knew
51 I, 6,2 | three-finger form; it was the ~Greeks who were the innovators,
52 I, 7 | The twentieth century, Greeks and Arabs~The Orthodox Church
53 I, 7,1 | islands in the Aegean; All Greeks of the dispersion, together
54 I, 7,1 | more than half of whom are Greeks ~dwelling in North America. ~
55 I, 7,1 | population of some 1,500,000 ~Greeks, but the greater part of
56 I, 7,1 | only place in ~Turkey where Greeks are allowed to live is Istanbul (
57 I, 7,1 | 000,000. Since then, many Greeks have fled from fear or else
58 I, 7,5 | 1948 there were only 5,000 Greeks within the Patriarchate
59 I, 7,9 | North America. ~In 1922 the Greeks created an Exarchate for
60 I, 7,9 | brought up in France), seven Greeks, five Serbs, one Georgian,
61 I, 7,9 | originally under the Greeks, is now within the Russian
62 I, 7,9 | others, especially among the Greeks, the Serbs, ~and the Russian
63 I, 7,9 | Archdiocese. For a ~long time the Greeks, anxious to preserve their
64 I, 7,9 | something restricted to Greeks or Rus-~sians, and of no
65 II, 1,2 | and enfeebled by what the Greeks call ‘desire’ and the Latins ‘
66 II, 3,2 | America — particularly the~Greeks — who are now showing a
67 II, 3,2 | the whole take longer than Greeks over services, but in a~
68 II, 4,4 | to go more often than the~Greeks do. Where infrequent communion
69 II, 4,5 | the original way; but the Greeks (except at~Jerusalem) now
70 II, 4,5 | Metropolitan. Thus among the Greeks~an Archbishop now ranks
71 II, 4,5 | distinction.~Higumenos. Among the Greeks, the Abbot of a monastery.
72 II, 4,6 | places crowns, made among the Greeks of leaves~and flowers, but
73 II, 5,1 | parish church. Not among the Greeks only but throughout Orthodox~
74 II, 5,1 | to an end. At present the Greeks~(outside Athos and Jerusalem)
75 II, 5,1 | January (New Style); the Greeks~keep Epiphany on 6 January,
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