Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I,Intro | much part of Orthodoxy ~as Greece and Christian Russia are
2 I,Intro | influence has ~been that of Greece. Yet it must not therefore
3 I,Intro | former glory, the Church in Greece is free once more; but Russia
4 I,Intro | Orthodox. The Churches of ~Greece, Cyprus, and Sinai are Greek;
5 I, 2,4 | rocky ~peninsula in North Greece jutting out into the Aegean
6 I, 5,1 | Patriarchate: the Church of Greece (organized in 1833, recognized
7 I, 5,2 | introduce weekly communion in Greece today appeal to the great
8 I, 6,1 | Domini-~can. Returning to Greece in 1504, he became a monk
9 I, 7 | ancient Patriarchates and Greece, under communism are the
10 I, 7 | four . Constantinople, Greece, ~Cyprus, Sinai . are predominantly
11 I, 7,1 | students not ~only from Greece but from the Near East in
12 I, 7,1 | least in certain circles in Greece itself, ~the monastic life
13 I, 7,1 | widely known and respected in Greece as a whole. ~ But it would
14 I, 7,4 | missionary. movements of Greece, a leading part is ~played
15 I, 7,6 | The Church of Greece ~continues to occupy a central
16 I, 7,6 | million faithful) and in north Greece many dioceses con-~tain
17 I, 7,6 | married parish clergy of Greece in the past preached sermons;
18 I, 7,6 | theological seminary, but in Greece in the year ~1920, of 4,
19 I, 7,6 | educational standards in Greece during recent years, a change
20 I, 7,6 | two older universities of Greece, at Athens and Thessalonica,
21 I, 7,6 | theological professors of Greece have produced a considerable
22 I, 7,6 | Orthodox tradition. Theology in Greece today suffers from ~the
23 I, 7,6 | university. Nevertheless in Greece ~at the present time there
24 I, 7,6 | alarm-~ing on the mainland of Greece as it was on Athos until
25 I, 7,6 | spiritual father in post-war ~Greece), already has two daughter
26 I, 7,6 | have ~been reprinted in Greece, including a new edition
27 I, 7,6 | monasteries. ~ Religious art in Greece is undergoing a most welcome
28 I, 7,6 | New York, 1957, p. 21). ~ Greece possesses an Orthodox counterpart
29 I, 7,6 | few if any such schools in Greece), and it is ~reckoned that
30 I, 7,9 | come in most cases from Greece, but almost all the ~parish
31 I, 7,10 | sent to study theology in Greece, and since 1960 more than
32 II, 3,2 | increasing number~of parishes in Greece, Russia, Romania, and the
33 II, 4,2 | Constantinople and the Church of Greece usu-~44~ally receive them
34 II, 4,3 | years a few parishes~in Greece and in the Russian diaspora
35 II, 4,5 | occasions in Constantinople or Greece during the present century
36 II, 5,1 | Friday, when every bell in Greece tolls its lament~and the
37 II, 5,1 | delegates from Serbia, Romania, Greece, and Cyprus (the Patriarchs
38 II, 5,1 | by Alexandria, Antioch,~Greece, Cyprus, Romania, and Poland (
39 II, 5,1 | opposition, particularly in Greece, where groups~of ‘Old Calendarists’
40 II, 5,1 | Constantinople and the Church of Greece, but the Palaioimerologitai
41 II, 6,2 | Alexandria,~Antioch, Jerusalem, Greece, Cyprus, Serbia, Bulgaria,
42 II, 6,2 | Alexandria, Jerusalem, Greece, Cyprus,~Serbia, Bulgaria,
43 II, 6,2 | Alexandria, Antioch, Jerusalem,~Greece, Cyprus, Bulgaria, Poland,
44 II, 6,2 | Churches): Constantinople, Greece, Romanian Church~in America.~
45 II, 6,2 | Constantinople, Antioch, Greece, Cyprus,~North American
46 II, 6,2 | Alexandria, Antioch, Jerusalem,~Greece, Cyprus, Russia, Bulgaria,
47 II, 6,2 | reserved. The Church of Greece, for example, at one point
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