Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I, 2,3 | said Leontius, are .opened books to remind ~us of God. (P.G.
2 I, 3,1 | sources nor read the same books, Greek east and Latin ~west
3 I, 3,3 | For ~many centuries these books were thought to be the work
4 I, 4,1 | Bible and Slavonic service books. Before they set out for
5 I, 4,1 | of their Slavonic service books on the altars of the principal
6 I, 4,1 | too the Slavonic service books were intro-~duced and a
7 I, 5,2 | printing presses and issued books in defense of Orthodoxy;
8 I, 5,2 | adapting for Orthodox use books by Lorenzo Scupoli and Ignatius
9 I, 6,1 | accordance with the Prophetical books. Two Romes have fallen,
10 I, 6,1 | correct the Russian service books, ~which were disfigured
11 I, 6,1 | proposed in the service books, and the work of revision
12 I, 6,2 | work of correcting service books, begun in the previous century
13 I, 6,2 | and more accurate Church ~books were issued, although the
14 I, 6,2 | that the Russian service books should be altered wherever
15 I, 6,2 | corrections in the service books without arousing opposition.
16 I, 6,2 | or to use the new service books ~which he issued. Nicon
17 I, 6,2 | with its Niconian ser-~vice books eventually formed a separate
18 I, 6,2 | s changes in the service books ~and above all his ruling
19 I, 6,3 | upon German and Anglican books of devotion; his detailed
20 I, 6,3 | important than all possible books and ideas,. wrote the Slavophil ~
21 I, 7,6 | number of periodicals ~and books, with a very wide circulation.
22 I, 7,9 | American Orthodoxy. A list of ~books and articles published by
23 I, 7,9 | includes seventy full-scale books . a remarkable achievement,
24 I, 7,9 | Patriarchate, wrote many books as .A Monk of the Eastern
25 I, 7,9 | which produces liturgical books in Church Slavonic, and
26 I, 7,9 | Church Slavonic, and other books and periodicals in Russian ~
27 II, 0,11| than this. It means the books of the Bible; it means the
28 II, 0,11| the Canons,~the Service Books, the Holy Icons — in fact,
29 II, 0,12| originally decided which~books form a part of Holy Scripture;
30 II, 0,12| Testament contains thirty-nine books. The Septuagint contains~
31 II, 0,12| in addition ten further books, not present in the Hebrew,
32 II, 0,12| as the ‘Deutero-Canonical Books’ (3 Esdras; Tobit; Judith;
33 II, 0,12| Jeremias. In the west these books are often called the ‘Apocrypha’).~
34 II, 0,12| that the Deutero-Canonical Books, although part of the Bible,~
35 II, 0,12| laid down by the service books. In practice, in ordinary
36 II, 0,12| sometimes called the ‘Symbolical Books’ of~the Orthodox Church,
37 II, 3,1 | should~not so much read books as follow the sample of
38 II, 3,2 | to translate the service~books into native tongues. In
39 II, 3,2 | the place where the sacred books, particularly the Book~of
40 II, 4,4 | Slavonic but not in the Greek books).~After this the priest
41 II, 4,4 | absolution. In the Greek books the formula of absolution
42 II, 4,4 | forgive…’), in the Slavonic books it is indicative (i.e. in
43 II, 4,4 | introduced into Orthodox service books~under Latin influence by
44 II, 5,1 | Church he requires only two books — the Missal and the Breviary;~
45 II, 5,1 | of the Orthodox Service Books, ‘these volumes together
46 II, 5,1 | 1866, p. 52).~Yet these books, at first sight so unwieldy,
47 II, 5,2 | directly from the Service Books used in public worship,
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