Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I, 6,1| Byzantium was assisted by a marriage. In 1472 Ivan III ~.the
2 I, 6,1| heir to the throne, the marriage served to establish a ~dynastic
3 II, 3,2| occasions, such as Baptism,~Marriage, Monastic Profession, Royal
4 II, 4 | Confession~5 Holy Orders~6 Marriage or Holy Matrimony~7 The
5 II, 4,6| Marriage~The Trinitarian mystery
6 II, 4,6| Church~but to the doctrine of marriage. Man is made in the image
7 II, 4,6| union of man and woman. Marriage is not only a state of nature
8 II, 4,6| sacrament of Holy Matrimony.~The Marriage Service is divided into
9 II, 4,6| the two partners join in marriage of their own~free will and
10 II, 4,6| no sacrament of Christian~marriage. The second part of the
11 II, 4,6| martyrdom, since every true marriage involves an immeasurable
12 II, 4,6| recalls the miracle at the marriage feast of Cana in Galilee:
13 II, 4,6| about the indissolubility of marriage, the Orthodox Church also
14 II, 4,6| Certainly Orthodoxy regards the marriage bond as in principle lifelong
15 II, 4,6| condemns the breakdown of marriage as a sin and an evil. But
16 II, 4,6| chance. When,~therefore, a marriage has entirely ceased to be
17 II, 4,6| the service for a second~marriage several of the joyful ceremonies
18 II, 4,6| a second or even a third marriage, absolutely forbids~a fourth.
19 II, 7,8| 1’amour, Paris, 1962 (on marriage).~ J. Meyendorff, Marriage:
20 II, 7,8| marriage).~ J. Meyendorff, Marriage: An Orthodox Perspective,
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