Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | a special relevance for contemporary Orthodoxy. ~ ~.Suddenly
2 I, 2,4 | others: .He used to say,. a contemporary recorded, .that ~if, without
3 I, 4,3 | compared ~with his western contemporary, Saint Louis, King of France.
4 I, 4,3 | evident. Sergius was a contemporary of Gregory Palamas, and
5 I, 6,2 | the ~same reverence for contemporary Greeks. They remembered
6 I, 6,3 | pseudo-religious movements in the contemporary west: Protestant ~mysticism,
7 I, 6,3 | pseudo-religious movements in the contemporary west, and fell back once
8 I, 6,3 | close sympathy with his contemporary Nicodemus. ~He made a Slavonic
9 I, 6,3 | liturgical developments in contemporary Orthodoxy. In 1964 he was ~
10 I, 7,6 | Selected Writings of the contemporary Greek icon painter Fotis
11 I, 7,9 | religious movements of the contemporary west . in Biblical research,
12 I, 7,10| difficulties to face than most. In contemporary Orthodoxy it is not always
13 II, 2,3 | fairly widely accepted in contemporary Orthodox thought.~This act
14 II, 2,5 | encouraging signs of~revival in contemporary Orthodoxy is the renewed
15 II, 3,2 | Sundays and feasts. But~in contemporary Russia, where places of
16 II, 3,2 | liturgical~language and the contemporary vernacular is not so great
17 II, 7,6 | N. Struve, Christians in Contemporary Russia, London, 1967.~
18 II, 7,8 | Gavin, Some Aspects of Contemporary Greek Orthodox Thought,
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