Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I, 2,3 | religion freed from all contact with what is material; for
2 I, 5,2 | There were many means of contact: Orthodox, as we have ~seen,
3 I, 5,2 | spirit marked the first major contact between Orthodoxy and the ~
4 I, 5,2 | seventeenth century came into contact not only with Roman Catholics, ~
5 I, 6,3 | scholar, a man in close contact with the intellectual movements
6 I, 7,6 | flock can have personal contact, and in ~ 71~whom the poor
7 I, 7,6 | children lose all vital contact with the Church, is commonly
8 I, 7,9 | as an important point of contact between Orthodox and non-~
9 I, 7,9 | At times the only formal contact has been the ~regular exchange
10 I, 7,10| as a result of personal contact with other Ortho-~dox, but
11 I, 7,10| and Obadiah established contact with an organization emanating
12 II, 0,11| often it is precisely~their contact with the west which is helping
13 II, 1,2 | Him there is a point of contact, an essential similarity.~
14 II, 1,3 | of course many points of contact; yet in the western approach
15 II, 6,1 | have had close personal contact with other Christians. This
16 II, 6,2 | and enter into a living contact with~non-Orthodox Christians.~
17 II, 6,3 | younger brothers, for through contact with Christians of the west~—
18 II, 6,3 | so today the renewal of contact between~69~east and west
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