scholarly journals QUINTESENCE OF THE SPIRITUAL TEMPLES OF VOLYN AT THE END OF XIX – EARLY XX CENTURIES IN THE SERMONS OF VOLYNSKIY AND ZHYTOMYRSKIY ARCHBISHOP DIMITRIY

2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 21-25
Author(s):  
Olena Moroz

The analysis of the sermons of the Archbishop of Volynskyy and Zhytomyrskyy Dimitriy, delivered on the occasion of the opening of the Orthodox Churches in Volyn region at the end of XIX – early XX centuries, is relevant. It helps to analyze and reveal the symbolic and essential features of the Orthodox Church, to compare the outlook and religious views of modern Orthodox adherents in assessing the role of the spiritual temple, determining its place in the life of the modern man. Spiritual temples of Volyn region at the end of XIX – early XX centuries as religious and cultural centers have been played an important role in the life of the region. The purpose of this article is to analyze the main symbolic content of the architectural forms of the Orthodox Church, to find out their meaningful content, to convey to the modern generation the spiritual and sacred meaning of the religious temple through the prism of Christian virtues. Research methods: according to the purposes a wide range of methods was applied. The historical method was used to clarify the foundations and purpose of the first religious buildings of Christianity. Structural-functional method was used for revealing the basic ideas of architectural forms of the temple, their symbolic and sacred content related to basic criteria of life of the Orthodox adept: attending spiritual temples, Divine liturgies; observance of the Decalogue, the sacraments of the Orthodox Church; love, morality, humility. The method of comparison and analogy was applied to highlight the vital priorities of a true Orthodox adept. The author notes that the spiritual temple is the God's Kingdom on earth, the source and the original guardian of spiritual and religious values. The quintessence of the spiritual temples of Volyn at the end of XIX – early XX centuries is expressed by: firstly, the spiritual temple is a symbol of the impulse of human essence to heaven, eternal, sacred; secondly, the spiritual temple is a holy and unity place (holiness is expressed by the concentration of the mighty power of the Holy Spirit, unity is expressed by the uniting power of believers of the Orthodox people); thirdly, the value of the spiritual temple, according to the thoughts of Archbishop of Volynskyy and Zhytomyrskyy Dimitriy, is not determined by external decoration, but by the sacraments of the Orthodox Church, sincere prayer.

1986 ◽  
Vol 39 (2) ◽  
pp. 165-174
Author(s):  
E. A. Obeng

Romans 8.26f. has no parallel in the NT. A. J. M. Wedderburn writes,Today it is still puzzling, troublesome, divisive; for some it is the essence of the Christian faith, to others it is incomprehensible and repellent.This statement sums up adequately the position of most NT scholars on Rom. 8.26f. Its strangeness derives from three basic ideas. First, this is the only passage in which it is asserted that the Christian does not know how to pray as he ought. This is an exception to what is otherwise said of prayer in the NT. Second, this is the only passage in biblical writings where the Holy Spirit is described explicitly as an intercessor. Third, the passage appears disjointed from its context. The guiding thought in vv. 18–25 is suffering but in v. 26, Paul talks about prayer. Can these themes be related in a single unit?


Author(s):  
Андрій Кобетяк

The article considers the basic principles and mechanisms of functioning of the church-administrative system of government of the Ecumenical Church. It is established that two opposing ecclesiological traditions (Greek and Slavic) were gradually formed, which testify to the lack of Unity and Conciliarism. The formation of two approaches to understanding the structure of the system of universal Orthodoxy was the reason for only a partial presence at the Great All-Orthodox Council in 2016. The article argues that in the Orthodox tradition there is no generally accepted interpretation of the interdependence of the principle of locality and the autocephalous status of churches. It is proved that the autocephalous church is always local, but the modern ecclesiological interpretation of locality does not automatically lead to the acquisition of autocephalous status. It is proved that the apostles and their closest disciples did not know and did not foresee any other principle of the existence of the Ecumenical Church than autocephaly. It is emphasized that such a mechanism of church government was based on the territorial principle. It is pointed out that such a division underlies the concept of locality in the Ecumenical Church. It is established that the study of the problem of autocephaly today is a key task of world Orthodoxy. Since the founding of Christianity, autocephaly has been a basic principle of apostolic preaching, which took into account the national and ethnic characteristics of the population of the Roman Empire. Autocephaly is one of the oldest institutions of the Church, which is a defining feature of Orthodoxy today. For two thousand years, this phenomenon remained unchanged, but there were different, even radically opposite approaches to understanding it. Because the theory of autocephaly emerges with Christianity, it is not an imposed or borrowed institution, but the very essence of Orthodoxy, the way it exists. It is claimed that the Ecumenical Church, being united in essence, is divided into independent Local Churches on an administrative and national basis. On a universal scale, the Orthodox Church testifies to the unity of the churches through the Eucharist. Every Local Church is already self-sufficient, for it has the fullness of the grace of the Holy Spirit, but through the Eucharist and the Councils the unity of the Universal Scale is expressed. Key words: cathedral, church, autocephaly, ecclesiology, canon law, patriarch, parish, metropolitan.


2019 ◽  
Vol 17 (17) ◽  
pp. 60-73
Author(s):  
O.V. Cherkashina ◽  
N.M. Utesheva ◽  
O.M. Yakymchuk

Background. The choral creativity of a modern Ukrainian composer Iryna Aleksiichuk is multifaceted and diverse. It includes spiritual chants, cycles of arrangements of Ukrainian and Balkan folk songs, choral works on poetry of Ukrainian and foreign poets (“Letters from the shell” and “Otherworld’ Games” on the verses by O. Stepanenko, “How Volodya flew quickly from the mountain” on the words by D. Harms), etc. The objective of this study is to find out the features of interpretation the canonical text in spiritual chants for a female choir a cappella by I. Aleksiichuk. Methods of studying. The holistic musical-theoretical analysis is applied to determine the figurative content of the work, to identify the peculiarities of form-building and the use of compositional ways of expressiveness (the intonational structure of the basic elements of the form, the tonal-harmonic plan, the methods of development of the thematic material). In the analysis of music the method of comparison was used (to identify correspondence between the means of musical expressiveness and the features of the canonical text). Results. The material of the analysis are four chants (“The King of Heaven”, “Glory to the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit”, “My voice to the Lord”, “Holy, holy, Lord of Sabaoth”), which are united in the cycle “Spiritual chants for female choir a cappella”. In the process of researching the algorithm of sequence of the chants in the cycle is revealed, as well as the correspondence of musical means of expressiveness to canonical text. It is concluded that all chants expressly convey the meaning and the features of the canonical text. Musical structures clearly correlate to verbal. The greatest number of repetitions in the chants the stable formulations of the canonical text acquires: “Lord have mercy”, “Hallelujah”, “Glory to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit”, “Holy Lord”. The semantic significance of the canonical text is reproduced through the rich harmony and inventional polyphony, through the changes of time signatures, text repetitions, the wide choir range, dramatic development and contrasts of all means of expressiveness. Four abovementioned spiritual chants for the female choir a cappella on the canonical texts were written by I. Aleksiichuk in different times during 2002–2011. The order of the canonical text and the logic of the deployment of the musical material allowed the composer to combine them into a fourpart concert for a female choir. The cycle begins with the evening prayer “The King of the Heaven” (prayer to the Holy Spirit). This prayer is а part of the early and evening Church rules. Anumber of services that are performed during the day in the Orthodox Church opens by the evening Divine service, since the day, according to the Church’s Charter, begins in the evening. That is why in first the evening service is, which included the repentant prayers for everyday sins and gratitude to God for this day. The chanting begins and ends with the sound of the bells that by and by go silent. The similarity of the finale to the introduction, the repetition of the musical and verbal texts contributes to the roundness of the musical form and helps to its holistic perception. The music of the incantation “Glory to the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit” reproduces his exalted character. Applied by the author the ways of expressiveness correspond to the canonical text, which glorifies the God in his three hypostases. The definitive feature of the musical work is the presence of a genre sign characterizing of Orthodox worship, the bells. This feature is reproduced in the homophonic-harmonic texture of the composition relying on the main harmonic functions, singing the repeated sounds, etc. In this chant, I. Aleksiichuk is working on three small parts of the canonical text: “Glory to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit”, “now and always and forever” and “Hallelujah”, giving each of them the certain musical themes. The complete formula of prayer sounds in the work three times gaining dynamic development. In the third chorus, “My voice to the Lord”, verses from Psalm 141 are used. This Psalm is the prayer of David to the Lord in the cave in time of his persecution by Saul. Of the seven verses of David’s Psalm, I. Aleksiychuk used four – 1, 2, 4, 5, in which the main content of the work is concentrated. The last part of the cycle is the hymn “Holy, holy, Lord of Sabaoth” performing finale function. This prayer is a part of the Eucharistic canon and it sounds in the most important section of the Divine Liturgy – the Liturgy of the Faithful. The chant begins immediately with the glorification of the God. Conclusions. An analysis of spiritual chants with canonical texts for the female choir a cappella by I. Aleksiichuk illustrates the following. All the songs very clearly express the meaning and features of the canonical text. I.Aleksiichuk choses three-part forms with reprise, in which clearly, according to the text, the musical structures built; the stable formulations of the canonical text “Lord have mercy”, “Hallelujah”, “Glory to the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit”, “Holy Lord” are most often repeated; at the end of the three chants (except «My voice to the Lord»), the final confirming formula of the prayers “Amen” sounds; means of expressiveness (changing of meter signatures, repetitions of the sounds, a wide range of the choir, singing of the main sounds of melody) are designed to create the illusion of chime that is the genre sign of the Orthodox worship; the semantic meaning of the canonical text is passing through the rich harmony, in which dissonances and chromaticism aggravate the expressiveness of the spoken words, through the dramatic development of the words of praise (“Hallelujah”, “Glory to the Father, and Son”), poly-timbre sounds, contrasting of all means of expressiveness, etc.


Author(s):  
Ivan Satyavrata

The Pentecostal/Charismatic movement is not a monolithic church ‘tradition’ with a centralized organization. After a May 1860 revival in Tamil Nadu, revivals swept across India that included figures such as Pandita Ramabai and Minnie Abrams. Pentecostalism in Iran had an early start in the work of Andrew Urshan, who received the baptism in the Holy Spirit in 1908 in Chicago. There are several sociological factors unique to the region that have influenced the wide range of Pentecostal expressions. Some church movements have closely guarded their indigenous identity, while others have welcomed outside relationships. Independent local churches have become Charismatic as the result of a spiritual revival or of embracing Pentecostal teachings and constitute the largest segment of Pentecostals/Charismatics in the region. Pentecostal movements take on indigenous contexts fairly easily due to its autonomy, its spontaneity, and the arousal of cultural identity emerging from colonial experience. A personal experience of the Spirit and the emphasis on Charismatic gifts are central. Despite hostility in the region, Pentecostal and Charismatic churches are growing exponentially, aided by the creative use of media. The varied populations of South and Central Asia represent the most formidable challenge to Christian missions in the twenty-first century.


2005 ◽  
pp. 55-66
Author(s):  
Liudmyla M. Shuhayeva

In the XVII-XVIII centuries. socio-political contradictions in the Russian empire led to the separation from orthodoxy of a number of communities, commonly known as "spiritual Christians," or the old Russian sectarianism. Declaring the doctrine of Orthodoxy authoritarian, they advocated the profession of faith "in the spirit and in the truth," for a spiritual interpretation of Scripture. All spiritual Christians are characterized by: the rejection of the Orthodox Church and the whole institute of the church hierarchy, the basic Orthodox dogmas, sacraments, the cult of the saints, icons, as well as the belief in the incarnation of the Holy Spirit in living people, the "spiritual" baptism which is the teaching of the word of God, human self-communication with God. They declared the whole world spiritual, condemned luxury, preached severe asceticism.


1956 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 31-45
Author(s):  
Alan Richardson

The nineteenth-century revolution in historical method and its application to the study of the Bible rendered necessary a complete re-statement of the doctrine of revelation. No longer was it possible to hold a doctrine of revelation as given in propositional form at the dictation of the Holy Spirit. The object of this paper is to ask what is the biblical conception of revelation and how it can best be expressed and understood in the light of modern thought. We will begin with a very brief and necessarily inadequate summary of what the Bible means by ‘revelation’.


Author(s):  
Paul McPartlan

After noting convergences regarding the Eucharist between the teaching of the Second Vatican Council and the views of the 1963 Faith and Order conference, this chapter surveys a wide range of bilateral and multilateral ecumenical agreed statements on the Eucharist achieved in recent decades. It finds broad progress in them regarding three specific aspects of the Eucharist, namely, the links between the Eucharist and the Church, the Eucharist and the Holy Spirit, and the Eucharist and the future (or eschatology), respectively. It identifies outstanding issues, especially regarding the Eucharist as sacrament and sacrifice, and suggests how the progress provides a new context for tackling those issues. The relationship between baptismal and eucharistic ecclesiologies is then considered, and also ways in which the Eucharist has been recognized in ecumenical dialogue as influencing the structure of the Church. Attention is finally given to ecological implications of the Eucharist.


Author(s):  
Ronald G. Musto

Cola di Rienzo (b. c. 1313–d. 1354) was a notary and diplomat, friend of Francesco Petrarch, and learned student of classical Antiquity. On 20 May 1347 he established a new communal government in Rome, toppling without violence the regime of the factious barons. He soon took on the titles of “tribune” in revival of ancient Rome, and “miles Spiritus Sancti” (“soldier of the Holy Spirit”) to indicate the dawning of a new, apocalyptic age. His new buono stato gained the support of a wide range of Roman social and economic groups, while the neighboring city-states soon allied with Rome. In Avignon Pope Clement VI first supported him and then—threatened by Rome’s new claims to legitimacy—actively worked with the barons to topple his government. Exiled in late 1347, on 1 August 1350 Cola made his way to the court of Charles IV in Prague, to persuade the emperor to reestablish his seat in Rome along with the pope. Delivered to Avignon on 1 August 1352, and imprisoned to stand trial for heresy, he was exonerated and sent to Rome as a papal senator on 1 August 1354. On 8 October 1354 he was murdered atop the Capitoline in an uprising organized by the Colonna and most likely supported by papal legate, Cardinal Gil Albornoz. New research methods and theoretical frames have moved away from the class-bound and nationalist analyses of the 19th century that viewed Rienzo as the unbalanced working-class populist. Interpretations also vary according to sources deployed. Those relying chiefly on the narrative account of the Anonimo romano’s classically inspired psychological and emotional portrait see the tribune as overreaching and unrealistic. Those that also deploy Rienzo’s and the papacy’s diplomatic correspondence and contemporary chroniclers place him into the normative communal thought of the Trecento. Meanwhile, the rise of 21st-century populisms has brought new scrutiny to Rienzo’s buono stato. While scholars of the Renaissance privilege philological and political methodologies, medievalists also examine Trecento public ritual, crime and punishment, sacred and secular urban space, patterns of patronage and clientage, Trecento visual culture and propaganda, claims of papal and secular legitimacy, and Trecento historiography. Rienzo’s period is also yielding important results in the reexamination of Roman archives, especially notarial registers, and their importance for the reevaluation of Roman social and economic networks, communal memory and forgetting, and the survival of his communal reforms into the Quattrocento.


Author(s):  
Andrew Louth

Although the Eastern Orthodox approach to Mary is based on the rich devotion to the Mother of God found in the liturgical worship and iconography of the Orthodox Church, there is a deep reticence about embarking on dogmatic definition in Mariology. The thought of four twentieth-century theologians is discussed: Bulgakov, Lossky, the Romanian Stăniloae, and Evdokimov. Bulgakov’s extensive reflection on Mary began with a short book, The Burning Bush, directed against Roman Catholic Mariology, tracing its erroneous doctrine back to the Scholastic notion of pura natura, his positive exposition of Mariology being drawn from liturgical texts. Bulgakov’s reflection on Mariology is intimately bound up with his Sophiology. Lossky’s reflection on Mary sees a close link between Mary and the Holy Spirit, something developed further by Evdokimov. Stăniloae’s Mariology is puzzling, apparently absent from its natural place in his Dogmatics, although compensated for in his discussion of the intercession of the saints.


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