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Añadir al carritoCondición: New. Zimmerman, Svetlana Ilustrador.
EUR 13,53
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Añadir al carritoCondición: New. Zimmerman, Svetlana Ilustrador.
Librería: Grand Eagle Retail, Bensenville, IL, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 13,52
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Añadir al carritoPaperback. Condición: new. Zimmerman, Svetlana Ilustrador. Paperback. When the Soviet state imposed the Gregorian calendar on Russia in 1918, it issued a direct challenge to the liturgical identity of the Russian Orthodox Church. The Bolsheviks understood precisely what they were doing - compelling the Patriarch's agreement to calendar reform would fracture the Church's moral authority from within and associate her feasts, fasting cycles, and Paschal reckoning with an atheist government. The calendar was never merely a question of dates. It was a question of who held sovereignty over the life of the Church.This volume gathers four primary documents in which Patriarch Tikhon of Moscow confronted that question directly. Writing under surveillance, house arrest, and constant governmental pressure, he navigated the impossible terrain between institutional survival and canonical integrity - producing texts that remain among the most significant witnesses to the Church's resistance under Soviet totalitarianism.The four documents presented here in English translation are: his message to Patriarch German of Constantinople situating the Russian Church within the broader Pan-Orthodox calendar controversy; his pastoral message to the Orthodox faithful calling them to patience and fidelity; his formal statement to the Soviet Central Executive Committee on September 17/30, 1924; and his decree suspending the introduction of the New Style following the immediate and widespread resistance of the faithful.Together they do not present a man who capitulated. They present a man who maneuvered - carefully, pastorally, and at great personal cost - to preserve the Church's liturgical life under a government determined to dismantle it.St. Tikhon of Moscow was canonized by the Russian Orthodox Church in 1989. His relics, long presumed lost, were discovered incorrupt at Donskoy Monastery in Moscow in 1992. First English translation of four primary documents in which St. Patriarch Tikhon of Moscow confronted Soviet calendar reform. Essential for Orthodox Christians, seminarians, and historians of the Russian Church under communism. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability.
Librería: Grand Eagle Retail, Bensenville, IL, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 13,52
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Añadir al carritoPaperback. Condición: new. Zimmerman, Svetlana Ilustrador. Paperback. Before he became Patriarch of Moscow and a confessor of the faith, St. Tikhon Bellavin was a young professor and newly consecrated Bishop, shepherding a vast and diverse flock across the American continent at the turn of the twentieth century. In sermons and theological essays composed with disciplined regularity, he addressed the most intimate dimensions of Christian life - among them, the sacred vocation of marriage and the spiritual formation of young men and women entering its covenant.This volume presents two of those works in English translation: On The Church's View of Marriage, composed in 1891 during his tenure as professor of moral theology at Kholm Theological Seminary, and Teaching at the Blessing of Newlyweds, written during his early episcopal years in North America in 1902. Together they reveal a theologian of remarkable clarity and a pastor of genuine tenderness - a man whose sanctity would later be confirmed not in lecture halls, but in the suffering and witness of revolution.St. Tikhon crossed the ocean at thirty-three years old to lead the Diocese of the Aleutians and Alaska, eventually moving the episcopal seat to New York and serving as Archbishop of North America for nearly a decade. His patriarchate, beginning in 1917, was marked by political upheaval and personal suffering culminating in his repose on April 7, 1925 - widely regarded as a martyric death. Glorified as a Saint by the Russian Orthodox Church in 1989, his incorrupt relics were discovered at Donskoy Monastery in Moscow in 1992.These early writings on marriage predate the trials that would define his legacy, offering a rare window into the formation of a Saint - his intellectual precision, his pastoral warmth, and his conviction that theology must be a guide for daily Christian life, not an abstraction removed from it.St. Tikhon of Moscow was canonized by the Russian Orthodox Church in 1989 and is venerated as a confessor and Saint across the Orthodox world. First English translation of two works on Christian marriage by St. Tikhon of Moscow, written as seminary professor and Archbishop of North America. Essential for Orthodox Christians, seminarians, and historians of American Orthodoxy. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability.
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Añadir al carritoTaschenbuch. Condición: Neu. Zimmerman, Svetlana Ilustrador. Neuware.
Librería: AussieBookSeller, Truganina, VIC, Australia
EUR 21,91
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Añadir al carritoPaperback. Condición: new. Zimmerman, Svetlana Ilustrador. Paperback. When the Soviet state imposed the Gregorian calendar on Russia in 1918, it issued a direct challenge to the liturgical identity of the Russian Orthodox Church. The Bolsheviks understood precisely what they were doing - compelling the Patriarch's agreement to calendar reform would fracture the Church's moral authority from within and associate her feasts, fasting cycles, and Paschal reckoning with an atheist government. The calendar was never merely a question of dates. It was a question of who held sovereignty over the life of the Church.This volume gathers four primary documents in which Patriarch Tikhon of Moscow confronted that question directly. Writing under surveillance, house arrest, and constant governmental pressure, he navigated the impossible terrain between institutional survival and canonical integrity - producing texts that remain among the most significant witnesses to the Church's resistance under Soviet totalitarianism.The four documents presented here in English translation are: his message to Patriarch German of Constantinople situating the Russian Church within the broader Pan-Orthodox calendar controversy; his pastoral message to the Orthodox faithful calling them to patience and fidelity; his formal statement to the Soviet Central Executive Committee on September 17/30, 1924; and his decree suspending the introduction of the New Style following the immediate and widespread resistance of the faithful.Together they do not present a man who capitulated. They present a man who maneuvered - carefully, pastorally, and at great personal cost - to preserve the Church's liturgical life under a government determined to dismantle it.St. Tikhon of Moscow was canonized by the Russian Orthodox Church in 1989. His relics, long presumed lost, were discovered incorrupt at Donskoy Monastery in Moscow in 1992. First English translation of four primary documents in which St. Patriarch Tikhon of Moscow confronted Soviet calendar reform. Essential for Orthodox Christians, seminarians, and historians of the Russian Church under communism. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our Sydney, NSW warehouse or from our UK or US warehouse, depending on stock availability.
Librería: AussieBookSeller, Truganina, VIC, Australia
EUR 21,91
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Añadir al carritoPaperback. Condición: new. Zimmerman, Svetlana Ilustrador. Paperback. Before he became Patriarch of Moscow and a confessor of the faith, St. Tikhon Bellavin was a young professor and newly consecrated Bishop, shepherding a vast and diverse flock across the American continent at the turn of the twentieth century. In sermons and theological essays composed with disciplined regularity, he addressed the most intimate dimensions of Christian life - among them, the sacred vocation of marriage and the spiritual formation of young men and women entering its covenant.This volume presents two of those works in English translation: On The Church's View of Marriage, composed in 1891 during his tenure as professor of moral theology at Kholm Theological Seminary, and Teaching at the Blessing of Newlyweds, written during his early episcopal years in North America in 1902. Together they reveal a theologian of remarkable clarity and a pastor of genuine tenderness - a man whose sanctity would later be confirmed not in lecture halls, but in the suffering and witness of revolution.St. Tikhon crossed the ocean at thirty-three years old to lead the Diocese of the Aleutians and Alaska, eventually moving the episcopal seat to New York and serving as Archbishop of North America for nearly a decade. His patriarchate, beginning in 1917, was marked by political upheaval and personal suffering culminating in his repose on April 7, 1925 - widely regarded as a martyric death. Glorified as a Saint by the Russian Orthodox Church in 1989, his incorrupt relics were discovered at Donskoy Monastery in Moscow in 1992.These early writings on marriage predate the trials that would define his legacy, offering a rare window into the formation of a Saint - his intellectual precision, his pastoral warmth, and his conviction that theology must be a guide for daily Christian life, not an abstraction removed from it.St. Tikhon of Moscow was canonized by the Russian Orthodox Church in 1989 and is venerated as a confessor and Saint across the Orthodox world. First English translation of two works on Christian marriage by St. Tikhon of Moscow, written as seminary professor and Archbishop of North America. Essential for Orthodox Christians, seminarians, and historians of American Orthodoxy. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our Sydney, NSW warehouse or from our UK or US warehouse, depending on stock availability.
Librería: CitiRetail, Stevenage, Reino Unido
EUR 18,12
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoPaperback. Condición: new. Zimmerman, Svetlana Ilustrador. Paperback. Before he became Patriarch of Moscow and a confessor of the faith, St. Tikhon Bellavin was a young professor and newly consecrated Bishop, shepherding a vast and diverse flock across the American continent at the turn of the twentieth century. In sermons and theological essays composed with disciplined regularity, he addressed the most intimate dimensions of Christian life - among them, the sacred vocation of marriage and the spiritual formation of young men and women entering its covenant.This volume presents two of those works in English translation: On The Church's View of Marriage, composed in 1891 during his tenure as professor of moral theology at Kholm Theological Seminary, and Teaching at the Blessing of Newlyweds, written during his early episcopal years in North America in 1902. Together they reveal a theologian of remarkable clarity and a pastor of genuine tenderness - a man whose sanctity would later be confirmed not in lecture halls, but in the suffering and witness of revolution.St. Tikhon crossed the ocean at thirty-three years old to lead the Diocese of the Aleutians and Alaska, eventually moving the episcopal seat to New York and serving as Archbishop of North America for nearly a decade. His patriarchate, beginning in 1917, was marked by political upheaval and personal suffering culminating in his repose on April 7, 1925 - widely regarded as a martyric death. Glorified as a Saint by the Russian Orthodox Church in 1989, his incorrupt relics were discovered at Donskoy Monastery in Moscow in 1992.These early writings on marriage predate the trials that would define his legacy, offering a rare window into the formation of a Saint - his intellectual precision, his pastoral warmth, and his conviction that theology must be a guide for daily Christian life, not an abstraction removed from it.St. Tikhon of Moscow was canonized by the Russian Orthodox Church in 1989 and is venerated as a confessor and Saint across the Orthodox world. First English translation of two works on Christian marriage by St. Tikhon of Moscow, written as seminary professor and Archbishop of North America. Essential for Orthodox Christians, seminarians, and historians of American Orthodoxy. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability.
Librería: CitiRetail, Stevenage, Reino Unido
EUR 18,12
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoPaperback. Condición: new. Zimmerman, Svetlana Ilustrador. Paperback. When the Soviet state imposed the Gregorian calendar on Russia in 1918, it issued a direct challenge to the liturgical identity of the Russian Orthodox Church. The Bolsheviks understood precisely what they were doing - compelling the Patriarch's agreement to calendar reform would fracture the Church's moral authority from within and associate her feasts, fasting cycles, and Paschal reckoning with an atheist government. The calendar was never merely a question of dates. It was a question of who held sovereignty over the life of the Church.This volume gathers four primary documents in which Patriarch Tikhon of Moscow confronted that question directly. Writing under surveillance, house arrest, and constant governmental pressure, he navigated the impossible terrain between institutional survival and canonical integrity - producing texts that remain among the most significant witnesses to the Church's resistance under Soviet totalitarianism.The four documents presented here in English translation are: his message to Patriarch German of Constantinople situating the Russian Church within the broader Pan-Orthodox calendar controversy; his pastoral message to the Orthodox faithful calling them to patience and fidelity; his formal statement to the Soviet Central Executive Committee on September 17/30, 1924; and his decree suspending the introduction of the New Style following the immediate and widespread resistance of the faithful.Together they do not present a man who capitulated. They present a man who maneuvered - carefully, pastorally, and at great personal cost - to preserve the Church's liturgical life under a government determined to dismantle it.St. Tikhon of Moscow was canonized by the Russian Orthodox Church in 1989. His relics, long presumed lost, were discovered incorrupt at Donskoy Monastery in Moscow in 1992. First English translation of four primary documents in which St. Patriarch Tikhon of Moscow confronted Soviet calendar reform. Essential for Orthodox Christians, seminarians, and historians of the Russian Church under communism. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability.