Displaying: 161-180 of 520 documents

0.179 sec

161. Philotheos: Volume > 21 > Issue: 1
Rastko Jović God’s Disability and Human Ability
abstract | view |  rights & permissions
Resurrected Christ comes to the Apostles bearing signs of His torture. His body is a perfect body, but yet his “glorious body of the resurrected Christ is disfigured and disabled in that it still bears the marks of crucifixion.” His ribs have obvious signs of injuries. Resurrected Christ has a perfect body that passes through the walls, and yet with visible wounds, “and by his wounds we are healed” (Is 53:4). United apostles have been with no fear, because His visible “defects” convinced them that eschatology entered present time. It is because of his bodily “imperfections” that they believed in Him. Wounds became a powerful symbol of faith, motivation and conviction. Disability, sickness and other conditions of human beings became incorporated into God, participating in His suffering body.
162. Philotheos: Volume > 21 > Issue: 1
Milesa Stefanović-Banović Views on the (Serbian Orthodox) Church Calendar as an Element of Cultural Heritage in Serbia: Attitudes on Online Platforms
abstract | view |  rights & permissions
The Serbian Orthodox Church is considered by a number of Serbian citizens to be the “guardian” of tradition and cultural heritage. Issues related to church reforms are thus often particularly sensitive, and are perceived by some of the public as a danger to the preservation of cultur­al and religious identity. On the other hand, there are opinions in favor of reforms. In this context, the issue of church calendar reform is of special interest. Although it has been raised for more than a century, it is still as relevant as in the first attempts at the reform thereof. This paper explores the attitudes on online platforms in Serbia on this issue. Is the church calendar perceived as an integral part of the cultural heritage? What are the pros and cons of calendar reform? What would be the consequences of its potential change?
163. Philotheos: Volume > 3
Klaus Oehler Pragmatismus und Religion
164. Philotheos: Volume > 3
Markus Enders Grundzüge philosophischer und theologischer Hermeneutik der Wahrheit in der ,Theologik’ des Hans Urs von Balthasar
165. Philotheos: Volume > 3
Václav Ježek Mithraism and Julian’s Hymns to King Helios and to the Mother of Gods
166. Philotheos: Volume > 3
Sergei S. Khoruzhy Man’s three far-away Kingdoms: Ascetic Experience as a Ground for a New Anthropology
167. Philotheos: Volume > 3
Jean-Claude Larchet Spiritualité et théologie de la lumière chez saint Syméon le Nouveau Théologien
168. Philotheos: Volume > 3
Franz M. Wuketits Evolution und die Frage nach dem Sinn
169. Philotheos: Volume > 3
Vittorio Hösle Religion, Theology, Philosophy
170. Philotheos: Volume > 3
Christoph Jamme Mythos und Wahrheit
171. Philotheos: Volume > 3
Радое Голович Метафизика сердца Б. П. Вышеславцева
172. Philotheos: Volume > 3
Dietmar Wyrwa Augustin und Luther über das Böse
173. Philotheos: Volume > 3
Carl Joachim Classen The Virtues in Seneca’s Epistles to Lucilius
174. Philotheos: Volume > 3
Wolfgang Speyer Vom Paradox der Wirklichkeit: Eine philosophisch-theologische Skizze
175. Philotheos: Volume > 3
Oswald Bayer Wann endlich hat das Böse ein Ende?
176. Philotheos: Volume > 3
Werner Theobald Göttliche Natur. Die philosophisch-religiösen Wurzeln des modernen Umweltbewußtseins
177. Philotheos: Volume > 3
Nikolas K. Gvosdev St. John Chrysostom and John Locke: An Orthodox Basis for the Social Contract?
178. Philotheos: Volume > 3
Heimo Hofmeister Nature and Value of the Theory of Just War in the Light of the Powerlessness of Politics
179. Philotheos: Volume > 3
Wolfgang Gombocz, Tanja Pihlar Zum neunzigsten Geburtstag von Ludvik Bartelj: Eine Würdigung, zugleich ein Baustein zur historiographie der Philosophie im ehemaligen Jugoslawien
180. Philotheos: Volume > 3
Irinej Dobrijević The Role of the Serbian Orthodox Church in National Self-Determination and Regional Integration