Displaying: 41-60 of 479 documents

0.182 sec

41. Philotheos: Volume > 16
Goran D. Mladenović The Synthesis of Royal and Messianic Verses in Psalm 143: A Psalm of David [MT: Psalm 144]
abstract | view |  rights & permissions
A Psalter consists of a number of royal and messianic psalms which should not be separated from each other. Their poetic structure is very similar, but their content is different. Except for the structure which is characteristic of the songs with the royal theme, Psalm 143 mentions the golden age of peace and plenty and simultaneously directs readers’ attention towards the coming of the new David-Messiah. The narrator takes on the role of the prayer representing his people, praying for the victory on the eve of a decisive battle.
42. Philotheos: Volume > 16
Jörg Splett Charles Péguy: Dichter Johannas und der Kathedrale: Dichter der Hoffnung
43. Philotheos: Volume > 16
Bogoljub Šijaković Ново издање Ибервегове Историје философије и Кант у средишту
44. Philotheos: Volume > 16
Iuliu-Marius Morariu Bioethics in the Romanian space – A Brief Overview
45. Philotheos: Volume > 16
Wilhelm Just „Wo ist der Vater?“
46. Philotheos: Volume > 16
Aleksandar Djakovac Person and Nature, Hypostasis and Substance: Philosophical Basis of the Theology of John Philoponus
47. Philotheos: Volume > 16
Heinrich Beck Argumente für ein philosophisch-ganzheitliches Verständnis von ‘Ehe’
48. Philotheos: Volume > 16
Alois Maria Haas Engel – ‘überall und nirgendwo’?
49. Philotheos: Volume > 16
Goran Vidović Good Doggy, Bad Dog: Rivalry between Peter and Simon Magus in Early Christian Apocryphal Literature
50. Philotheos: Volume > 17
Philipp W. Rosemann What is Philosophy?
51. Philotheos: Volume > 17
Bogoljub Šijaković Κριτική του βαλκανιστικού λόγου: Συμβολή στη φαινομε-νολογία της «ετερότητος» της Βαλκανικής
52. Philotheos: Volume > 17
Christos Terezis, Lydia Petridou The Question on the Divine Distinction and the Divine Energies in Gregory Palamas
abstract | view |  rights & permissions
In this study, focusing our attention on Gregory Palamas’ treatise under the title Περί θείας ενώσεως και διακρίσεως, we attempt to investigate, first of all, the volitional nature and the polymorphism of the divine energies and their relation to the divine essence. We also attempt to approach the divine distinction as a good “procession” and to prove, relying exclusively on the Christian thinker’s text, the inconsistencies according to his view that arise from the positions supported by Barlaam and Akindynos regarding the fact that the (divine) distinction is a creature. Regarding the matter on distinction, we conclude that it is a concept with a clearly different meaning when it comes to divine matters from the meaning that it gets when it concerns the created reality. From the gnoseological point of view, we focus our attention on the fact that the created beings are a source of knowledge for the revealed divine power-energy.
53. Philotheos: Volume > 17
Dionysios Skliris Aristotelian Influences on Plotinus’ Concept of the Intellect
54. Philotheos: Volume > 17
Christina Danko Hume, Kant and Kierkegaard: An Unlikely Trio
abstract | view |  rights & permissions
At a time when certain scholars insist that the self does not exist and is not worth discussing, a return to the work of Kierkegaard proves valuable insofar as he considers this topic without appeal to abstractions and instead by way of lived experiences. My paper argues that we gain crucial insights into what constitutes Kierkegaard’s lived self by considering the trajectory of a debate between two of his most prominent predecessors, Hume and Kant. From Hume we gain an account of the problem of thinking the self abstractly (i.e., the paradox of the bundle of perceptions having to be itself a perception) and how this problem vaguely connects to the passions. From Kant we gain an account of the psychological morality framing the self and the radical evil at its heart. I suggest that Kierkegaard builds on these accounts by synthesizing their abstract components in an embodied, dynamic context, showing (not telling) how the self can be presented in everyday experiences.
55. Philotheos: Volume > 17
Zoran Kindjić Religious Interpretation of the Meaning of Evil
abstract | view |  rights & permissions
Building on the Christian and far-eastern understanding of evil, the author points out that evil that affects us can have a positive meaning. Troubles and suffering that we experience serve as a means of our purification from sin or are trials through which we gain the winning crown. God’s punishment, which primarily has an educational role, is nuanced. The guilt of an individual for violations of the divine moral order depends on the level of their consciousness, life circumstances and their social position. Since God is love, His mercy prevails over justice. God does not allow evil if good does not flow from it. Awareness that the meaning of evil that strikes us is to tear us away from a superficial, hedonistic lifestyle and turn us to God, contributes to an attitude deprived of hatred towards the enemy and those who harm us. If we understand that the enemy is merely a tool used for our moral improvement and spiritual transformation, we will focus primarily on fighting against the evil within ourselves.
56. Philotheos: Volume > 17
Walter Sparn Wenn Engel, dann solche!: Warum es sich lohnt, über Engel theologisch nachzudenken?
57. Philotheos: Volume > 17
Romilo Knežević Surprising God: An Ontological Proposition for Creative Monasticism
58. Philotheos: Volume > 17
Wolfgang Speyer Das genealogisch-ursprungsmythische Denken als das erste systematische und geschichtliche Denken
59. Philotheos: Volume > 17
Kateřina Bauerová, Timothy Noble Orthodoxy in the West: Report on a Five-Year Research Project
60. Philotheos: Volume > 17
Jörg Splett „Wahre Werte“: Zu einem Buch von Stephen Green