Today, Christianity as a global religious community encompasses over a third of the entire world’s population, Eastern Christian communities represent approximately a fifth of that total number. However, despite the significant contribution that Eastern Christians have made to the history and richness of Christianity, their continued presence and witness has been often overlooked or neglected. This important and unique collection of papers by an international team of scholars seeks to put before a wider public audience innovative contributions on the contemporary history and theology of Eastern Christianity. Eastern Christianity is looked at as a living tradition. Religious themes and theological currents are viewed in their modern polit...
The new global situation of Christianity requires new historiographical approaches. Despite many rec...
The topic of Christians in the Middle East appears to be enjoying a growing vitality within Middle E...
Christianity spread into Mesopotamia no later than the mid-second century. By the early third centur...
Christianity was born in the Middle East. Its Christian Churches are representative of the great div...
Middle East Christianity in the context of the trend towards the study of World Christianity is rela...
International audienceEastern Christianity is pluralistic. How might exchanges among Christians in g...
Containing over 700 articles, this Dictionary allows the reader to explore Eastern Christian civiliz...
One of the most important political changes in the Middle Ages was the rise of Islam and the subsequ...
The article examines the use of Orthodox Christianity in the debates over the cultural heritage of c...
This chapter focuses on the distinctive features of Eastern Christianity, it is also important to em...
The articles in this collection go well beyond introductions to look deeply at key dimensions of fai...
This book gathers a wide range of theological perspectives from Orthodox European countries, Russia ...
In the present difficult circumstances in the Middle East, the position of the so-called Oriental Ch...
Since the 1990s, the Eastern Orthodox and Protestant Evangelical communities have had more direct co...
The new Turkish Encyclopedia of Islam (DIA), initiated in 1988 as a corrective to Leiden’s Encyclopa...
The new global situation of Christianity requires new historiographical approaches. Despite many rec...
The topic of Christians in the Middle East appears to be enjoying a growing vitality within Middle E...
Christianity spread into Mesopotamia no later than the mid-second century. By the early third centur...
Christianity was born in the Middle East. Its Christian Churches are representative of the great div...
Middle East Christianity in the context of the trend towards the study of World Christianity is rela...
International audienceEastern Christianity is pluralistic. How might exchanges among Christians in g...
Containing over 700 articles, this Dictionary allows the reader to explore Eastern Christian civiliz...
One of the most important political changes in the Middle Ages was the rise of Islam and the subsequ...
The article examines the use of Orthodox Christianity in the debates over the cultural heritage of c...
This chapter focuses on the distinctive features of Eastern Christianity, it is also important to em...
The articles in this collection go well beyond introductions to look deeply at key dimensions of fai...
This book gathers a wide range of theological perspectives from Orthodox European countries, Russia ...
In the present difficult circumstances in the Middle East, the position of the so-called Oriental Ch...
Since the 1990s, the Eastern Orthodox and Protestant Evangelical communities have had more direct co...
The new Turkish Encyclopedia of Islam (DIA), initiated in 1988 as a corrective to Leiden’s Encyclopa...
The new global situation of Christianity requires new historiographical approaches. Despite many rec...
The topic of Christians in the Middle East appears to be enjoying a growing vitality within Middle E...
Christianity spread into Mesopotamia no later than the mid-second century. By the early third centur...