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Eighteen Centuries of the Orthodox Greek Church

Using the Seven Ecumenical Councils as backbone, Hore provides the reader with an overview of the Greek Orthodox Church. Writing in an era when the Oxford Movement was reaching a wide array of Anglicans with the forgotten connections with orthodoxy, Hore presents a sympathetic view of Byzantine Christianity. Following the trials and difficulties of the early church after it received imperial approval, a sketch of the Greek Church, including the "separatist" Churches, emerges.
Publisher: Gorgias Press LLC
Availability: In stock
SKU (ISBN): 1-59333-051-0
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Publication Status: In Print
Publication Date: Mar 13,2003
Interior Color: Black
Trim Size: 6 x 9
Page Count: 720
ISBN: 1-59333-051-0
$204.00
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Using the Seven Ecumenical Councils as backbone, Hore provides the reader with an overview of the Greek Orthodox Church. Writing in an era when the Oxford Movement was reaching a wide array of Anglicans with the forgotten connections with orthodoxy, Hore presents a sympathetic view of Byzantine Christianity. Following the trials and difficulties of the early church after it received imperial approval, a sketch of the Greek Church, including the "separatist" Churches, emerges. Hore’s work is unique in that it demonstrates that the Eastern Churches (even those subscribing to only the pre-Chalcedonian councils) are of Orthodox faith. Following the great schism that separated East from West, Hore illustrates the developments that followed on from the Crusades, the fall of Constantinople, and the rise of Russia. He traces the history up to the late nineteenth century with the recovery of the Greek Church of his day and its relationship to the Western Church.

Alexander Hugh Hore (1829-1903) was a priest of the Church of England who taught at Trinity College, Oxford. He served as a chaplain to the military, and wrote extensively on the history of different branches of the historic church.

Using the Seven Ecumenical Councils as backbone, Hore provides the reader with an overview of the Greek Orthodox Church. Writing in an era when the Oxford Movement was reaching a wide array of Anglicans with the forgotten connections with orthodoxy, Hore presents a sympathetic view of Byzantine Christianity. Following the trials and difficulties of the early church after it received imperial approval, a sketch of the Greek Church, including the "separatist" Churches, emerges. Hore’s work is unique in that it demonstrates that the Eastern Churches (even those subscribing to only the pre-Chalcedonian councils) are of Orthodox faith. Following the great schism that separated East from West, Hore illustrates the developments that followed on from the Crusades, the fall of Constantinople, and the rise of Russia. He traces the history up to the late nineteenth century with the recovery of the Greek Church of his day and its relationship to the Western Church.

Alexander Hugh Hore (1829-1903) was a priest of the Church of England who taught at Trinity College, Oxford. He served as a chaplain to the military, and wrote extensively on the history of different branches of the historic church.

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Contributor

AlexanderHore

  • Introduction: General View of the Orthodox Greek Church
  • The Conflict between the Fourth and Fifth Empires
  • The Victory of Christ's Kingdom
  • The First Ecumenical Council
  • The Struggle for the Homoousion
  • The Second Ecumenical Council
  • The Third and Fourth Ecumenical Voundils
  • The Separatist Churches of the East
  • The Fifth and Sixth Ecumenical Councils
  • The Saracenic Conquests
  • The Seventh Ecumenical Council
  • The Culminating Schism of the Greek and Roman Churches
  • The Schism widened by the Crusades
  • Intrigues of the Palaeologi with Rome, and Fall of Constantinople
  • The Making of Russia
  • The Three Romes
  • The Holy Governing Synod
  • Partial Recovery of the Greek Church
  • The Greek Church in its present relation to Western Christendom