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Encountering the Mystery

Understanding Orthodox Christianity Today

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
As Ecumenical Patriarch, Bartholomew is the symbol of unity for the self-governing national and ethnic Orthodox Christian churches throughout the world. He is well known for his commitment to protecting the environment, and for opening communications with other Christians as well as with Muslims and other religious groups. His efforts for raising environmental awareness globally have earned him the title "Green Patriarch."
Written with personal warmth and great erudition, Encountering the Mystery illuminates the rich culture and soul of Orthodox Christianity. Bartholomew traces the roots of Orthodox Christianity to its founding two thousand years ago, explores its spirituality and doctrine, and explains its liturgy and art. More especially, in a unique and unprecedented way, he relates Orthodox Christianity to contemporary issues, such as freedom and human rights, social justice and globalization, as well as nationalism and war.
With a recent rebirth of Orthodox Christian churches (particularly in the former Soviet Union and elsewhere in Central and Eastern Europe), there has been great interest in understanding this important branch of Christianity with its close ties to the traditions of the early Church. As USA Today recently reported, Orthodox Christian churches throughout the country are drawing converts attracted by the beauty of its liturgy and inspired by its enduring theology. But for the general seeker, whatever their background, Encountering the Mystery is a rich spiritual source that draws upon the wisdom of millennia.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from January 14, 2008
      Although the 16-year reign of the patriarch of the Orthodox Christian communion has largely gone unnoticed in America, this new book should serve to raise his profile considerably. Like some of his Western counterparts, the popes of Rome, Bartholomew has used his position to speak out against the ravages of the global economy and has been an eloquent advocate for environmentalism. In his new book, he mines the mystical theology of Orthodoxy, which relies heavily on saints like Gregory of Nyssa and the New Testament, to paint a picture of a world transformed and renewed by Christianity. The chief principles that underlie this world are prayerfulness, asceticism and humility. Bartholomew understands the cultivation of virtue as having both personal and global dimensions, as when he writes, “et us treat everything with proper love and utmost care. Only in this way shall we secure a physical environment where life for the coming generations of humankind will be healthy and happy.” As a citizen of Turkey, Bartholomew has also been committed to Christian-Jewish-Muslim dialogue and is believable when he says, “t is not religious differences that create conflict between human beings.” More than anything else, this book shows that all who are committed to social justice have a friend in the Orthodox patriarch.

    • Library Journal

      March 1, 2008
      The growth of Orthodox Christianity in the United States, like that of Islam, is one of the most important phenomena in religious life today and also one of the phenomena about which most readers are least informed. Bartholomew I, Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople, has stepped up to try to remedy our ignorance with this relatively brief and quite accessible book. Not so much a systematic account of Orthdox theologyand also not intended to persuade or convertit can hardly be bettered as a reader's first guide to what those new neighbors in the Christian cul-de-sac might be thinking. For most collections.

      Copyright 2008 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      March 15, 2008
      As patriarch of Constantinople, Bartholomew (n' Demetrios Archondonis) is the ecumenical patriarch of the Orthodox Church, its spiritual leader and chief ambassador to the world. From the beginning of his patriarchate in 1991, Bartholomew has stressed dialogue among Christians and between Christianity and other religions, and environmental issues, and discussion of both bulks large in this book. Opening the book is abrief exposition of Orthodoxy and its distinctions, consisting of a historical pr'cis and explanations of Orthodox architecture, liturgy, and icons; theology; monasticism; and spirituality and sacraments. Bartholomewsfour pageson the sacraments as a means of encounter and communion with God are perhaps themost brilliantin an illuminating book. Moving on to his environmental message, Bartholomew stresses human relations with nature as a manifestation of sacramental living that is indisseverable from just social relations that encompass rights of conscience, personal freedom, tolerance, the mitigation of poverty, and peacemaking. Since the collapse of communism in much of Orthodoxys homeland, Western interest in it has burgeoned. This rich book can only augment and focus that interest.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2008, American Library Association.)

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