A live­ly and per­cep­tive account of the lives, writ­ings and endur­ing intel­lec­tu­al lega­cies of the great Ortho­dox the­olo­gians of the past 250 years. This book explores and explains the endur­ing influ­ence of some of the world’s great­est mod­ern the­olo­gians. Start­ing with the influ­ence of the Philokalia in nine­teenth-cen­tu­ry Rus­sia, the book moves through the Slavophiles, Solov’ev, Flo­ren­sky in Rus­sia and then traces the sto­ry through the Chris­t­ian intel­lec­tu­als exiled from Stal­in’s Rus­sia — Bul­gakov, Berdyaev, Florovsky, Lossky, Lot-Boro­dine, Skobtso­va — and a cou­ple of the­olo­gians out­side the Russ­ian world: the Roman­ian Staniloae and the Ser­bian Popovich, both of whom stud­ied in Paris. Andrew Louth then con­sid­ers the con­tri­bu­tions of the sec­ond gen­er­a­tion Rus­sians — Evdoki­mov, Meyen­dorff, Schme­mann — and the the­olo­gians of Greece from the six­ties onwards — Zizioulas, Yan­naras, and oth­ers, as well as influ­en­tial monks and spir­i­tu­al elders, espe­cial­ly Fr Sophrony of the monastery in Essex and his men­tor, St Silouan. The book con­cludes with an illu­mi­nat­ing chap­ter on Met­ro­pol­i­tan Kallis­tos and the the­o­log­i­cal vision of the Philokalia.

 

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