The Christian Tradition: A History of the Development of Doctrine, Vol. 2: The Spirit of Eastern Christendom (600-1700) (Volume 2)

by Jaroslav Pelikan

Paperback, 1977

Status

Available

Call number

BT21.2 .P42

Publication

University of Chicago Press (1977), 329 pages

Description

The line that separated Eastern Christendom from Western on the medieval map is similar to the "iron curtain" of recent times. Linguistic barriers, political divisions, and liturgical differences combined to isolate the two cultures from each other. Except for such episodes as the schism between East and West or the Crusades, the development of non-Western Christendom has been largely ignored by church historians. In The Spirit of Eastern Christendom, Jaroslav Pelikan explains the divisions between Eastern and Western Christendom, and identifies and describes the development of the distinctive forms taken by Christian doctrine in its Greek, Syriac, and early Slavic expression. "It is a pleasure to salute this masterpiece of exposition. . . . The book flows like a great river, slipping easily past landscapes of the utmost diversity—the great Christological controversies of the seventh century, the debate on icons in the eighth and ninth, attitudes to Jews, to Muslims, to the dualistic heresies of the high Middle Ages, to the post-Reformation churches of Western Europe. . . . His book succeeds in being a study of the Eastern Christian religion as a whole."—Peter Brown and Sabine MacCormack, New York Review of Books "The second volume of Professor Pelikan's monumental work on The Christian Tradition is the most comprehensive historical treatment of Eastern Christian thought from 600 to 1700, written in recent years. . . . Pelikan's reinterpretation is a major scholarly and ecumenical event."—John Meyendorff "Displays the same mastery of ancient and modern theological literature, the same penetrating analytical clarity and balanced presentation of conflicting contentions, that made its predecessor such an intellectual treat."—Virgina Quarterly Review… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member deusvitae
This is part 2 of a five-volume series describing the development of doctrine in "Christendom." This volume focuses on eastern Christianity and its doctrinal history from 600 to 1700.

Topics include the trajectories of Nestorian, Monophysite, and Chalcedonian Orthodox doctrines, particularly on the
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Trinity; the icon controversy; disputations with Roman Catholicism, Judaism, and Islam; later attempts to systematize eastern Christian beliefs.

Pelikan does well at exposing the myths and prejudices of scholastic treatment of eastern Christendom while showing respect for the worldview and perspective of those of whom he writes. His understanding of the issues and his exposition are quite magisterial.

If one desires to understand the doctrinal systems of eastern Christendom, this book is a must read.
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Language

Original language

English

Physical description

8.9 inches

ISBN

0226653730 / 9780226653730
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