Veselin kesich biography sample
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Wiki-Timeline of Church History
Wiki-Timeline of Church History
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Eras Timeline of Church History (Abridged article) Eras New Testament Era | Apostolic Era (33-100) | Ante-Nicene Era (100-325) | Nicene Era (325-451) | Byzantine Era (451-843) | Late Byzantine Era (843-1054) | Post-Roman Schism (1054-1453) | Post-Imperial Era (14531821) | Modern Era (1821-1917) | Communist Era (1917-1991) | Post-Communist Era (1991-Present) | (Main articles)
This article forms part of the series Introduction to Orthodox Christianity
Holy Tradition
Holy Scripture The Symbol of Faith Ecumenical Councils Church Fathers Liturgy Canons Icons
The Holy Trinity
God the Father Jesus Christ The Holy Spirit
The Church
Ecclesiology History Holy Mysteries Church Life
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The History of the Church is a vital part of the Orthodox Christian faith. Orthodox Christians are defined significantly by their continuity with all those who have gone before, those who first received and preached the truth of Jesus Christ to the world, those who helped to formulate the
expression and worship of our faith, and those who continue to move forward in the unchanging yet ever-dynamic Holy Tradition of the Orthodox Church.
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1 New Testament era 2 Apost
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Rev. Alkiviadis C. Calivas
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Remembering Sophie Koulomzin: Trailblazing Orthodox Christian Educator
This past Sunday, September 29, 2024, marked the 24th anniversary of the repose of Sophie Koulomzin, former faculty member at St Vladimir's Seminary and prolific author, speaker, and Orthodox Christian education expert. In honor of her memory and in gratitude for her legacy, we are republishing her biography here. May the memory of Sophie Koulomzin be eternal! Vechnaya pamyat!
Sophie Koulomzin (December 3, 1903–September 29, 2000), renowned Orthodox Christian religious educator, was born Sophie Schidlovsky in St Petersburg, Russia, in 1903. She was the daughter of Sergei Schidlovsky, the last vice president of the Czar's Duma, or Parliament. A life of privilege was replaced by one of poverty as the family endured the first years of Soviet rule, then fled, first to Estonia, where her father died, then Berlin, then Paris.
In Germany, she studied philosophy at the University of Berlin and took part in philosophical discussions led by Nikolai Berdyaev, The Rev. Sergius Bulgakov, and Semyon Frank, leading Russian religious thinkers and former Marxists who became liberal Christians and were expelled from the Soviet Union by Lenin in 1922. They were formative in her development as a broad-minded Orthodox