Results 231 to 240 of about 65,845 (277)
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The Russian Orthodox Church and Society
Russian Politics & Law, 2003The past and the present of Russian society clearly demonstrate a lack of social ethics. By social ethics, we have in mind the self-regulation of social relations, not through coercion exercised by legal institutions but with the help of social actors' own inner mechanisms for coordinating interactions.
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Religion and the Russian Orthodox Church
2017Russia is a multi-confessional country. According to the Levada Centre, the national breakdown is roughly as follows: Orthodox (74 per cent), Catholicism (1 per cent), Protestantism (1 per cent), Islam (1 per cent), Judaism (1 per cent), Buddhism (less than 1 per cent) and Hinduism (less than 1 per cent).
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Dissent in the Russian Orthodox Church
Russian Review, 1969Early in 1969 the Sunday Times of London printed three lengthy articles about recent intellectual developments in the Soviet Union.' They were written by an anonymous Western journalist, resident in Moscow, and constitute one of the most perceptive pieces of reporting on the Soviet scene by a non-Russian in recent years.
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“A Rose for the Russian Orthodox Church”
Journal of Eastern Christian StudiesAbstract The article studies the unofficial trip of Cardinal Franz König, the head of the Catholic Church of Austria and Roman cardinal. In November 1980, König initiated a ten-day tour through the USSR for a delegation of 30 people – board members of the Pro Oriente Foundation (focused on developing communication with the Eastern Churches).
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The Russian Bible Society and the Russian Orthodox Church
Church History, 1966The historian Presniakov has characterized the first quarter of the nineteenth century, the reign of Alexander I, as “Russia at the crossroads” (Rossiia na rasput'i). No longer content with slavish imitation of Western Europe, Russia now began to develop a culture which would be admired and emulated by the West.
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The Russian Orthodox Church – the Church of the majority
2017This article examines dynamics between the Russian Orthodox Church (ROC) and Russian society. Opinion polls indicate that almost half of the Russians backs up the role of ROC as the spiritual support and the connecting element of the society. In 2013, only 11% of people thought that the church should not be involved in politics at all.
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The Russian Orthodox Church and Russian Politics
Russian Politics & Law, 2011Irina Papkova, Dmitry P. Gorenburg
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The Russian Orthodox Church and its fight against abortion: taking on the state and losing
Religion, State and Society, 2023Pål Kolstø
exaly

