NB: My audio and video quality and general production quality will obviously be much better when the channel launches! Still getting the ducks in a row with regards the relevant recording equipment. Godspeed.
Having read a fair bit of Solovyov I think the concept of Sophia is a bit misunderstood. I think Hart got it the closest by saying it's a manifestation of creation's desire to be the bride of Christ
Interesting video guys, do you guys currently believe God is IN TIME reconciling the world? What is the Eastern Orthodox official view of God and Time? I have been listening to William Lain Craig and Ryan Mullins who agree that God is IN TIME and was woder if any Eastern Orthodox believers in the Past/Present would agree?
I am quite intrigued by your critique of the principle of identity. Is there any place where you have written about it or any video where you explain in detail as in explaining the various arguments and all?
Yeah, St. Boethius was the uncontested rockstar of his day for the Latins, and for many generations afterward. Even King St. Alfred the Great translated _The Consolation of Philosophy_ from Latin into Anglo-Saxon and dispersed it, among other works, to his bishops, labeling it one of "the books that must be read," when he was rebuilding the education system and revitalizing monasticism throughout his kingdom. Saint Boethius is mighty influential, also, because he was one of the key figures, along with Cassiodorus, who preserved the Greek Classical system for posterity after him, because he translated numerous fundamental, standard texts from Greek into Latin, and his translations were the ones used when the West was fully Latinized and more or less lost its facility with Greek.
Saint Boethius was also contemporary with Emperor St. Justinian. Dr. Ruth Dwyer, who has sadly passed away, in her short video titled "A Portrait of Boethius in Ravenna," made a good case for him being the man depicted between Sts. Justinian and Maximianus in the famous Ravenna Cathedral mosaic. She also makes the case elsewhere that, since Justinian's mother tongue was Latin, and that he only learned Greek later in life as the Emperor, it's probable and likely that he used Boethius' translations of the Greek works on the Quadrivium when building Hagia Sophia.
NB: My audio and video quality and general production quality will obviously be much better when the channel launches! Still getting the ducks in a row with regards the relevant recording equipment. Godspeed.
Profoundly illuminating, lads. Glory to God. ☦️
Having read a fair bit of Solovyov I think the concept of Sophia is a bit misunderstood. I think Hart got it the closest by saying it's a manifestation of creation's desire to be the bride of Christ
Interesting video guys, do you guys currently believe God is IN TIME reconciling the world?
What is the Eastern Orthodox official view of God and Time?
I have been listening to William Lain Craig and Ryan Mullins who agree that God is IN TIME and was woder if any Eastern Orthodox believers in the Past/Present would agree?
I am quite intrigued by your critique of the principle of identity. Is there any place where you have written about it or any video where you explain in detail as in explaining the various arguments and all?
From a 75 year-old, many years.
Yeah, St. Boethius was the uncontested rockstar of his day for the Latins, and for many generations afterward. Even King St. Alfred the Great translated _The Consolation of Philosophy_ from Latin into Anglo-Saxon and dispersed it, among other works, to his bishops, labeling it one of "the books that must be read," when he was rebuilding the education system and revitalizing monasticism throughout his kingdom.
Saint Boethius is mighty influential, also, because he was one of the key figures, along with Cassiodorus, who preserved the Greek Classical system for posterity after him, because he translated numerous fundamental, standard texts from Greek into Latin, and his translations were the ones used when the West was fully Latinized and more or less lost its facility with Greek.
Saint Boethius was also contemporary with Emperor St. Justinian. Dr. Ruth Dwyer, who has sadly passed away, in her short video titled "A Portrait of Boethius in Ravenna," made a good case for him being the man depicted between Sts. Justinian and Maximianus in the famous Ravenna Cathedral mosaic.
She also makes the case elsewhere that, since Justinian's mother tongue was Latin, and that he only learned Greek later in life as the Emperor, it's probable and likely that he used Boethius' translations of the Greek works on the Quadrivium when building Hagia Sophia.
Who is nate? What is his channel? Please
Wherw i guys from ?Intresting u talk on this topics.
Grrrtings from Serbia