~ Orthodox Theological Digital Library I.M.D. ~

The site is under upgrade.

Stamoulis Chrysostomos, About the Light, Palimpsiston, Thessaloniki, 1999.

           A special study of academic character devoted to the issue of the existence or not of “personal actions” constitutes the content of this volume under the title: About the Light.

The renaissance of the theological studies in Greece coincided with and was marked by the renaissance of the palamic studies, the explosion of apophatic and, at the same time, experiential theological knowledge, the participation in Grace and the saving energies of God, the need for a realistic and, at the same time, transformative reading of academic theology.

Another world seemed to be born inside the contemporary academic theology, removed from the intellectual leadership and scholasticism, whose dead and nerveless historical and thematic development constituted the content of the theological science before the renewal of interest in hesychasm and the theology of Saint Gregory Palamas.

In the light of the above problems, a re-examination of the whole of our academic tradition, terms and theological thematic that affect every branch of theology, but also of philosophy – and not only – were employed to analyse and fully understand the mystery of the Triadic God, who moves towards man, imparting His Grace to him and rendering him part of His saving Energies.

The major efforts of the theological dialogue have focused on the conceptual, theological dipole of essence-energies, precisely because it constitutes a turning point in the understanding of our theological tradition and a criterion of contradistinction from other theological traditions. In this volume, readers can inform themselves analytically about the significance of the uncreated energies in the patristic theology, as well as the central role that the theology of the divine energies has played in modern theological approaches.

The issue at hand of the “personal energies” seems not to be justified by the course of the theological thought on these issues in the patristic period. However, it does not fail to highlight, in spite of the problems it itself brings about, the various tendencies of a mechanical understanding of God’s actions on the matter of salvation, which, thus, render the role of the divine persons in the Economy incomprehensible.

Professor Stamoulis, faithful to the terminological accuracy of the patristic tradition, will try to solve the issue with anatomic judgements and scientific compositions.

  

Stamoulis Chrysostomos, An exercise in self-conscience, Palimpsiston, Thessaloniki, 2004.  

This volume, citing a good number of theological-doctrinal studies, full of meanings and challenges, is titled: “An Exercise in Self-Conscience”. An exercise in the discovery of the other side of things, an exercise for meaning beyond the theological self-evident, an ascetic verification of the distance between everyday living and the need for existential fullness and directness.

If the most basic need of theology over time is to seek ways to experience the saving ecclesiastical word in every era, then the exercise in self-conscience expresses the agony for the verification of this need in the life of the faithful. In this field, every objective attitude constitutes, according to the author, a sin and every sin seeks penitence. The initial study by Professor Stamoulis on the “revelational word of the Apostle of the Nations, Paul” in the texts by N. G. Pentzikis, is part of this perspective. The “trained senses” (Hebr. 5,14) are presuppositions for the exercise of self-conscience, which the novelist from Thessaloniki understood as a search for the criteria and ways through which man can actually see God. A God-seer (θεόπτης), who with the movements of his body (mental prayer) will include the whole world, animate and inanimate, in the transformation, highlighting that beauty, which will eventually save the world. In this expression of prince Mishkin from the “Idiot” by Dostoyevsky, Stamoulis seeks juxtapositions from the diachrony of the patristic tradition. If the fall of man constitutes in its essence a denial of the saving beauty, then the last one, as transformation and benediction of the senses, guarantees the emergence of the beauty of the Kingdom.

The issue of modern “spirituality”, its idolatry, is another issue for the exercise in self-conscience, which the author discusses. Referring to the ideas of the renowned Russian theologian Fr. Alexander Schmemann, he develops his thoughts, which range from the unconditional and folklore renaissance of spirituality to the apotheosis of the depth psychology and the need to re-examine the modern spiritual life, keeping the necessary distances from the Russian theologian.

Finally, the author’s views expressed in the essay “Saint Gregory Palamas in modern Greek theology” are worth mentioning. The renaissance of the theological studies in Greece has virtually coincided with the renaissance of the palamic studies and the author highlights the theological tendency towards the exercise of self-conscience. This is a course of revising terms and methods, a course of awareness of its initial dimension, which is no other than the ecclesiastical reality of divination. This course, according to the author, is not far from being named “neo-palamism” and highlights a prolific problematic, which in effect embraces the theological thematic in its entirety, bringing forth important critical observations, many of which are made by the author himself, and, thus, fertilizing the modern theological thought.

Chrysostomos Stamoulis,  The Sacred Beaty, Akritas Publications, 2004, pp. 358.

The search for beauty, a diachronic adventure of human civilisation, represents one of the deeper, if not the deepest human existential need. The struggle to see beyond material things, to experience real significance in the flow of existence. More so today, in our era, when the beautification of images (perceptible and intelligible) and the deification of senses replace all significance, to serve an insatiable enervation with ravenousness. Therefore, articulating a fertile theological word on beauty carries particular importance.

In this volume, the author literally makes an intervention. An intervention that transforms into a creative challenge to compose and mutually define all forms, changes and experiences in the perspective of a transfiguring experience that truly beautifies people and life. Therefore, “Sacred Beauty” transforms into the beauty of Sainthood in a capacious vessel of Grace that embraces but also beautifies all beauty. For this reason, the author’s thought widens to embrace everything beautiful over time.

From the Areopagus sense of beauty to the love of beauty and from the aesthetics of modern poetry to the beauty of the creation and the charming presence of sainthood, mainly in the faces of modern Saints.

In the book’s first chapter the author reconstructs the dilemma between Philocally and aesthetics. Through the reasoning of a political scientist, of a priest and a service practitioner and at the same time an academic of theology, he attempts to transcend the subjectivity of aesthetics, its disconnection from morality, its easy usage and its utilitarian version. The emergence of the Philocallic perspective bears the diachronic element of Tradition and at the same time fertilizing the world as it engages it, far from the fragmentation of reality in the service of personal gratification.

The above credentials constitute a central issue of next two chapters. The Philocallic aesthetics of Orthodoxy tends to embrace everything. The world and history, humans and their desires, the needs and their perspective, even their passions are embraced in a transfiguring emergence of the Philocallic perspective. In this perspective history is comprehended as well as smaller traditions. East and West, technocratic civilization, sacred and profane, exercise and life are dissected in the world with the scarpel of wholistic theological understanding, so that the function of the apokatharsis does not allow the marginalization of something that could contribute to the understanding of the mutual dependence of human existence.

Saints and poets, sages and thinkers, in a wholistic understanding of life, which is illuminated by the Grace of the non-anticipated and the anticipated.

Stamoulis Chrysostomos, The Theotokos and the Orthodox dogmaPalimpsiston,Thessaloniki, 2003.

The Christological teaching of Cyrill of Alexandria shaped not only the Third and Fourth Ecumenical Synods, but also the teaching of the Church on these issues. His teaching on Virgin Mary is presented in an artistic and useful volume.

This presentation by the Ass. Professor Chrysostomos Stamoulis under the title: “Virgin Mary and the Orthodox Dogma” constitutes an extension and elaboration of his doctoral thesis by the same content.

The aim of the book, as pointed out by the title, is the presentation and deep understanding, in the context of the Orthodox teaching, of the dogma on Virgin Mary. The author begins with the fundamental observation that Virgin Mary is not a goddess, but a “sister to humanity, partaking in human nature”. The privilege of  the “most holy” is something that she freely acquired, contributing the most to the realization of the saving Economy, equipped with the Holy Grace and Her saintly and pious life. A noteworthy observation is Her unclear connection with the person of the Word. Any understanding of Virgin Mary is inextricably linked to Christ and the Christological fact and any adulation and conceptualization of her person cannot constitute, according to the model of the western (mainly Roman-Catholic) tradition, a separate chapter of discussion.

The author devotes a large part of the book to the analysis of the terms “Θεοτόκος” (God bearer) and “Χριστοτόκος” (Christ bearer), in the context of dogmatic problems, brought about by the Nestorian teaching and the Cyrillic treatment of it. The union of the Word with man, conceived by Virgin Mary “in hypostasis”, which means in reality, constitutes the cornerstone of the  understanding of the saving Holy Economy, as well as of the human contribution in the Face of Mary. Consequently, every heretic forgery of the person of the Virgin, has a direct impact on the face of the incarnated Word and His saving significance.

This is a major issue for the author, that is the understanding and the theological formulation of every word about Virgin Mary, filtered through the experience and perception of the content of our salvation in the Church. Every synodical expression, as well as every patristic teaching, according to Saint Cyrill’s remarks, derives from this experience and is theologically exploited for the body of Christ to be built and its heretic corruptions to be treated.

The eloquence and readability of the presentation, combined masterfully with the depth and scientific style of the analysis, expose the diverse virtues of the author and his book.

Search

new summaries

Adamtziloglou Evanthia - Woman in the Theology of Saint Paul A Hermeneutical Analysis of A Cor

Evanthia Adamtziloglou, Women in the Theology of Saint Paul. A Hermeneutical Analysis of A Cor. 11, 2-16 (Ph.D. Thesis), Academic Register of the Department of Theology, of the Theological School,...

Savvas Agouridis (ed), Orthodox Spirituality. Chistianity – Marxism

Savvas Agouridis (ed), Orthodox Spirituality. Chistianity – Marxism, Thessaloniki Theologians’ Seminar no. 2, Thessaloniki 1968, 244 pages. The 2nd volume of the “Thessaloniki Theologians’ Seminar” is divided in two parts....

Agouridis Savvas (ed), What is the Church

Agouridis Savvas (ed), What is the Church, Thessaloniki Theologians’ Seminar no. 3 (reprinted from the journal “Gregorios Palamas”, issue 606-607 of year 1968),  Thessaloniki 1968, 126 pages. The 3rd volume...

Anastasiou Ioannis (ed.) Tradition and Renewal in the Church

Anastasiou Ioannis (ed.) Tradition and Renewal in the Church, Thessaloniki Theologians’ Seminar, no. 6, “Gregorios Palamas” journal publication, Thessaloniki 1972, 206 pages. The 6th volume of “Thessaloniki Theologians’ Seminar” contains...

Charalambos Atmatzidis, Eschatology in the 2nd Epistle of Peter

Charalambos Atmatzidis, Eschatology in the 2nd Epistle of Peter, Pournaras Press, 2005, pages 349. The study of Charalambos Atmatzidis deals with the eschatological perceptions of Peter’s 2nd Epistle. From the...