У нас вы можете посмотреть бесплатно Maria Skobtsova - Types of Religious Lives (Audiobook) или скачать в максимальном доступном качестве, видео которое было загружено на ютуб. Для загрузки выберите вариант из формы ниже:
Если кнопки скачивания не
загрузились
НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием видео, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу
страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса ClipSaver.ru
Download Audiobook: https://github.com/jubireads/Skobtsov... Click the green button with the download arrow and 'download zip'. The zip file will include a torrent file for the audiobook. This is my first audiobook. And I'm still figuring out github and torrents. If you have trouble downloading, just message me or email at jubileereads at gmail dot com. Text: http://www.intratext.com/IXT/ENG0113/ Contents: 0:00 - Introduction 1:27 - The Five Types 3:19 - Synodal Piety 19:33 - Ritualism 39:38 - Aesthetic Piety 59:27 - Ascetic Piety 1:27:12 - The Evangelical Path 1:34:56 - Two Types of Love Bio: Maria Skobtsova was a Russian poet, nun, socialist revolutionary, and member of the French Resistance during World War II. She has been canonized a saint in the Eastern Orthodox Church. Furious at Leon Trotsky for closing the Socialist-Revolutionary Party Congress, she planned his assassination, but was dissuaded by colleagues, who sent her to Anapa. In 1918, after the Bolshevik Revolution, she was elected deputy mayor of Anapa in Southern Russia. When the anti-communist White Army took control of Anapa, the mayor fled and she became mayor of the town. The White Army put her on trial for being a Bolshevik. However, the judge was a former teacher of hers, Daniel Skobtsov, and she was acquitted. Soon the two fell in love and were married. Mother Maria Skobtsova died on Good Friday or Holy Saturday, 1945, in Ravensbrck concentration camp near Berlin. The "crime" of this Orthodox nun and Russian refugee was her effort to rescue Jews and others being pursued by the Nazis in her adopted city, Paris, where in 1932 she had founded a house of hospitality. Synopsis: Though written in 1937, this essay, arguably one of Mother Maria's most significant writings, was, discovered only in 1996 by Helene Klepinin-Arjakovsky in the archive of Sophia Pilenko (Mother Maria’s mother). While based on very specific groups and tendencies within the Russian Orthodox Church, nonetheless Mother Maria’s analysis of five types of Christian faith and practice remain widely relevant today, even beyond the original Russian Orthodox context. In turn she posits and offers a critique of four religious types: synodal, ritualist, aesthetical, and ascetical, before presenting her own ideal, which she calls the evangelical type. Of all the types, the one most tied to Russian history and the most common style of relationship between Church and State in Russia is the “synodal” model, which refers to the long period in Russian history when the Orthodox Church was administered as a department of the tsarist state. But even here, one can recognize the tendency among many Christians to cling to a “traditional” and seemingly “unchangeable” vision of an institution’s identity and piety. Such a model might be recognized under the more familiar word “Christendom.” The discerning reader, regardless of background, will surely also recognize the other “types” depicted here: the ritualist, aesthetical, ascetical. In each case she offers a fairly biting critique of approaches to religious practice that substitute the love of tradition, order, doctrine, liturgy, or form for the underlying Spirit of God. Mother Maria’s last type, the “evangelical,” is not to be identified with the modern Protestant variety, whether that is identified as Bible-based, culturally and ethically conservative, or openly and emotionally expressive. Rather, what she means by the “Gospel” type is a more authentic Christianity of the sort already reflected in the preceding writings. In this type, liturgy and hierarchy, dogma and tradition all have their place, but here we seek first God and God's kingdom, and recognize Him foremost in the face of the brother or sister before us. Love of God is love of the neighbor. The liturgy we celebrate in church is the liturgy we must live on the street, in our homes, in loving service to the neighbor. Again, the relevance of this model is not confined to the Orthodox Church. Indeed, Mother Maria’s vision points to a truly ecumenical convergence available to Christians of all backgrounds and traditions, and it is this challenge, among others, that gives her voice such an enduring and urgent relevance.