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The College was honoured to host the visiting Orthodox scholar and Athonite monk, Fr Damaskinos (Jaakko Olkinuora) of Xenophontos Monastery, on 19 August for an evening symposium on the theme “Byzantine Hymnody: Past, Present and Future”. His keynote address entitled ‘Listening and Singing in the Church’ was followed by a panel discussion with representatives from the Antiochian Orthodox Archdiocese Choir (Deacon Phillip Saba), the Australian Byzantine Choir (Mr George Scoufis), Melisma Ensemble (Dr Dimitri Koubaroulis), St John of Damascus Choir Adelaide (Mr John Saredakis) and the Sydney School of Byzantine Chant (Mr Andrew Psarommatis). Dr Andrew Mellas, Lecturer in Byzantine Studies at St Andrew’s, was the MC for the evening.
Father Damaskinos is a member of the Department of Theology of the University of Eastern Finland and a monk of the Holy Monastery of Xenophontos on Mount Athos. His research interests include both musicology, especially the adaptation of Byzantine chant into Finnish, and patristics, especially the liturgical literature of the Middle Byzantine period. He is a polyglot with fluency in Finnish, Swedish, English and Greek, and competency in several other modern and ancient languages.
Click here to view the Symposium on our Youtube Channel
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Greek philosophy remains foundational to the history of ideas in the Western and Eastern traditions. It has shaped disciplines as diverse as theology, ethics, politics, science, and metaphysics. In particular, the writings of Plato, Aristotle, and the later Hellenistic and Byzantine philosophers have exercised enduring influence on Christian theology, especially in the Patristic and medieval Byzantine periods.
The Master of Greek Philosophy cultivates advanced capacity for critical engagement with the key figures, texts, and ideas of the ancient and Byzantine Greek philosophical tradition, preparing graduates to integrate these insights in further scholarly research, higher education, ministry, or other cultural and professional spheres.