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Editor, Prof. Angelo Karantonis
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Contents |
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| Editorial | vii |
| Byzantine Catanyctic Hymns as Laments: The Canons of Joseph the Hymnographer, Bishop Damaskinos (Olkinuora) of Haapsalu | 1 |
| Toward an Oriental Orthodox Understanding of the (Un)createdness of Grace: A Patristic Approach Informed by Liturgical Theology, Andrew N. A. Youssef | 33 |
| Divine Participation: The Indwelling of the Spirit in Father Mattá Al-Miskīn’s Theology against the Backdrop of the Cyrilline Legacy, Wagdy Samir | 57 |
| Theos Kyrios, The Lord is God: Word-Order and Meaning, John A. L. Lee | 89 |
| Pleasure and Pain in the Analysis of St Maximus, According to the Quaestiones ad Thalassium, Christoph Schönborn and Margaret Beirne | 107 |
| Contributors | 125 |
| Chronicle of Faculty Activities | 127 |
| Information for Authors |
141 |
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.