|
Последние поступления
[English Edition / Orthodoxy Today]
[English Edition / Orthodoxy Today]
Priest Ioan Valentin Istrati
[English Edition / Orthodoxy Today]
Archimandrite Tikhon (Shevkunov)
[English Edition / Orthodoxy Today]
[English Edition / Orthodoxy Today]
Archimandrite Tikhon (Shevkunov)
For instance, we are walking around Moscow. A rainy, nasty day. We are in a hurry to get somewhere. Suddenly, a babushka with a cart stops Vladyka. “Ba-atiushka!..” she says in her trembling, elderly voice, not knowing, of course, that standing before her was no simple batiushka, but a entire bishop—from America, no less. “Batiushka, at least you help me—bless my room!
[English Edition / Orthodoxy Today]
Fr. Vladimir Berzonsky
[English Edition / Saints. Asceties of Piety. Church Holy Days ]
[English Edition / Church History]
Sergei Tsvetkov
[English Edition / Orthodoxy Today]
Fr. Barnabas Powell
[English Edition / Orthodoxy Today]
Tatiana Veselkina
[English Edition / Orthodoxy Today]
Fr. Ernesto Obregon
[English Edition / Orthodoxy Today]
[English Edition / Orthodoxy Today]
[English Edition / Coming to Orthodoxy]
[English Edition / Orthodoxy Today]
[English Edition / Church History]
[English Edition / Orthodoxy Today]
[English Edition / Orthodoxy Today]
Tatiana Kuznetsova
But not only psychotherapy, scientology, or therapeutically oriented sects, such as “transcendental meditation,” occupy themselves with healing emotional illnesses. Christianity, “and Orthodoxy in particular, in the opinion of theologians, is a medical science”; and “the Church’s work is to heal.” Met. Hierotheos Vlachos, Orthodox psychotherapy, (Holy Trinity-St. Sergius Lavra) 2004, 18.
| |