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Praxis is a key to understanding the Byzantine tradition, which is observed by the Eastern Orthodox Church and some Eastern Catholic Churches. This is because praxis is the basis of the understanding of faith and works as conjoint, without separating the two.
Praxis is a key to understanding the Byzantine tradition, which is observed by the Eastern Orthodox Church and some Eastern Catholic Churches.This is because praxis is the basis of the understanding of faith and works as conjoint, without separating the two.
The Byzantine Rite, also known as the Greek Rite or the Rite of Constantinople, is a liturgical rite that is identified with the wide range of cultural, devotional, and canonical practices that developed in the Eastern Christian church of Constantinople.
Praxis (process), the process by which a theory, lesson, or skill is enacted, practised, embodied, or realised; Praxis model, a way of doing theology; Praxis (Byzantine Rite), the practice of faith, especially worship; Christian theological praxis, the practice of the Gospel in the world; Praxis School, a Marxist humanist philosophical movement
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As a divine liturgy of the Church of Holy Wisdom, Hagia Sophia, it became over time the usual divine liturgy in the churches within the Byzantine Empire. Just two divine liturgies (aside from the presanctified), those of Saints John and Basil the Great, became the norm in the Byzantine Church by the end of the reign of Justinian I. [1]
On May 29, 1453 occurred the Fall of Constantinople, thus marking the end of the Byzantine Empire. The Ecumenical Patriarchate became subject to the Ottoman Empire . 1453–1466
A Greek and Latin copy of Xanthopoulos' Ecclesiastica Historia ("Church History"); published in 1630. Nikephoros Kallistos Xanthopoulos (Greek: Νικηφόρος Κάλλιστος Ξανθόπουλος; Latinized as Nicephorus Callistus Xanthopulus; [1] c. 1256 – 1335) was a Greek ecclesiastical historian and litterateur of the late Byzantine Empire. [2]