105 research outputs found

    A Time to Laugh: Religious Humor in Contemporary Russia

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    Contemporary Russian religious humor continues the tradition of this spiritual and selfsacrificial laughter. The anecdotes that are gathered here make fun not only of religion and its characteristic attributes, but of human imperfections and shortcomings, which manifest themselves in relation to various aspects of worship. Everything is good in moderation, including religious zeal that is not the goal by itself, but the instrument of spiritual and moral development. There is a proverbial saying in Russia—force a fool to pray to God and he will beat his forehead. Many anecdotes portray in a comic light this certain pseudo-piety, the eternal human intention to follow the letter of religion to the detriment of its spirit, while remaining the same stingy, calculating, deceitful, vain, and lustful creatures that care not a bit about their own inner transformation. Religious anecdotes mock blind imitation of the authorities, literal (and often absurd) interpretation of the Scriptures, inappropriate claims to sainthood, and the insatiable desire to use God and religion in self-interest. Religious humor, therefore, purifies human souls from the filth of intolerance and fanaticism. It awakens respect and compassion toward those people who profess another faith or hold different views and opinions, and belong to diverse races, nations, classes and civilizations. Thus, religious humor teaches us to love and appreciate religion in ourselves and not ourselves in religion—an attitude needed in our contemporary post-Cold War world, stricken by the fever of religious terrorism

    Religion and Globalization: Crossroads and Opportunities

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    A conversation between the First Vice-President of the Russian Philosophical Society, Doctor of Philosophy, Professor of Moscow State University, Alexander Chumakov and the editor of the special series Contemporary Russian Philosophy at Brill, the Nertherlands, Doctor of Philosophy, Professor Mikhail Sergeev

    Orthodoxy and Democracy: Sophiological Themes in the Philosophy of Nikolai Losskii

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    Divine Wisdom and the Trinity: A 20th Century Controversy in Orthodox Theology

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    Russian Orthodoxy: Renewal or Revival?

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    Religious Nationalism in Russia: A Postmodern Identity?

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    Post-Modern Themes in the Philosophy of Nicholas Berdyaev

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    Liberal Orthodoxy: From Vladimir Solov\u27ev to Fr. Alexander Men

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