Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Below is an excerpt from a homily by church father John Chrysostom (c. A.D. 349-407), entitled “ The Kind of Women Who Ought to Be Taken as Wives.” A wife has just one purpose: to guard the...

  2. She demonstrates that the exoneration of John was a clear priority in the Dialogue, even if some of the concepts were in contrast to expected ascetic ideals later highlighted in the Lausiac History and after the rehabilitation of John was well on its way.

    • Young Richard Kim
    • 2018
  3. John Chrysostom (/ ˈ k r ɪ s ə s t ə m, k r ɪ ˈ s ɒ s t ə m /; Greek: Ἰωάννης ὁ Χρυσόστομος, Latin: Ioannes Chrysostomus; c. 347 – 14 September 407 AD) [5] was an important Early Church Father who served as Archbishop of Constantinople.

  4. Oct 15, 2024 · The official rehabilitation of John Chrysostom came about 31 years later, when his relics were brought from Comana to Constantinople and were solemnly received by the archbishop Proclus and the emperor Theodosius II, son of Arcadius and Eudoxia.

    • Donald Attwater
  5. Aug 24, 2013 · Marriage cannot get any better than St. John Chrysostom, in his mature years, made it out to be. For a married man or woman to read his homilies on Colossians and Ephesians is to be simultaneously humbled and exalted.

  6. This paper aims to provide a summary of St John Chrysostoms teachings on man-woman relations as pertinent to marriage and the conjugal relationship through the prism of the Orthodox phronema, defined here as the experience-based conscience of the Orthodox Church.

  7. People also ask

  8. While the Pauline text of 1 Cor 7.2–4 includes both women and men in each line, Chrysostom choses to focus his sermon on the men in his congregation – even as he talks about women and in the presence of women – depicting the men as the especially weak link in the marriage.