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  1. Oct 14, 2010 · For an excellent and detailed article on all the dialogues between Orthodox Christians and Muslims, see Professor Gregorios Ziakas, University of Thessalonica, ‘The Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople and the dialogue with Islam’, in: Phanari: 400 Chronia (Istanbul: Ecumenical Partriarchate) (2001), pp. 575–713 (Greek), 714–725 (English).

    • George C. Papademetriou
    • 2010
  2. Aug 23, 2023 · This is something that all orthodox Christians believe--Greek Orthodox Christians, Roman Catholic Christians, evangelical Protestant Christians, and many others. It is at the heart of the distinctive message we proclaim and what sets us apart most dramatically from Islam.

    • Timothy George
  3. Romania is one of the most religious of European countries and the majority of the country's citizens are Orthodox Christians. Romania is a secular state, and it has no state religion. The Romanian state officially recognizes 18 religions and denominations.

  4. Sep 12, 2011 · Thus, Russian Muslims lived in the great country together with orthodox Christians in peace for centuries. And they want today both to save this inestimable historical heritage and to put it on solid theological grounds. [1] “Orthodox religious studies - Islam, Buddhism, Judaism”.

  5. Nevertheless, in spite of the Ottoman conquest and following Islamization of south-eastern Europe, a large Catholic and Orthodox population lived in the Turkish provinces. In the world history of Reformation, the success of the Lutheran, Calvinist, and antitrinitarian churches in the lands of Islam, in the Ottoman Empire, represents an ...

    • István Tóth
    • 2007
  6. Three of the world's major religions -- the monotheist traditions of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam -- were all born in the Middle East and are all inextricably linked to one another ...

  7. present the relationship between Orthodox Christianity and Islam as an example of a unique symbiosis that constitutes a basic foun dation of Russian civilization. The goal of this article is to character ize the institutions of the two most important Russian "traditional religions,"1 analyze reasons for cooperation and potential tensions,