Florovsky at the Crossroads: Imagining Byzantine Renaissance from Morningside Heights

Journal Title: Social Evolution & History - Year 2014, Vol 13, Issue 1

Abstract

Georges Florovsky, an influential theologian, came to New York City in 1948 to be dean of the Russian St Vladimir Theological Seminary. At Morningside Heights, Florovsky taught about what went wrong in Russia in 1917 and what needed to be done about it. His ideas prefigure the critique of European Enlightenment and its Orientalism formulated by Edward Said. Florovsky argued that Russia, imitating Western Europe, gave up its own Hellenic heritage of the Church Fathers, and replaced it with the western style of the Renaissance of ancient Hellenic philosophy. His remedy for this condition was ‘the return to the fathers’, establishing a direct philosophical connection with Russia's Hellenic herit-age, thus by-passing the West. These ideas of Hellenic patristic revival also run into problems at Morningside Heights, in the World Council of Churches and with the powerful theological figures at Union Theological Seminary. Florovsky misread the changing political situation in the late 1950s. American theology and politics were becoming influenced by Reinhold Niebuhr, who was not interested in the nuances of Church History. The new American priorities were the homogenization of ethnic churches into a union. Florovsky's ideas about the Russian religious revival, once popular at the height of the Cold War now became outdated. Thus, Florovsky was removed from the deanship of St Vladimir Theological Seminary in 1955 and a more Americanized generation took over the leadership, while his ideas found fertile soil in more nationalistic circles

Authors and Affiliations

Alexander Mirkovic

Keywords

Related Articles

Success of the International Symposium on ‘Theories and Methods for Studies of the Origin of States’

On November 14–15, 2015, the international symposium on ‘Theories and Methods for Studies of the Origin of States’ was held in Gucun Park Hotel, Shanghai. The symposium was co-organized by Research Center on Ancient Civi...

Urbanization and Mutual Help Groups: Contribution to Nation-Building in Tanzania

The article is devoted to mutual help groups in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, as an input to the country's successful nation-building process. It summarizes the results of field researches conducted by Oxana V. Ivanchenko in...

Keeping Together Long Distance Families: Technology as a Social Actor

The article examines how communication tools became social actors for family members separated due to economic migration and for parenting from abroad. Media and movies became aware of social problem in communication wit...

The Punctuated Equilibrium Macropattern of World System Urbanization and the Factors that Give Rise to that Macropattern

Change in complex systems, system evolution, is itself complex. This paper is about world system evolution as it is reflected in the pattern of urbanization over the last 5000 years. It will be shown that the pattern of...

Florovsky at the Crossroads: Imagining Byzantine Renaissance from Morningside Heights

Georges Florovsky, an influential theologian, came to New York City in 1948 to be dean of the Russian St Vladimir Theological Seminary. At Morningside Heights, Florovsky taught about what went wrong in Russia in 1917 and...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP266049
  • DOI -
  • Views 117
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Alexander Mirkovic (2014). Florovsky at the Crossroads: Imagining Byzantine Renaissance from Morningside Heights. Social Evolution & History, 13(1), 151-171. https://europub.co.uk./articles/-A-266049