ORTHODOX CHRISTIANS HELPING CHILDREN AND FAMILIES IN SYRIA by Rebecca Loumiotis

Editor’s Note: Even though IOCC remains strictly apolitical and nonpartisan in its messaging—and rightly so—Orthodoxy in Dialogue has no hesitation in condemning the White House’s green-lighting of Turkey to escalate the violence in Syria by clearing the way to attack our Kurdish allies.
Keep reading to learn how you can help.
Please share this post widely. 

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International Orthodox Christian Charities Launches Campaign for
Children’s Programs in Syria
Dream Centers offer Children, Families Safe Spaces, Support Overcoming Trauma 

International Orthodox Christian Charities (IOCC) is launching a new fundraising campaign, aiming to raise $250,000 for programming that supports children and families who have survived trauma and tragedy in Syria. Read More


GETTING YOUR PAPERS READ ON ACADEMIA.EDU via ORTHODOXY IN DIALOGUE

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If you post a paper of interest to a mainly Orthodox audience on academia.edu, Orthodoxy in Dialogue may help draw new readers to your work.

You need not be Orthodox to participate so long as your paper has significant relevance to Orthodox Christianity.

Of course, your paper need not agree with anything that Orthodoxy in Dialogue has already published. Read More


THE NEW ATHEISM, MYTH, AND HISTORY: THE BLACK LEGENDS OF CONTEMPORARY ANTI-RELIGION reviewed by Iain Elabo

The New Atheism, Myth, and History: The Black Legends of Contemporary Anti-Religion
Nathan Johnstone
Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2018

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My interest in Nathan Johnstone’s book comes from my lifelong experience of a diversity of religious thought. I was born and raised in Indonesia, a majority Islamic nation. My global studies and travels have exposed me to a plethora of philosophies, beliefs, and arguments. Having nearly become an atheist myself in my early 20s, and having read many of the New Atheist publications as well as the writings of their detractors, I consider myself  well versed in the arguments of both sides. I enjoy and respect my discussions with atheists.

The self-described “New Atheist” movement began arguably in 2004 with the publication of The End of Faith: Religion, Terror, and the Future of Reason by Sam Harris. This was the first book to be associated with New Atheists, although the term “New Atheist” itself was not born until 2006. Since then there have been a plethora of books, articles, and other media posts written by atheists in support of the new atheism and by theists criticising and countering the moment.

Nathan Johnstone may not be the first author to join in the fray, but his book is the first to approach the issue from a historical perspective as opposed to a philosophical or theological  perspective. What is distinctive about this book and its author’s approach is that he is not arguing for or against atheism or theism. In fact, the author freely criticises both atheist and theist arguments where he deems it necessary.  Read More


DOES THE CHURCH REALLY NEED MORE PRIESTS WITH A HE-MAN COMPLEX? by Giacomo Sanfilippo

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Cover photo on Father Samuel Davis‘ Twitter profile

My Orthodoxy, Sissies, and the Performance of Masculinity of March 3, 2018 ranks number ten among Orthodoxy in Dialogue’s 670 articles published since we launched in August 2017, and number three among those with my name in the byline.

Our readers will therefore be interested to learn that the newly ordained Father Samuel Davis of the Orthodox Church in America and recent graduate of St. Tikhon’s Seminary — where it is apparently acceptable to call for my drowning and being fed to sharks (see here and here) — has taken up Father John Guy Winfrey’s clarion call that only “real men” need apply for membership in the Orthodox Church. Yesterday Father Davis tweeted on his Twitter account

While Contemporary Christianity has become feminized. Men are still men in the Orthodox Church and that is what is enticing/attractive to men. Read More