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Slavica Slovaca
|
2021
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vol. 56
|
issue 3
403 - 408
EN
The Latin Church and the Byzantine Church in the area below the Carpathians live side by side for several centuries. This neighbourhood has its own historical development. It is divided into several periods. The most important milestone was the establishment of the Greek Catholic Church after the conclusion of the Uzhhorod Union in 1646. As elsewhere in the world, under the Carpathians, various tensions arose in mutual relations. They primarily caused problems that ultimately proved to be beneficial to both parties. The interest in the other and the presentation of one’s own values contributed to the spiritual and cultural exchange. Apparent competition has forced each community to deepen its own identity and historical memory. In key historical situations, there was interconnection and action against the external enemies of the church. The common tangents and intersections of the interests of the Latin and Western Churches under the Carpathians have ultimately always been mutually beneficial. This article points out this added value.
Studia theologica
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2013
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vol. 15
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issue 2
1–31
EN
The aim of this study is to evaluate how Czech Catholic theology approached the contribution of the sciences in 1850–1930, particularly new discoveries and theories in astronomy. This is demonstrated with a wide scale of papers and books by Czech Catholic theologians indicating there was actually no tension between scientists and theologians and that the first chapters of Genesis were by no means read in a Fundamentalist manner. The competence of astronomy was fully respected. If any polemic emerged, it took place on the axis of the “Christian world view” – “materialistic and atheist interpretation of the world".
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