COMMUNIO VIATORUM
COMMUNIO VIATORUM

Communio viatorum is a theological journal from Central European perspectives founded in 1958 by J. L. Hromádka and J. B. Souček, published by the Protestant Theological Faculty of Charles University in Prague three times a year.

Communio Viatorum seeks to promote research and scholarly debate in all theological disciplines. Since its foundation special attention has been paid to both biblical studies and Czech Protestant history. The journal is also interested in articles that reflect new accents within the field of theology as well as relevant challenges from neighbouring disciplines, developments in the Church worldwide as well as new moves within society. It seeks to promote an ongoing process of theological debate from a specific Central European Protestant background, but open to authors from all around the world and all denominations who wish to engage in such a conversation.

As of 2024, the journal Communio Viatorum has transitioned to an open-access publication, issued by Charles University Karolinum Press.

Articles published here are indexed in the ATLA Religion Database® and are included in the full-text ATLASerials® (ATLAS®) collection. They are also indexed and abstracted in the Web of Science – Arts and Humanities Citation Index® of Clarivate Analytics, in Scopus, in CEEOL, and in ERIH PLUS.

The previous journal homapage with an archive of published issues

COMMUNIO VIATORUM, Vol 66 No 1 (2024), 69–81

Creation as Sacrament: An Orthodox Contribution to the Cultivation of an Ecological Ethos

Viorel Coman

DOI: https://doi.org/10.14712/30296374.2024.7
published online: 20. 09. 2024

abstract

This article looks at the contribution of Dumitru Stăniloae’s theology of the sacramentality of creation for the cultivation of an ecological sensitivity, attending in particular to his ideas that the entire created reality is God’s gift to humanity and that the cosmos has a mysterious or apophatic dimension. This helps in developing a Christian ecology whose central idea is of non-possession or non-domestication of the world by human beings. Understanding the world thus is seen as world-affirming and a reminder that creation cannot be treated as mere utility, property, or raw material, but is always also a vehicle of grace and spiritualization.

keywords: Dumitru Stăniloae; theology of creation; apophaticism; theological anthropology; grace; sacramentality

Creative Commons License
Creation as Sacrament: An Orthodox Contribution to the Cultivation of an Ecological Ethos is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

210 x 148 mm
periodicity: 3 x per year
print price: 500 czk
ISSN: 0010-3713
E-ISSN: 3029-6374

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