homer

Pagan Philosophy, Pagan Virtue, Epistemology & Natural Law – Jay Dyer / Fr Dcn Ananias

Fr Dcn Dr Ananias joins me to cover the basics of epistemology, how do we view pagan classical literature as Orthodox? How do we appreciate and utilize the notions of pagan virtue without accepting the idea of “natural theology,” given we have critiqued this idea so often from Roman Catholicism. What are the extremes we […]

Debate! Pagan vs. Orthodox: Logos, Language & Metaphysics – Jay Dyer Vs CB Robertson

 I spent 3 hours reworking the audio so pretend along with the vaporware its 1987 and you are listening to an old cassette tape – nothing I can do about it, wasn’t recorded by me. I am reposting it because it’s still a good debate, and so far one of the better debates we’ve […]
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Covid Odyssey

John Griffin Who else senses the world shrinking around them? Was it only a year ago we could twirl a multi-hued globe and contemplate a trip to one of those inviting islets of colour? Now, such goals have become uncertain, hazardous, forbidden even. We are confined to our country, our state, our town, a backyard. …

The 3,000-Year-Old European Social and Moral Code

European culture formally began with the books of Homer. These European cultural stories were popularized in Europe approximately 3,000 years ago and then written down by the poet Homer about 2,700 years ago. One of the major themes in Homer is the concept of Xenia. Xenia defines the behavior expected from local European residents toward travelers, strangers, and even immigrants. Xenia also defines the behavior that is expected in return from these guests, these strangers in a strange land.