North American Orthodox-Catholic Theological Consultation

North American Orthodox-Catholic Theological Consultation

 

This semiannual Consultation met three times between May 2003 and June 2004 under the co-chairmanship of His Eminence Metropolitan Maximos, Greek Orthodox Bishop of Pittsburgh, and the Most Reverend Daniel Pilarczyk, Archbishop of Cincinnati.  Each meeting usually runs for an afternoon, a full day, and a morning and is usually divided into seven sessions: one business; two informational; and four theological.  The business sessions draw up plans for the next meeting–time, place and theological subjects to be examined.  The informational has various members of the Consultation report briefly on recent developments in each Church.  The theological sessions normally involve presentation of pre-assigned papers for discussion.  Because the theological sessions comprise the heart of each meeting, this report focuses on them.

 

 


 

Robert M. Haddad, the author of this report, has been a member of St. Mary’s Orthodox Church (Brooklyn, NY) since its inception and a member of this Consultation for more than twenty-five years.  He received his Ph.D. in History and Middle Eastern Studies from Harvard University and is Sophia Smith Professor of History and Professor of Religion Emeritus at Smith College.  >From 1993 to 1997, he served as president of the American University of Beirut.  Dr. Haddad has pursued research in the Middle East and Europe as a Fulbright Scholar, a Ford Foundation Fellow and a Fellow of the Social Science Research Council.  He is author of Syrian Christians in Muslim Society: an Interpretation (Princeton University Press, 1970) and numerous articles dealing mainly with the intellectual and political interaction between Islam and Eastern Christianity and between Greek and Latin Christianity.  His current work-in-progress deals with the affinities and divergences that characterized medieval Islam, Greek Christianity and Latin Christianity.