Abba John the Dwarf Ἀββᾶς Ἰωάννης Egyptian desert father famed for his absolute obedience — planted a dry stick and watered it daily until it bloomed.
Abstinence Ἀποχή The practice of refraining from certain foods on fast days — the external discipline that supports the interior fast.
Aer Ἀήρ The large veil used to cover the eucharistic gifts during the proskomide and at the Great Entrance.
Akribeia Ἀκρίβεια Strictness — the exact application of canonical rules without pastoral accommodation.
Altar Ἁγία Τράπεζα The holy table — the central liturgical furnishing of the sanctuary, the throne of God and the table of the Eucharist.
Ambon Ἄμβων The raised platform from which the Gospel is proclaimed — also called amvon in Slavic practice.
Anastenaria Ἀναστενάρια A folk religious practice in northern Greece — fire-walking on the feast of SS. Constantine and Helen.
Anathema Ἀνάθεμα A solemn ecclesiastical condemnation — formal separation from the Church's communion.
Anomoeanism Ἀνομοιανισμός Extreme Arianism: the Son is unlike the Father in essence — the most radical wing of the Arian controversy.
Antidoron Ἀντίδωρον Blessed bread distributed after the Divine Liturgy — 'instead of the gift,' for those who did not receive communion.
Apocatastasis Ἀποκατάστασις Universal restoration — the teaching that all rational beings will ultimately be saved; debated and partly condemned.
Apokatastasis Ἀποκατάστασις Restoration of all things — see Apocatastasis; the term is also used in Acts 3:21 for the eschatological renewal.
Apophthegmata Ἀποφθέγματα The Sayings of the Desert Fathers — the primary literary legacy of early monasticism, collected 4th–6th centuries.
Apostasy Ἀποστασία Formal abandonment of the Christian faith — distinguished from heresy (wrong belief) and schism (wrong communion).
Apostolic Succession Ἀποστολικὴ Διαδοχή The unbroken chain of episcopal ordination from the Apostles to the present bishops of the Church.
Artoklasia Ἀρτοκλασία The blessing of five loaves at All-Night Vigil — recalling the feeding of the five thousand and anticipating the eschatological banquet.
Artos Ἄρτος Bread — specifically the large leavened loaf blessed at Pascha and carried in procession through Bright Week.
Atonement Ἱλασμός Propitiation — the reconciliation of humanity with God through Christ's self-offering; interpreted differently East and West.
Autocephaly Αὐτοκεφαλία Self-headedness — the status of an Orthodox church that governs itself without external ecclesiastical authority.
Barlaam of Calabria Βαρλαὰμ Καλαβρός The 14th-century monk whose attack on hesychasm provoked Gregory Palamas's formal defense of the uncreated light.
Beatitude Μακαριότης Blessed — the state of those who share in the divine life; also the eight blessings of the Sermon on the Mount.
Bema Βῆμα The sanctuary — the raised platform behind the iconostasis where the altar stands, the image of the heavenly throne room.
Bishop Ἐπίσκοπος Overseer — the fullness of the priesthood, successor of the Apostles, center of unity for the local Church.
Bishop of Rome Ἐπίσκοπος Ρώμης The Pope — whose primacy of honor is recognized in Orthodox theology but whose universal jurisdiction and infallibility are not.
Bogomilism Βογομιλισμός A medieval Balkan dualist heresy — the world was created by Satan; the material body is evil.
Bosom of Abraham Κόλπος Ἀβραάμ The place of rest for the righteous after death — the intermediate state before the resurrection.
Burial Office Παρακλητικός The funeral service — the Church's prayer for the departed and farewell to the body, oriented entirely toward the resurrection.
Canon Κανών A rule or standard — both the canonical books of Scripture and the Church's disciplinary legislation from the councils.
Canonical Hours Κανονικαὶ Ὧραι The seven fixed times of daily prayer — sanctifying every hour of the day and night.
Catechesis Κατήχησις Christian instruction — the formation of the faith through systematic teaching of the Gospel and the Church's life.
Catechumen Κατηχούμενος One under instruction — a person preparing for Holy Baptism, present for the Liturgy of the Word but dismissed before the Eucharist.
Cathedra Καθέδρα The bishop's throne — the seat of episcopal authority in the cathedral church; from which the word 'cathedral' derives.
Catholicity Καθολικότης The quality of universality — each local Church is the full, complete, whole Church, not a fraction of it.
Chalcedon Χαλκηδών The Fourth Ecumenical Council (451 AD) — defined Christ as one Person in two natures with four precise adverbs.
Cherubikon Χερουβικός The Cherubic Hymn — sung at the Great Entrance, identifying the congregation with the angelic orders.
Chrismatory Χρισματοδόχος The vessel containing the Holy Chrism — kept in the sanctuary and used in Chrismation and other anointings.
Chrismon Χρίσμον / ΧΡ The Chi-Rho — the monogram of Christ composed of the Greek letters X (Chi) and P (Rho), one of the earliest Christian symbols.
Christ Pantocrator Χριστὸς Παντοκράτωρ Ruler of All — the central iconographic image of Christ, reigning in divine majesty and human mercy.
Comma Johanneum Comma Iohanneum The disputed Trinitarian verse in 1 John 5:7 — not in the Orthodox text; a later Latin interpolation.
Communicatio Idiomatum Communicatio Idiomatum Communication of properties — predicates of either nature apply to the one Person of Christ, so God truly suffered and died.
Compline Ἀπόδειπνον The night prayer — the last of the canonical hours, prayed before sleep; Great Compline contains the Great Canon during Lent.
Confessor Ὁμολογητής One who confesses the faith under persecution — a title given to those who suffered but were not martyred.
Council Σύνοδος An assembly of bishops — the Church's authoritative organ of teaching and legislation, whose authority depends on reception.
Cross Σταυρός The instrument of Christ's death — venerated as the Tree of Life; the sign of the Christian.
Deacon Διάκονος Servant — the third order of ordained ministry, serving at the altar and historically serving the poor.
Deification Θέωσις See Theosis — the English academic term for the same reality: genuine participation in the divine nature.
Deisis Δέηση Intercession — the central icon of the iconostasis: Christ enthroned with the Theotokos and St. John the Baptist interceding.
Desert Fathers Πατέρες τῆς Ἐρήμου The Egyptian and Syrian monks of the 3rd–5th centuries — the founders of the Christian ascetical tradition.
Deuterocanon Δευτεροκανονικά The books in the Orthodox Old Testament not found in the Hebrew Bible — Tobit, Sirach, Maccabees, Wisdom, etc.
Diaspora (Canonical) Διασπορά Orthodox Christians living outside traditional Orthodox territories — a canonical situation requiring ongoing resolution.
Didaskalia Διδασκαλία Teaching — the doctrinal instruction of the Church; the office of teacher in the early Christian community.
Diptych Δίπτυχον See Diptychs — the hinged tablets listing those commemorated at the Liturgy; inclusion signals full communion.
Docetism Δοκητισμός The heresy that Christ only appeared to be human — his body was a phantom; one of the earliest and most persistent distortions.
Dogma Δόγμα A defined doctrine — an irreformable teaching of the Church binding on all the faithful; to be distinguished from theologoumena.
Dogmatikon Δογματικόν The principal theotokion of Saturday Great Vespers — summarizing the Orthodox theology of the Incarnation.
Dorotheos of Gaza Δωρόθεος Γάζης 6th-century Palestinian monk — his Discourses and Sayings are a masterwork of practical monastic teaching.
Doxastikon Δοξαστικόν A sticheron sung after 'Glory to the Father' — the final and most theologically significant hymn of a series.
Economy of Salvation Οἰκονομία τῆς Σωτηρίας The divine plan of redemption — God's ordered self-disclosure through history culminating in the Incarnation.
Eikon Εἰκών Image — in theological use, the human person as the image (eikon) of God; and the icon as the image of the prototype.
Ekklesia Ἐκκλησία The Church — the assembly of those called out by God; each local eucharistic gathering is the full Church, not a fraction.
Eleos Ἔλεος Mercy — the loving-kindness of God that stoops to the creature in need; the word at the heart of the Jesus Prayer.
Eparchy Ἐπαρχία A diocese — the territorial unit governed by a bishop; the basic unit of Orthodox canonical governance.
Epiclesis in Marriage Ἐπίκλησις The invocation of the Holy Spirit in the marriage service — asking God to crown the couple with glory and honor.
Eschatology Ἐσχατολογία The doctrine of the last things — death, judgment, resurrection, and the life of the age to come.
Eulogia Εὐλογία Blessing — also the blessed (but not consecrated) bread distributed in certain contexts as a sign of ecclesial unity.
Eutychianism Εὐτυχιανισμός Monophysitism — Christ has one nature after the Incarnation, the human absorbed into the divine like a drop in the ocean.
Evil Κακία / Ἁμαρτία The privation of the good — in Orthodox theology, evil has no independent existence but is the absence or distortion of the good.
Exaposteilarion Ἐξαποστειλάριον The hymn of light — a brief stanza sung at Orthros after the canon, near the dismissal.
Feast Ἑορτή A liturgical celebration — see Feast; also Pentecost as the biblical Feast of Weeks (Shavuot).
Feast Ἑορτή A liturgical celebration — the sanctification of time through the re-presentation of the saving acts of God.
Flesh Σάρξ The human body — in Scripture, both the seat of weakness and mortality, and the matter assumed by the Logos in the Incarnation.
Forerunner Πρόδρομος The title of St. John the Baptist — the one who goes before to prepare the way for Christ.
Free Will Αὐτεξούσιον The self-determination of the rational will — the foundation of human dignity, moral accountability, and the possibility of synergy.
Gehenna Γέεννα The valley of fire — Christ's word for the place of eschatological condemnation; Hell as the condition of a will closed against love.
Gerontikon Γεροντικόν The Book of the Elders — the Greek title for the collection of desert fathers' sayings (Apophthegmata Patrum).
Glorification Δοξασμός The final stage of theosis — the full transformation of the human person in divine glory at the resurrection.
Grace Χάρις The free gift of God — in Orthodox theology, the uncreated divine energies themselves, not a created supernatural accident.
Great Blessing of Waters Μεγάλη Ἁγιασμός The solemn blessing of water at Theophany — one of the most ancient and significant rites of the Orthodox Church.
Great Entrance Μεγάλη Εἴσοδος The procession of the eucharistic gifts to the holy table — the eschatological royal procession accompanied by the Cherubic Hymn.
Great Feasts Μεγάλες Ἑορτές The twelve principal feasts of the Orthodox liturgical year plus Pascha — the Feast of Feasts above them all.
Great Lent Μεγάλη Τεσσαρακοστή The forty-day fast before Pascha — the Church's annual school of repentance, beginning on Clean Monday.
Great Schism Μέγα Σχίσμα The division of the Church into Eastern Orthodoxy and Roman Catholicism — formalized in 1054 but centuries in the making.
Hades ἍΙδης The realm of the dead — the intermediate state where souls await the general resurrection; distinguished from Gehenna.
Hagiography Ἁγιογραφία The writing of saints' lives — a theological genre preserving the witness of the holy; portrait, not biography.
Hamartiologia Ἁμαρτιολογία The theology of sin — its nature, origin, and effects; Orthodox emphasis falls on sin as sickness rather than legal guilt.
Heirmos Εἱρμός The model stanza of each ode in a liturgical canon — establishing the melody and connecting the ode to its biblical canticle.
Hieromartyr Ἱερομάρτυρας A martyred priest or bishop — one who was both ordained and martyred; a combined liturgical title.
Holy Fire Ἅγιο Φῶς The miraculous light that descends at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre on Great Saturday — documented since the 4th century.
Holy Oil Ἅγιον Ἔλαιον Oil used in the sacraments of Chrismation, Holy Unction, and blessings — sanctified matter as vehicle of divine grace.
Holy Orders Ἱερωσύνη The sacrament of ordination — conferring the grace of episcopal, presbyteral, or diaconal ministry.
Holy Synaxis Ἁγία Σύναξις A commemorative feast on the day after a Great Feast — honoring those who were present at the original event.
Holy Tradition Ἱερά Παράδοσις The living transmission of the apostolic faith — encompassing Scripture, Creeds, councils, Fathers, and the liturgical life of the Church.
Holy Unction Εὐχέλαιον The sacrament of healing — anointing of the sick with oil and prayer; offered to all the faithful at Holy Wednesday each year.
Holy Week Μεγάλη Ἑβδομάς The Great Week before Pascha — the most solemn week of the Orthodox liturgical year.
Homoiousios Ὁμοιούσιος Of similar essence — the Semi-Arian compromise rejected at Nicaea; one iota less than orthodoxy.
Hours Ὧραι The canonical prayer hours — the fixed times of daily prayer that sanctify each part of the day.
Hypostatic Union Ὑποστατικὴ Ἕνωσις The union of divine and human natures in the one Person of the Son — neither merged nor divided, genuinely one.
Image and Likeness Εἰκὼν καὶ Ὁμοίωσις The distinction between the image of God (given at creation) and the likeness (the goal of theosis).
Incarnation Ἐνσάρκωσις The eternal Son of God becoming flesh — God genuinely entering human history as a human being; the central event of history.
Incense Θυμίαμα Aromatic resin burned in liturgical worship — the visible symbol of prayer ascending to God.
Intercession Μεσιτεία / Πρεσβεία Mediatory prayer — Christ as the unique Mediator; the saints as intercessors who pray alongside us.
Irenaeus of Lyon Εἰρηναῖος Λυγδούνου Bishop of Lyon (c. 130-202) — the first systematic theologian of the Church; author of Against Heresies.
Jerusalem Cross Σταυρός Ἱεροσολύμων The heraldic cross of the Kingdom of Jerusalem — five crosses symbolizing Christ's five wounds or the four corners of the world.
John Cassian Ἰωάννης Κασσιανός Monk and theologian (c. 360-435) — transmitter of the desert tradition to the West; his Institutes and Conferences are essential texts.
Katabasis Κατάβασις Descent — Christ's descent into Hades; in hymnography, the closing verse of each ode in a canon.
Kathisma Κάθισμα A section of the Psalter — the Psalter is divided into twenty kathismata for liturgical reading; the full Psalter read weekly.
Kecharitomene Κεχαριτωμένη Full of grace — the angel's salutation to the Virgin Mary at the Annunciation; a permanent, not momentary, condition.
Koinonia Κοινωνία Communion — the shared life of the Body of Christ, expressed supremely in the Eucharist; the constitutive reality of the Church.
Koliva Κόλυβα Boiled wheat — the ritual food used at memorial services; the grain of wheat that dies and rises.
Kyrie Eleison Κύριε Ἐλέησον Lord, have mercy — the most repeated prayer in Orthodox worship; theologically complete, never redundant.
Laity Λαϊκοί The people of God — the non-ordained faithful who are nonetheless the Church and not merely its recipients.
Lamentations Θρῆνοι The Lamentations service at Holy Friday Vespers — the Church mourning over the body of Christ.
Lamp Κανδήλα / Λύχνος The oil lamp burning before icons — a sign of prayer, faith, and the presence of the Holy Spirit.
Lectionary Λεκτιονάριον The appointed Scripture readings for each day of the liturgical year — ensuring the whole New Testament is heard in course.
Litany Λιτανεία / Συναπτή A prayer of petitions led by the deacon, to which the congregation responds Kyrie Eleison or Grant it, O Lord.
Liturgical Year Λειτουργικὸν Ἔτος The cycle of feasts, fasts, and commemorations through which the Church sanctifies time.
Logos Spermatikos Λόγος Σπερματικός The seminal Word — the presence of the Logos in all rational beings; developed by Justin Martyr.
Macarius of Egypt Μακάριος Αἰγύπτιος Desert father (c. 300-390) — one of the towering figures of the Egyptian desert, whose sayings define the tradition.
Maranatha Μαράνα θά Come, Lord — the Aramaic prayer for the return of Christ, preserved in the New Testament and the Didache.
Mark the Ascetic Μᾶρκος ὁ Ἀσκητής 5th-century monk — his writings on repentance, the law of the Spirit, and those who think they are justified by works are essential reading.
Marriage Γάμος The sacrament of the union of a man and woman — crowned with the crowns of martyrdom, an image of the Kingdom.
Matins Ὄρθρος See Orthros — the dawn prayer service; Matins is the Western term for the same service.
Megalynarion Μεγαλυνάριον A magnification verse — the short hymn honoring the Theotokos sung during the canon at Orthros.
Memorial Μνημόσυνον A commemoration of the departed — the service prayed for the repose of a soul; see Pannychida.
Menaion Μηναῖον The monthly liturgical book — twelve volumes containing the variable hymnography for each day of the year.
Miaphysitism Μιαφυσιτισμός The Christology of the Oriental Orthodox — one united nature of the incarnate Word; distinguished from Eutychianism.
Monoenergism Μονοενεργισμός The heresy that Christ has only one operation — the precursor to Monothelitism, also condemned.
Monophysitism Μονοφυσιτισμός One-nature-ism — the teaching that Christ has only one nature after the Incarnation; the position of the Oriental Orthodox, who prefer 'Miaphysitism.'
Monothelitism Μονοθελητισμός One-will-ism — condemned at Constantinople III (681 AD); if Christ has no human will, no human will was healed in him.
Myrophores Μυροφόρες The Myrrh-bearing Women — those who came to anoint Christ's body and were the first witnesses of the Resurrection.
Mysterion Μυστήριον Mystery / Sacrament — a sacred rite through which divine grace is genuinely communicated; the Orthodox prefer this term to 'sacrament.'
Narthex Νάρθηξ The vestibule of an Orthodox church — the transitional space between the world and the nave; where catechumens stood.
Nave Ναός The main body of an Orthodox church — the space of the assembled faithful, standing on earth before the heavenly sanctuary.
Neptic Fathers Νηπτικοὶ Πατέρες The watchful fathers — those who wrote from direct experience of the interior battle; the authors of the Philokalia.
Nestorianism Νεστοριανισμός The heresy that Christ's divine and human natures are only morally united — condemned at Ephesus (431 AD).
Nicene Creed Νικαιοκωνσταντινοπολίτειον Σύμβολον The Niceno-Constantinopolitan Creed — the rule of faith recited at every Divine Liturgy.
Nomocannon Νομοκάνων A collection of civil and ecclesiastical law — the Byzantine synthesis of imperial law and canon law.
Oikonomos Οἰκονόμος Steward — the administrative officer of a diocese or monastery; also used theologically for those entrusted with divine gifts.
Ordo / Taxis Τάξις Order — the proper ordering of liturgical and ecclesiastical life; divine order as a theological category.
Original Sin Προπατορικὸν Ἁμάρτημα The sin of the first parents — in Orthodox theology, its primary effect is mortality and the tendency toward sin, not inherited guilt.
Orthopraxy Ὀρθοπραξία Right practice — the liturgical and ascetical embodiment of orthodox belief; lex orandi, lex credendi.
Orthros Structure Δομὴ Ὄρθρου The internal structure of the Orthros service — the most complex of the canonical hours.
Paisios Velichkovsky Παΐσιος Βελιτσκόφσκι Ukrainian-Romanian staretz (1722-1794) — the renewer of hesychasm in the Slavic world; translator of the Philokalia.
Panegyris Πανήγυρις A feast day celebration — the communal gathering for the liturgy of a patron saint; worship overflowing into table fellowship.
Panentheism Πανενθεϊσμός All-in-God — the view that creation exists within God; distinguished from pantheism (God is creation) and theism (God is separate from creation).
Pantocrator Παντοκράτωρ Almighty — the title of Christ as ruler of all creation; the central icon of the dome.
Parables Παραβολαί Earthly stories with heavenly meaning — Christ's primary teaching method; each a window into the Kingdom.
Paraklesis Παράκλησις A supplication service — the canon to the Theotokos sung throughout August and at times of need.
Parousia Παρουσία The Second Coming — the return of Christ at the end of the age; the cosmic, public event the Church prays for.
Passion Week Ἑβδομὰς τοῦ Πάθους The final week of Holy Week — Holy Monday through Holy Saturday — the heart of the liturgical year.
Patriarch Πατριάρχης The head bishop of an autocephalous church — first among equals in his jurisdiction; no universal jurisdiction over other churches.
Pelagianism Πελαγιανισμός The heresy that human will is capable of achieving salvation without grace — condemned at Carthage (418 AD).
Pentarchy Πενταρχία The five ancient patriarchates — Rome, Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, Jerusalem — as the governing structure of the universal Church.
Pentecost Πεντηκοστή The fiftieth day after Pascha — the descent of the Holy Spirit on the Apostles; the fulfillment of Pascha.
Pentecost Πεντηκοστή The descent of the Holy Spirit upon the Apostles — the birth of the Church and the fulfillment of the Incarnation.
Photius of Constantinople Φώτιος Κωνσταντινουπόλεως Patriarch of Constantinople (c. 820-893) — the greatest Byzantine scholar; his theology of the Filioque defined the Orthodox position.
Phronema Φρόνημα The Orthodox mindset — the way of thinking, feeling, and judging formed by immersion in the Church's tradition and worship.
Pneumatomachianism Πνευματομαχία Spirit-fighting — the heresy that denied the full divinity of the Holy Spirit, condemned at Constantinople I (381 AD).
Polyeleos Πολυέλεος The Many Mercies — the solemn Psalms 134-135 sung at Orthros on feast days, with refrains of 'for his mercy endures forever.'
Presbyter Πρεσβύτερος Elder / Priest — the second order of ordained ministry; ordained by the bishop to preside at the Eucharist.
Procession Πομπή / Λιτανεία A liturgical movement of clergy and people — an enacted prayer through sacred space; movement as worship.
Prostration Μετάνοια / Προσκύνηση The physical act of bowing — from the simple bow to the full prostration; the body's participation in prayer.
Prostration Μετάνοια / Γονυκλισία Full bodily prostration — the most complete physical act of worship; also the term used for an act of repentance before another person.
Protomartyr Πρωτομάρτυς The first martyr — St. Stephen is called the Protomartyr of the New Testament; St. Thecla the first woman martyr.
Providence Πρόνοια God's ongoing care and governance of creation — not determinism, but the infinite wisdom that works through free acts.
Psalter Ψαλτήριον The Book of Psalms — the primary text of Orthodox liturgical prayer, read through in its entirety each week.
Qoheleth Ἐκκλησιαστής The Preacher — the Septuagint title of Ecclesiastes; its theology of vanity as the beginning of wisdom.
Reading Ἀνάγνωσις The liturgical reading of Scripture — a sacramental act by which the living Word addresses the gathered assembly.
Reception Δοχή / Ἀποδοχή The Church's recognition of a council or teaching as expressing the faith — what makes a council truly ecumenical.
Relics Λείψανα The bodily remains of saints — venerated as vessels of divine grace; every altar contains a relic sewn into the antimension.
Reliquary Types Λειψανοθήκη The various forms of reliquary — ark, monstrance, arm-reliquary, head-reliquary — used to honor the saints' remains.
Resurrection Appearances Ἀναστάσιμαι Ἐμφανίσεις Christ's appearances after the Resurrection — the foundation of apostolic witness.
Rite Τελετή A liturgical ceremony — a fixed form of worship; also the liturgical tradition of a particular church.
Royal Doors Βασιλικαὶ Πύλαι The central doors of the iconostasis — the threshold between nave and sanctuary, opened at key moments of the Liturgy.
Sabellianism Σαβελλιανισμός Modalism — the heresy that Father, Son, and Spirit are three modes of one divine Person; the opposite error to Arianism.
Sacristy / Diakonikon Διακονικόν See Diakonikon — the vestry where liturgical vestments and vessels are kept.
Saints Ἅγιοι The holy ones — all the baptized in their vocation; and specifically those the Church recognizes as having attained theosis.
Sanctification Ἁγιασμός Being made holy — the ongoing process of transformation by the Holy Spirit; the middle stage between justification and glorification.
Saturday of Souls Ψυχοσάββατον See Soul Saturday — a Saturday of universal commemoration of the departed.
Sayings of the Fathers Ἀποφθέγματα τῶν Πατέρων See Apophthegmata — the collected wisdom of the desert elders.
Seal Σφραγίς The seal of the Holy Spirit given in Chrismation — and the seal of confession that binds the confessor to silence.
Second Coming Δευτέρα Παρουσία See Parousia — the return of Christ at the end of the age; the consummation of all things.
Sedalen Κάθισμα (ὑμνογραφικόν) A liturgical hymn sung while sitting — the troparia that follow the kathisma readings at Orthros.
Septuagint Ἑβδομήκοντα The Greek translation of the Old Testament — the Scripture of the New Testament writers and the Orthodox Church.
Seraphim Σεραφίμ The fiery angelic beings of Isaiah's vision — those who cry 'Holy, holy, holy' before the Throne; the model of pure worship.
Shema Σχήμα / Ἀκούσατε The central prayer of Judaism, quoted by Christ as the greatest commandment; foundational for Christian theology.
Silouan the Athonite Σιλουανός ὁ Ἀθωνίτης Russian-Athonite monk (1866-1938) — the theologian of keeping the mind in hell and despairing not.
Sin Against the Holy Spirit Ἁμαρτία κατὰ τοῦ Πνεύματος The unforgivable sin — the persistent, final rejection of the Spirit's call to repentance.
Skeuophylakion Σκευοφυλάκιον The treasury — the room where the liturgical vessels and sacred objects are kept.
Sobornost Соборность The conciliar unity of the Orthodox Church — the Church as organic community rather than institution.
Solea Σωλέας The raised area immediately before the iconostasis — the liminal zone where heaven and earth meet in the distribution of communion.
Sophrony Sakharov Σωφρόνιος Σαχάρωφ Russian-British monk (1896-1993) — disciple and biographer of St. Silouan; theologian of hypostatic existence.
Soteriology Σωτηριολογία The theology of salvation — its nature, means, and goal; Orthodox soteriology centers on healing and deification.
Soul Saturday Ψυχοσάββατον A Saturday of universal commemoration of the departed — the Church's prayer for all the dead, known and unknown.
Sticheron Στιχηρόν A liturgical hymn inserted between psalm verses — the most common hymn type in Byzantine Vespers and Orthros.
Sunday Κυριακή The Lord's Day — the eighth day, the day of the Resurrection, the icon of the age to come; every Sunday a Paschal celebration.
Symeon the New Theologian Συμεών ὁ Νέος Θεολόγος Byzantine monk (949-1022) — the third 'Theologian' in the Orthodox tradition; advocate for personal experience of the Holy Spirit.
Synodikon Συνοδικόν The document of conciliar decisions — specifically the Synodikon of Orthodoxy read on the Triumph of Orthodoxy Sunday.
Tabernacle Κιβώτιον / Ἀρτοφόριον The vessel in which the reserved eucharistic gifts are kept for the communion of the sick.
The Anastasis (Resurrection) Anastasis The Orthodox icon of the Resurrection — Christ descending into Hades and lifting Adam and Eve from their tombs by the wrist.
The Annunciation Euangelismos The icon of the Archangel Gabriel announcing to the Virgin Mary that she will conceive and bear the Son of God.
The Ascension Ἀνάληψις τοῦ Κυρίου Christ ascending into heaven — humanity carried into the life of the Trinity.
The Baptism of Christ (Theophany) Theophania The icon of Christ's baptism in the Jordan — the simultaneous manifestation of the Holy Trinity at the Theophany.
The Crucifixion Staurosis The Orthodox icon of Christ on the Cross — distinct from Western depictions in showing Christ as the victorious Lord, not the suffering Man of Sorrows.
The Deesis Deesis The icon of Christ enthroned with the Theotokos and John the Baptist interceding on either side — the central image of the iconostasis Deesis tier.
The Dormition Κοίμησις τῆς Θεοτόκου The falling asleep of the Theotokos — her passage through death into the fullness of the Resurrection.
The Fall Ἡ Πτῶσις The primal disobedience of Adam and Eve — the wound in human nature that Christ came to heal.
The Holy Trinity (Rublev) Hagia Trias St. Andrei Rublev's celebrated icon of the three angels at Mamre — the supreme Orthodox depiction of the Trinity.
The Nativity of Christ Nativity The Orthodox icon of Christ's birth — depicting the Incarnation as a cosmic event involving heaven, earth, and the depths of the cave.
The Transfiguration Metamorphosis The icon of Christ revealing His divine glory on Mount Tabor — central to Orthodox theology of the divine light and theosis.
Theanthropic Theanthropos The term for the unique Person of Jesus Christ who is both fully God and fully human — two complete natures in one divine Person.
Theologoumena Θεολογούμενα Theological opinions — views held by respected Fathers but not defined as dogma; may be questioned without heresy.
Theopathy Θεοπάθεια Divine suffering — the question of whether and how God can be said to have suffered in the Incarnation.
Theophany Theophania The manifestation of God — used in Orthodox Christianity for the feast of the Baptism of Christ, when the Holy Trinity was revealed at the Jordan River.
Theophany Θεοφάνεια A divine appearance — the manifestation of God to human beings; in liturgical use, the feast of Christ's Baptism (January 6).
Theotokion Θεοτοκίον See Theotokion — a hymn in honor of the Theotokos; every major hymnographic series concludes with one.
Theotokos Θεοτόκος God-bearer — the title of the Virgin Mary defined at Ephesus (431 AD); primarily a Christological statement.
Theotokos Eleousa Eleousa The icon of the Virgin and Child cheek-to-cheek — depicting the intimate maternal love between the Theotokos and her Son.
Theotokos Hodegetria Θεοτόκος Ὁδηγήτρια She Who Shows the Way — the Theotokos pointing to Christ as the way, the truth, and the life.
Throne of God Θρόνος τοῦ Θεοῦ The image of the divine majesty — expressed in the Pantocrator dome, the holy table, and the eschatological vision.
Tonsure Κουρά The cutting of hair — the rite of entry into the monastic life; death to self-will in the form of a cross.
Transfiguration Μεταμόρφωσις The revelation of Christ's divine glory on Mount Tabor — August 6; the prototype of theosis.
Trisagion Τρισάγιον Holy God, Holy Mighty, Holy Immortal — the ancient doxology connecting Christian worship to the seraphic hymn of Isaiah.
Triumph of Orthodoxy Θρίαμβος τῆς Ὀρθοδοξίας The restoration of icon veneration in 843 AD — celebrated on the first Sunday of Lent; the vindication of all seven councils.
Typikon Τυπικόν The liturgical constitution — the book governing the order of all services throughout the year; a theology of time in rubrical form.
Typology Τυπολογία The reading of Old Testament events as types (prefigurations) of New Testament realities.
Unity of the Church Ἑνότης τῆς Ἐκκλησίας The oneness of the Church — a divine gift, not an achievement; expressed in the one Eucharist, one faith, one baptism.
Unmercenary Ἀνάργυροι The holy unmercenaries — saints who healed the sick without accepting payment; Cosmas and Damian, Cyrus and John, Panteleimon.
Vesper Psalms Ψαλμοὶ Ἑσπερινοῦ The psalms sung at Great Vespers — especially Psalm 104 (the sunset psalm) and Psalms 141, 142, 130, 117.
Vespers Ἑσπερινός The evening prayer — the first service of the liturgical day, opening with the lighting of lamps and the sunset psalm.
Vigil Ἀγρυπνία An all-night service — the combination of Vespers and Orthros on the eve of great feasts; the long darkness giving way to light.
Vigil Lamp Κανδήλα Ἀγρυπνίας The oil lamp that burns continuously before icons — an image of unceasing prayer and watchful attention.
Wedding Crowns Στέφανα The crowns placed on the heads of the bride and groom at Orthodox marriage — crowns of glory and martyrdom.
Xerophagy Ξηροφαγία Dry eating — the strictest form of the Orthodox fast, eating only dry foods without oil.
Year Ἔτος Λειτουργικόν See Liturgical Year — the complete annual cycle of feasts, fasts, and commemorations.
Yoke Ζυγός Christ's easy yoke — the image of discipleship as a burden that liberates; the monastic life as the taking on of Christ's yoke.
Zealotry Ζηλωτισμός Ecclesiastical rigorism — the tendency to demand absolute strictness in canonical matters, refusing all economy.
Zeon Ζέον The hot water added to the chalice at the Divine Liturgy — symbolizing the fervor of the Holy Spirit.
Zoe Ζωή Life — in the fullest sense, the divine life that God shares with human beings; distinguished from mere biological life (bios).
Zosima of Solovki Ζωσιμᾶς Σολόφκι Co-founder of the Solovetsky Monastery (15th c.) — one of the great monastic founders of the Russian North.