Dr. Adam DeVille
(Український переклад рецензії д-ра. Адама ДеВілля на книгу Антуана Аржаковського “Очікуючи на Всеправославний собор” вийшов друком в журналі Патріярхат №1, 2012)
I have on several occasions previously noted the important work of the Russian Orthodox historian Antoine Arjakovsky, author of such works as Entretiens avec le cardinal Lubomyr Husar. Earlier this year, as I noted at the time, he published another big book on the topic of the much-promised but much-delayed “great and holy council” of the Orthodox Churches: En attendant le Concile de l’Église Orthodoxe (Paris: Éditions du Cerf, 2011), 682pp.

Antoine Arjakovsky is a fascinating figure: a Russian Orthodox scholar from France who was the founding director of the Ecumenical Institute at the Ukrainian Catholic University in Lviv. Anyone who knows the slightest thing about relations between the Russian Orthodox and Ukrainian Catholic Churches in the last sixty years will know what an extraordinary thing it is to have a Russian Orthodox working for a Ukrainian Catholic institution, and dealing with ecumenism of all things, which is regularly reprobated by some Orthodox as the “pan-heresy.” In 2007, Arjakovsky published Church, Culture, and Identity: Reflections on Orthodoxy in the Modern World (Lviv: Ukrainian Catholic University Press), which I very favorably reviewed the following year in Logos: A Journal of Eastern Christian Studies. That book, I confess, made me change my mind on one important issue: eucharistic hospitality between Catholics and Orthodox. I am and remain greatly indebted to Arjakovsky for cogently compelling me to re-think that issue.