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NEO-Historicism – End Times Eschatology From An Eastern Orthodox Christian Historicist Perspective

NEO-Historicism – End Times Eschatology From An Eastern Orthodox Christian Historicist Perspective

“(…) in a time of times and a half of a time, when the dispersion hath been consummated, all these things shall become known.” – Daniel 12:8 (Theodotion)

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  • What is Neo Historicsm?
  • Post-Byzantine Historicist Exegesis
    • Greek Orthodox Historicist Revelation Commentaries: The Post-Byzantine Exegetical Movement (1453 to 1922 AD)
    • Saint Neophytos the Recluse (1134-1214)
      • Saint Neophytos the Recluse and the Development of Byzantine Historicist Apocalyptic Thought after 1204
      • Saint Neophytos the Recluse of Cyprus and his Byzantine-era ‘Historicist’ Commentary on Revelation (1200s)
    • George Kalyvas (1522)
    • Maximos the Peloponnesian (1570-1650)
      • Maximos the Peloponnesian: Life, Apocalypse Commentary, and the Foundations of Greek Historicist Exegesis (1610)
    • Christophoros Angelos (1575-1638)
      • Christophoros Angelos (1624): Persecuted Hieromonk and the Birth of Greek Historicism
      • Christophoros Angelos -“Treatise on the Apostasy from the Church, the Antichrist, and the Numbers of Daniel and Revelation”(1624)
    • Zacharias Gerganos (1570-1631)
      • Zacharias Gerganos: A Bridge Figure in Greek Orthodox Historicism (1621 AD)
    • Mitrofanis Kritopoulos (1627)
    • Georgios Koressios (1570-1659)
      • Georgios Koressios of Chios and the Architecture of Post-Byzantine Apocalypse Exegesis
      • Georgios Koressios, Exegesis of the Apocalypse of John (1640)
    • Paissios Ligardis (1655)
    • Saint Anastasios Gordios (1654-1729)
      • Saint Anastasios Gordios and the Formation of the Orthodox Historicist Eschtalogical Tradition
      • Today (June 7) We Remember Saint Anastasios Gordios – A Great Father of Eastern Orthodox Historicist Eschatology (1718)
    • Nektarios Terpos (1732)
      • Nektarios Terpos – Forerunner of the Neo-Hellenic Movement of Modern Greece
    • Eustratios Argentis (early 1700s, died 1750).
    • Pantazes of Larissa (d. July 22, 1795)
      • Pantazès of Larissa (18th c.) and the Development of Greek Orthodox Historicist Eschatology
    • Metropolitan John Lindios of Myra (1791)
      • Metropolitan John Lindios of Myra – “Interpretation of the Apocalypse” (1791 AD)
      • Metropolitan John of Myra and the Mystical Foundations of Eastern Orthodox Historicism
    • Theodoret of Ioannina (1740–1823)
      • Theodoret of Ioannina: Apocalypse, Empire, and Orthodox History
      • Theodoret of Ioannina and the Orthodox Reconstruction of Sacred History (1817): A Non-Augustinian Eschatology
      • The Liberation of the Greeks in the Interpretative Work of Theodoret of Ioannina (c. 1740-1823)
    • Cyril Lavriotis (1742-1829)
      • Kyrillos Lavriotis of Patras – “Exegesis on the Apocalypse” (1817)
    • Patriarch Anthimos of Jerusalem (1717-1808)
      • Patriarch Anthimos of Jerusalem and His Commentary on the Apocalypse (1795)
    • Apostolos Makrakis (1831-1905)
    • Nikolaos Damalas (1842-1892)
    • Neilos Sotiropoulos (1973)
  • Western Historicist Digitized Books (PDFs)
    • Western Historicism Overview/Resources
    • 1260-Year Tribulation Resources (PDFs)
    • 2520 – “Seven Times” Resources (PDFs)
  • Eastern Historicist Timeline of the Church in the Apocalypse
  • Eastern Historicism Graphics and Charts
  • Hellenism and the Unfinished Revolution
  • Neohistoricist Books on Amazon & Other Stores
    • Apostolos Makrakis Historicist Commentary On Revelation
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Greek Orthodox Historicism: A Patristic, Ecclesial, and Historical Interpretation of the Apocalypse From Byzantium to the Modern Era

“But thou, O Daniel, shut up the words, and seal the book, until the time of the consummation, until many shall have been taught and knowledge shall have been multiplied.“ – Daniel 12:4 (Theodotion-Greek) Neo-Historicism (also referred to as Eastern Historicism, Greek Orthodox Historicism, or Eccelsia Historicism) is a patristically grounded, ecclesial,…Continue reading “Greek Orthodox Historicism: A Patristic, Ecclesial, and Historical Interpretation of the Apocalypse From Byzantium to the Modern Era”

18Jan 202618 Jan 2026
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Babylon and the Captive Queen: Constantinople, the Prophets, and Revelation in Theodoret of Ioannina

By: Jonathan Photius, The NEO-Historicism Research Project I. Introduction: Why “Babylon” Cannot Be Reduced to Rome Alone Within Christian interpretation…

15Jan 202617 Jan 2026
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The πλατεῖα of the Great City: Revelation 11, Conciliar Witness, and the Crucifixion of Wisdom in Constantinople

By Jonathan Photius – The NEO-Historicism Research Project Introduction: Revelation 11 as Ecclesial History Revelation 11 is not an isolated…

14Jan 202615 Jan 2026
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Apostolos Makrakis and the Unfinished Revolution

Orthodox Historicism, the Two Beasts, and the Eschatological Meaning of 1821 By Jonathan Photius – The NEO-Historicism Research Project I.…

Greek Revelation Commentaries…

Zacharias Gerganos: A Bridge Figure in Greek Orthodox Historicism (1621 AD)

19 Dec 202522 Dec 2025
By: Jonathan Photius, The NEO-Historicism Research Project Introduction Metropolitan Zacharias Gerganos of Arta occupies a transitional yet decisive place in the formation of post-Byzantine Greek Orthodox interpretation of the Apocalypse.…
Book of Revelation…

Maximos the Peloponnesian: Life, Apocalypse Commentary, and the Foundations of Greek Historicist Exegesis (1610)

17 Dec 202521 Dec 2025
By: Jonathan Photius, The NEO-Historicism Research Project 1. Introduction: A Transitional Figure Reconsidered Maximos the Peloponnesian occupies a crucial yet understated position in the history of Orthodox interpretation of the…
Greek Revelation Commentaries…

Patriarch Anthimos of Jerusalem and His Commentary on the Apocalypse (1795)

16 Dec 202520 Dec 2025
By: Jonathan Photius, NEO-Historicism Research Project Patriarch Anthimos of Jerusalem (†1808) occupies a distinctive and often misunderstood place in the intellectual and spiritual history of the late Ottoman Greek world.¹…
Book of Revelation…

Metropolitan John of Myra and the Mystical Foundations of Eastern Orthodox Historicism

14 Dec 202519 Dec 2025
by: Jonathan Photius, N.E.O.-historicism Research Project Abstract This article demonstrates that Metropolitan John of Myra (fl. 1791) stands as a crucial figure in the development of Eastern Orthodox apocalyptic interpretation.…
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Orthodox Historicism and the Apocalyptic Tradition: A Synthesis of Garrick V. Allen’s Manuscript Findings and the Eastern Orthodox Historicist School

12 Dec 202517 Dec 2025
Abstract Recent work by Garrick V. Allen on the manuscript tradition of the Apocalypse offers one of the most significant scholarly confirmations to date that Eastern Orthodox Historicist Eschatology—the reading…
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Pantazès of Larissa (18th c.) and the Development of Greek Orthodox Historicist Eschatology

11 Dec 202516 Dec 2025
By Jonathan Photius — the Neo-Historicism RESEARCH Project Abstract Pantazès of Larissa, an eighteenth-century Greek interpreter of the Apocalypse, stands at a pivotal juncture in the evolution of post-Byzantine Orthodox…
Book of Revelation…

Saint Anastasios Gordios and the Formation of the Orthodox Historicist Eschtalogical Tradition

10 Dec 202520 Dec 2025
Introduction Anastasios Gordios (c. 1654–1729) occupies a uniquely influential position in the development of post-Byzantine Orthodox eschatology. His Treatise on Mahomet and Against the Latins (1717) constitutes not only a…
Book of Revelation…

Georgios Koressios, Exegesis of the Apocalypse of John (1640)

15 Sep 202514 Dec 2025
Geòrgios Koressios (c.1570–1659) was the most prominent theologian of the early modern Greek world. This reputation is based not only on his valuable works on theology, but also on his…
Book of Revelation…

Nektarios Terpos – Forerunner of the Neo-Hellenic Movement of Modern Greece

12 Feb 202415 Sep 2025
Nektarios Terpos (Νεκτάριος Τέρπος) was an Orthodox Christian scholar, teacher and hieromonk in the 18th century. He was from Moscopole which is located in now modern Albania, and was a Vlach…

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  • Babylon and the Captive Queen: Constantinople, the Prophets, and Revelation in Theodoret of Ioannina
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  • Apostolos Makrakis and the Unfinished Revolution
  • Neilos Sotiropoulos and Twentieth-Century Orthodox Historicism
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  • Allegory, History, and the Millennium: Andrew of Caesarea, Augustine of Hippo, and the Byzantine Grammar of Apocalyptic Time
  • Reconstructing the ‘Lost Commentary on Daniel’ of Theodoret of Ioannina († c. 1823)
  • Theodoret of Ioannina and the Orthodox Reconstruction of Sacred History (1817): A Non-Augustinian Eschatology
  • Theodoret of Ioannina: Apocalypse, Empire, and Orthodox History
  • The Peals of Thunder and the Restoration of the Bride
  • Daniel 7, Revelation 11, and the Christological Trial of History
  • Georgios Koressios of Chios and the Architecture of Post-Byzantine Apocalypse Exegesis
  • Christophoros Angelos (1624): Persecuted Hieromonk and the Birth of Greek Historicism
  • The Olivet Discourse as a Historicist Prophecy of the Church Age
  • Saint Neophytos the Recluse and the Development of Byzantine Historicist Apocalyptic Thought after 1204
  • Zacharias Gerganos: A Bridge Figure in Greek Orthodox Historicism (1621 AD)
  • Maximos the Peloponnesian: Life, Apocalypse Commentary, and the Foundations of Greek Historicist Exegesis (1610)
  • Patriarch Anthimos of Jerusalem and His Commentary on the Apocalypse (1795)
  • Metropolitan John of Myra and the Mystical Foundations of Eastern Orthodox Historicism

Books on Eastern Orthodox Historicist Eschatology

Seven Times Unto The Dispersion Consummation

The Encyclopedia of Christianity in the Book of Revelation

The Interpretation of the Book of Revelation by Apostolos Makrakis

Hellenism and the Unfinished Revolution

Day of the Christ Pantocrator Sky – August 11th, 1999

 

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