St. Sergius Institute | |
Established: | 1925 |
Chancellor: | Jean Renneteau |
Dean: | Michel Stavrou[1] |
Campus: | 93, rue de Crimée Paris, France |
Website: | saint-serge.net |
The St. Sergius Orthodox Theological Institute (French: Institut de théologie orthodoxe Saint-Serge) in Paris, France, is a private university of higher education in Orthodox theology. Founded in 1925 by a group led by Metropolitan Eulogius Georgiyevsky, historian, theologian, and last Minister of Religious Affairs of the Russian Provisional Government, Anton Kartashev, Lev Liperovsky and Mikhail Ossorguine, with the active support of Nobel Peace Prize recipient John Mott. It is under the canonical jurisdiction of the Archdiocese of Russian Orthodox churches in Western Europe under the omophorion of the Russian Orthodox Church.
The institute has been in conformity with French legislation and the norms of European university education since its earliest years and is accredited by the Académie de Paris to deliver bachelor, masters and doctoral degrees.[2] The mission of the institute is to form educated priests and laypeople, intending them to serve actively the Orthodox Church and representing it in ecumenical dialogue as well as in the religious and cultural life of their own country.
The institute's building was originally a German Protestant church. Friedrich von Bodelschwingh bought the site to construct a church, a school and other facilities to help German workers in Paris.
The original faculty and their immediate successors included some of the most notable names in Russian intellectual history: economist, philosopher and theologian Sergei Bulgakov who became the dean; Anton Kartashev; Georgy Fedotov; Boris Vysheslavtsev; Archpriest Basil Zenkovsky; Archpriest Georges Florovsky, pioneer of Orthodox neopatristics and of the ecumenical movement; Archimandrite Cyprian Kern, patrologist and liturgist; Archpriest Nicolas Afanassieff, professor of canon law; New Testament scholar Bishop Cassian Bézobrazov; Léon Zander, another pioneer of the ecumenical movement; Alexander Schmemann; John Meyendorff; and diplomat Constantin Andronikof, personal interpreter for several French presidents and prolific translator of Russian-language theological classics.[3]
The St. Sergius Institute:
Teaching is in the French language.
Alumni
Professors