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THEOFAN See also: Russian archbishop and statesman, one of the ablest coadjutors of See also: Peter the See also: Great, was sprung from a See also: merchant See also: family
.
He brilliantly distinguishedhimself at the Orthodox See also: academy of See also: Kiev, subsequently completing his See also: education in Poland (for which purpose he turned Uniate), and at See also: Rome in the See also: College of the Propaganda
.
Primed with all the knowledge of the West, he returned home to seek his See also: fortune, and, as the Orthodox See also: monk, became one of the professors at, and subsequently rector of, the academy of Kiev
.
He entirely reformed the teaching of
See also: theology there, substituting the See also: historical method of the See also: German theologians for the antiquated Orthodox scholastic See also: system
.
In 1709 Peter the Great, while passing through Kiev, was struck by the eloquence of See also: Prokopovich in a See also: sermon on " the most glorious victory," i.e
.
See also: Poltava, and in 1716 summoned him to See also: Petersburg
.
From henceforth it was Theofan's duty and pleasure to explain the new ideas and justify the most alarming innovations from the pulpit
.
So invaluable, indeed, did he become to the See also: civil power, that, despite the determined opposition of the Russian See also: clergy, who regarded " the See also: Light of Kiev " as an interloper and semi-heretic, he was rapidly promoted, becoming, in 1718, See also: bishop of See also: Pskov, and finally, in 1724, archbishop of Novgorod
.
As the author of " the spiritual regulation " for the reform of the Russian See also: Church, Theofan must, indeed, be regarded as the creator of " the spiritual department " superseding the patriarchate, and better known by its later name of " the
See also: holy See also: synod," of which he was made the See also: vice-president
.
Penetrated by the conviction that ignorance was the worst of the inveterate evils of old See also: Russia, a pitiless enemy of superstition of every sort; a reformer by nature, overflowing with energy and resource, and with a singularly lucid mind armed at all points by a far-reaching erudition, Prokopovich was the soul of the reforming party after the See also: death of Peter the Great
.
To him also belongs the great merit of liberating Russian preaching from the fetters of See also: Polish turgidity and affectation by introducing popular themes and a See also: simple See also: style into Orthodox pulpit eloquence
.
See I
.
Chistovitch, Theofan Prokopovich and his Times (Rus.; Petersburg, 1868) ; P . Morozov, Theophan Prokopovich as a Writer (Rus.; Petersburg, 188o) . (R . N . |
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