In the year 1054, a great schism separated
Christianity in Western and Eastern churches. This historical event still
affects nowadays. The Great Controversy explores the roots of this
conflict and analyses in detail its multiple historical, political and
philosophical manifestations and transformations. Catholics and Orthodoxes,
Latins and Greco-Russians: polarities that have served to accommodate the
notions «heretic», and «enemy». Differences that give cause for ferocious
fights, for devastating massacres and, in conclusion, for a not very evangelic
violence.
With the rigour of a historian and the passion of the
profound expert of the theme, Jean Meyer describes the schism gestation and the
progressive alienation between the two churches, exploring different aspects of
the conflict. On the one hand, he presents the medieval tensions between the
temporal and the religious power. In addition, Meyer also explores the
geopolitical turbulences that the fall of Constantinople caused. And on the
other hand, the author analyses the fundamental role – often subterranean- of
both churches in events like the Russian Revolution or the fall of Communism.
Moreover, Meyer even reaches the present-day perils and complexities of the
conflict, full of frustrated attempts to reconcile papacy with the orthodox
patriarchy.
Jean Meyer was born in France in 1942. He graduated in
History by the Superior Normal School and by Soborna School in Paris. In 1956
he went to Mexico as a researcher. Meyer has been professor at Mexico School,
at the Universities of Soborna and Perpiñan and at Michoacán School. He founded
the magazine Istor and is author of more than thirty books. With The
Great Controversy, the prestigious historian Jean Meyer was finalist in the
XVIIIth Comillas Prize.