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Fr Andrew
Phillips was born in 1956 in a non practising family that has lived for
centuries in the countryside of the Essex-Suffolk border. In childhood
he became interested in the history of early England, especially in the
local figure of Saint Edmund but also in King Alfred the Great. At the age
of twelve, he began teaching himself Russian and at the same time read
for the first time the New Testament. He was struck especially by two
phrases: 'Seek ye first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness; and
all these things shall be added unto you' (Matt. 6,33) and, 'the foolishness
of God is wiser than men' (1 Cor. 1,25). Following
religious experiences at this time confirmed by reading, at the age of
fourteen he conceived the desire to be received into the Russian Orthodox
Church. This finally came about in 1975. From the very beginning, he wished
to make English this Orthodox Tradition, without in any way watering down
the Orthodox Faith with cultural excuses. After staying
in Russia, he gained an M.A. in Russian at Oxford. Here he also studied
theology, history and literature. He then went to work in Greece for a
year, next going on to study theology full-time at the Orthodox Theological
Institute in Paris. Here he was ordained deacon in the Russian Orthodox
Church in 1985 and priest in 1991. In all he
spent sixteen years living outside England, in Norway, Greece, Russia,
France and Portugal. In France he worked as a lecturer at the ESSEC Graduate
School of Management outside Paris and in Portugal he set up the first
ever Russian Orthodox parish in that country. In 1988 he wrote a first
book called 'Orthodox Christianity and the Old English Church', followed
in 1992 by a gazetteer of the English Saints, 'The Hallowing of England'.
This in turn was followed in 1995 first by an anthology of 100 articles
written for Orthodox journals over the previous twenty years, entitled
'Orthodox Christianity and the English Tradition', and then by a study
of the 19th century visionary William Barnes, called 'The Rebirth of England
and English'. A fifth work, 'The Lighted Way' appeared at the end of 1999,
providing Orthodox Christian perspectives for the Third Millennium. This
was followed by a sixth work concerning the Apostle of East Anglia, St
Felix, who came to England as a missionary from France. Leaving his
Russian Orthodox parish in the Paris suburbs, he and his family returned
to England to carry out missionary work in 1997. He is now the priest
of St Felix and St Edmund Orthodox church in Felixstowe, Suffolk, where
he also edits the journal 'Orthodox England'. He lives at Seekings House
with his wife, six children and their grandparents, three generations
of Orthodox Christians.
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