Saint Vladimir's Seminary (SVS) Press has launched a new audiobook program, sponsored by the Orthodox Vision Foundation (OVF).
How to Be a Sinner is the first audiobook to become available through OVF's generous grant. It will be followed many other titles over the coming year, including Great Lent, For the Life of the World (also currently available through Mars Hill Audio), The Orthodox Way, On the Incarnation, and On the Orthodox Faith (print version forthcoming).
The audiobook version of How to Be a Sinner may be purchased at Amazon.com.
If you are interested in sponsoring an audiobook of your favorite SVS Press title, please contact us at media@svots.edu.
About How to Be a Sinner
We call ourselves “sinners” in much of our church life. Yet the sinner identity—when done right—brings peace of mind, a clear conscience, and love for others. Addressing topics like guilt, shame, and self-care, this compassionate guide will help you reflect on your life in surrender to God’s mercy. Written by an internationally recognized professor of Orthodox theology, this book will speak to you wherever you find yourself. This book is available in paperback, ebook, and audiobook, narrated by the author, Peter Bouteneff.
About the Orthodox Vision Foundation
The Orthodox Vision Foundation (OVF) continues the nearly five decades of the philanthropic vision begun by Charles and Marilee Ajalat in 1971. As a newly married couple, Charles and Marilee were driven by an unshakable belief in the power that the Historic, Orthodox Christian Church has to transform people’s lives, and indeed the world. It was then that they committed to a lifelong pursuit to do what they could to implement that belief. The Orthodox Vision Foundation was created at the beginning of this century to formalize and maximize their ability to continue to scale that belief and create real impact on a national and international level.
OVF funds a broad range of issues and organizations that tackle everything from feeding and equipping the homeless and working poor, to spreading the Orthodox Church’s worldview, to church governance and policy issues, to ongoing education for our clergy and lay leaders, and launching new ministries.