1. Michael Radu, “The Burden of Eastern Orthodoxy,” Orbis, 2, no. 42, Spring 1998, p. 283.
2. See, for example, Mirko Djordjević, “The Balkan God Mars—Te Religious Factor in the [Yugoslav] Wars 1991–1999,” in Dragica Vujadinović et al., eds., Between Authoritarianism and Democracy: Serbia, Montenegro, Croatia, Vol II, Civil Society and Political Culture (Belgrade: CEDET, 2005), pp. 133–143.
3. For a succinct account of the role of the SPC in modern Serbian society and political life (since 1989) see Radmila Radić and Milan Vukmanović, “Religion and Democracy in Serbia since 1989: The Case of the Serbian Orthodox Church,” in Sabrina P. Ramet, ed., Religion and Politics in Post-Socialist Central and Southeastern Europe: Challenges Since 1989 (London: Palgrave MacMillan, 2014), pp. 180–211.
4. For detailed analyses of the CPC see, Sreten Zekovic (ed.), Elementa Montenegrina hrestomatija—Crnogorska pravoslavna crkva (Zagreb: CFP-Crnogorski federalistički pokret, 1991);
5. Dr. Danilo Radojevic, Iz povijesti hriscanskih crkava u Crnoj Gori (Cetinje: CDNK, 2000);