Reshaping Ecumenical Theology
The Church Made Whole?
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Hardback
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Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
ISBN: 9780567070449
Number of Pages: 224
Published: 11/02/2010
Width: 15.6 cm
Height: 23.4 cm
"Contesting Ecumenical Theology" is a major contribution to the study of the Church. It provides clear and authoritative orientation for the student, while probing deep into a range of key issues in ecclesiology and ecumenical dialogue from a critical standpoint that will stimulate discussion among scholars and ecumenists. It reclaims some old orthodoxies, while challenging some new ones, and points to a deeper and more personal engagement with the major traditions of the Christian Church as the way to fuller unity and more effective mission. "Contesting Ecumenical Theology" argues that the values of difference and diversity and the priority of mission and evangelisation must shape our picture of unity. It transcends old arguments about 'establishment', by showing that all churches are compelled to develop a constructive relationship to the modern state, wherever possible, if they are to be effective in mission. The central ecumenical notion of 'reception' is re-interpreted, not as the faithful unquestioningly receiving the teaching of church authorities, but as the process whereby the whole Church discerns the truth of new developments.
The mantra 'baptism is complete sacramental initiation' is challenged, and the place of confirmation is secured within a total process of initiation. The ministry of the episcopate is affirmed, but only by being related to the gospel on which the Church is founded. The nature of communion is examined and the imperative of maintaining it against divisive tendencies is affirmed. 'The hermeneutics of unity' shows that we are shaped by each other through the conflict or rivalry of traditions: 'We are what we are because you are what you are'.
Looking at the Church (an overview); Ecclesiology (the discipline of the theology of the Church); Rethinking ecumenical theology (affirming diversity and prioritising mission); New Paths to Christian unity (how can we combine vision and realism?); 'Reception' and the development of doctrine (a key concept restated); The struggle for authority (reclaiming the conciliar tradition - as in Beyond the Reformation?); Church and state: an inescapable connection (models of establishment); One Baptism? The waters that divide (the significance of this biblical and credal phrase); Is Baptism Complete Sacramental Initiation? (challenging a current orthodoxy); Episcopacy and the foundation and form of the Church (establishing the validity of bishops from a Reformation perspective); The Bishop as Theologian (why is the theological role of bishops neglected or played down by some major Churches?); The Reformation Confession, Confessionalism, and the confessing Church? (how can a Church be a 'confessing Church' without becoming ideologically 'confessional'?); The Hermeneutics of Unity (how we interpret one another's traditions in dialogue and are shaped by them); Ecclesiology and Communion (the theology of 'being in communion' and the imperative of preserving unity and preventing schism).
'In Reshaping Ecumenical Theology: The Church Made Whole? Paul Avis presents a penetrating analysis of the current state of ecumenical theology and a fresh vision for its renewal. Skilfully summarising a huge amount of source material, Avis provides a concise overview of ecumenical theology before outlining ideas for 'reshaping' it in creative ways that open up new possibilities for tackling as yet unresolved issues... As Avis' readers have come to expect from him, this present volume is clear-sighted, highly readable and engaging.'--Sanford Lakoff