Living the Liturgy
Enlarging the Baptist Vision
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Living the Liturgy argues that there is no sphere of life—political, economic, or otherwise—that is not already liturgical. So understood, liturgies inevitably form our understandings of nature, freedom, time, and much else. The key question is, "Which liturgy is in fact shaping our lives?" Elizabeth Newman argues that Baptists can expand their liturgical and theological vision by locating themselves more fully within the whole church: one, holy, catholic, and apostolic.
Far from entailing a loss of Baptist identity, genuine ecumenism enhances Christian self-understanding, whatever one's tradition. Ecumenism is an exchange of gifts. A faithful gift exchange—whether giving or receiving—builds communion, illuminating rather that obfuscating Baptist and other Christian identities, enabling us to live and witness more fully for the life of the world. Living the Liturgy displays in particular ways and through specific examples how an ecumenically informed understanding of liturgy can cultivate an enriched Baptist self-understanding and witness in a late modern context.
I Healing Liturgical Amnesia: Gathering as Christ's Body
1 Baptism: The Substance and the Sign
2 Healing Eucharistic Amnesia
3 Practicing the Nicene Faith
4 The Liturgy Is Political Action
II Cultivating Life Together: A Communion that Radiates
5 The Priesthood of All Believers: On Sharing What We Have Received
6 The Communion of Saints: Lottie Moon and Teresa of Ávila
7 Living the Liturgy: Dwelling with Mary in Real Time
III Bearing Witness: The Church for the World
8 "Let All Things Their Creator Bless"
9 Samuel Sharpe: On Finding a Freedom Not Our Own
10 Baptist Catholicity: Being Christ's Broken Body for the World