Showing posts with label ecumenical reception. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ecumenical reception. Show all posts

Friday, August 15, 2014

Ecumenical Perspectives on the Filioque for the 21st Century--now available

Ecumenical Perspectives on the Filioque for the 21st Century, ed. Myk Habets (New York: Bloomsbury T&T Clark), a book to which I contributed the Foreword "Ecumenical Reception of Ecumenical Perspectives on the Filioque," has now been released in the North American market. It's available directly from the publisher and from Amazon.com (in both hardcover and Kindle formats). The book description and Table of Contents appear below.


About Ecumenical Perspectives on the Filioque for the 21st Century

The volume presents a range of theological standpoints regarding the filioque. With some contributors arguing for its retention and others for its removal, still others contest that its presence or otherwise in the Creed is not what is of central concern, but rather that how it should be understood is of ultimate importance. What contributors share is a commitment to interrogating and developing the central theological issues at stake in a consideration of the filioque, thus advancing ecumenical theology and inter-communal dialogue without diluting the discussion. Contributors span the Christian traditions: Roman Catholic, Protestant, Eastern Orthodox, and Pentecostal. Each of these traditions has its own set of theological assumptions, methods, and politics, many of which are on display in the essays which follow. Nonetheless it is only when we bring the wealth of learning and commitments from our own theological traditions to ecumenical dialogue that true progress can be made. It is in this spirit that the present essays have been conceived and are now presented in this form.

Table Of Contents

Contents
Dedication
Contents
Acknowledgments
Foreword: Ecumenical Reception of Ecumenical Perspectives on the Filioque. Steven R. Harmon
List of Contributors
1. Introduction: Ecumenical Perspectives and the Unity of the Spirit. Myk Habets
Part 1: The Filioque in Context: Historical & Theological
2. The Filioque: A Brief History. A. Edward Siecienski
3. Theological Issues Involved in the Filioque. Paul D. Molnar
4. The Filioque: Reviewing the State of the Question, with some Free Church Contributions. David Guretzki
Part 2: Developments in the Various Traditions
5. The Eternal Manifestation of the Spirit ‘Through the Son’ According to Nikephoros Blemmydes and Gregory of Cyprus. Theodoros Alexopoulos
6. The Spirit from the Father, of himself God: A Calvinian Approach to the Filioque Debate.
Brannon Ellis
7. Calvin and the Threefold Office of Christ: Suggestive Teaching Regarding the Nature of the Intra-Divine Life? Christopher R.J. Holmes
8. The Baptists ‘And The Son’: The Filioque Clause In Noncreedal Theology. David E. Wilhite
9. Baptized in the Spirit: A Pentecostal Reflection on the Filioque. Frank D. Macchia
Part 3: Opening New Possibilities: Origin, Action, & Intersubjectivity
10. Lutheranism and the Filioque. Robert W. Jenson
11. On Not Being Spirited Away: Pneumatology and Critical Presence. John C. McDowell
12. The Filioque: Beyond Athanasius and Thomas Aquinas: An Ecumenical Proposal. Thomas Weinandy
13. Beyond the East/West Divide. Kathryn Tanner
14. Getting Beyond the Filioque with Third Article Theology. Myk Habets
Index

Monday, June 24, 2013

Report of 2006-2010 Baptist-Catholic conversations published

The report of the 2006-2010 series of bilateral ecumenical conversations between the Baptist World Alliance and the Catholic Church has now been published. A new issue of the American Baptist Quarterly (vol. 31, no. 1), a publication of the American Baptist Historical Society, includes the full text of the 95-page report "The Word of God in the Life of the Church" along with introductions and commentaries. An editorial introduction by Curtis W. Freeman, who is co-editor of the American Baptist Quarterly as well as Research Professor of Theology and Director of the Baptist House of Studies at Duke University Divinity School, makes connections between these recent international conversations and the national-level conversations that began in 1967 soon after the Second Vatican Council between representatives of the American Baptist Churches USA and the United States Catholic Bishops' Committee for Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs (pp. 3-5). Baptist-Catholic dialogue commission co-chair and report co-editor Paul S. Fiddes, Professor of Systematic Theology at Oxford University, provides an extensive introduction to the report that contextualizes the themes of the report in relation to other ecumenical dialogues the Baptist World Alliance and the Catholic Church have held with other Christian communions (pp. 7-27). The text of the report (pp. 28-122) is followed by a pair of responses to the report by two Baptist theologians of note who were not members of the Baptist delegation to these conversations: a commentary by Josué Fonseca, who was Professor and Academic Dean at the Baptist Theological Seminary in Santiago, Chile from 1978 to 2008 before his current service as pastor of First Baptist Church in Concepcion, Chile (pp. 123-37), and a commentary by Stephen R. Holmes, Senior Lecturer in Theology at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland who is also a minister in the Baptist Union of Scotland (pp. 138-53).

The all-important process of reception of the report begins for Baptists at the annual gathering of the Baptist World Alliance July 1-6, 2013 in Ocho Rios, Jamaica. A session of the gathering on July 3 will be a plenary forum for the presentation and discussion of the report, led by a panel of some of the members of the Baptist delegation to the conversations. Paul Fiddes will introduce Section I, "Aims, History and Context of the Conversations"; Timothy George, Dean of Samford University's Beeson Divinity School in Birmingham, Alabama will introduce Section II, "The Koinonia of the Triune God and the Church"; I will introduce Section III, "The Authority of Christ in Scripture and Tradition"; Curtis Freeman will introduce Section IV, "Baptism and Lord's Supper or Eucharist: The Visible Word of God in the Koinonia of the Church"; Elizabeth Newman, Professor of Theology and Ethics at Baptist Theological Seminary in Richmond, Virginia, will introduce Section V, "Mary as Model of Discipleship in the Communion of the Church"; Anthony Peck, General Secretary of the European Baptist Federation, will introduce Section VI, "The Ministry of Oversight (Episkope) and Unity in the Life of the Church"; and Professor Fiddes will offer concluding reflections.

A follow-up post will provide information for ordering individual copies of this special issue of the American Baptist Quarterly when available. Readers of Ecclesial Theology who are attending the General Assembly of the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship in Greensboro, North Carolina later this week (June 26-28) will be able to purchase copies of this issue at the Duke University Divinity School Baptist House of Studies booth. The report will also be available at the Baptist World Alliance annual gathering in Jamaica.

The report will also be published by the Baptist World Alliance and the Catholic Church in various print and electronic media. I will provide details for those publications when they are available here at Ecclesial Theology, along with other information about the report and notices of events and publications related to its ongoing reception by Baptists and Catholics.