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E-raamat: Church as Fullness in All Things: Recasting Lutheran Ecclesiology in an Ecumenical Context

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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 25-Jun-2019
  • Kirjastus: Lexington Books/Fortress Academic
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781978702868
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 25-Jun-2019
  • Kirjastus: Lexington Books/Fortress Academic
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781978702868

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What is Lutheran ecclesiology? The Lutheran view of the church has been fraught with difficulties since the Reformation. Church as Fullness in All Things reengages the topic from a confessional Lutheran perspective. Lutheran theologians and clergy who are bound to the Holy Scriptures and the Lutheran Confessions explore the possibilities and pitfalls of the Lutheran traditions view of the church in the face of contemporary challenges. The contributors also take up questions about and challenges to thinking and living as the church in their tradition, while looking to other Christian voices for aid in what is finally a common Christian endeavor. The volume addresses three related types of questions faced in living and thinking as the church, with each standing as a field of tension marked by disharmonizedthough perhaps not inherently oppositepoles: the individual and the communal, the personal and the institutional, and the particular and the universal. Asking whether de facto prioritizations of given poles or unexamined assumptions about their legitimacy impinge the church Lutherans seek, the volume closes with Anglican, Reformed, and Roman Catholic contributors stating what their ecclesiological traditions could learn from Lutheranism and vice-versa.

Arvustused

In the modern West, the church has become a contested idea too often co-opted into artificial schemes that privilege either adherence to institutions and propositions or the expression of personal faith and piety. Avoiding such facile polarities, the authors broaden our ecclesiological story by showing us constructive ways in which Lutheran thinking can account for the deeply interrelated individual and communal, personal and institutional, and particular and universal dimensions of the church. By bringing critical voices outside of Lutheranism into the conversation, the authors invite us to reflect on the challenge and promise of a Lutheran ecclesiology that is not merely centripetal but also centrifugal in its confessional and ecumenical potential. -- Leopoldo A. Sánchez M., Concordia Seminary This collection of essays by Lutheran, Anglican, Reformed, and Roman Catholics seeks to encourage Christians in the pursuit of unity, communion, and community in the church. All who take ecclesiology seriously, whatever their Christian tradition, will find this collection of essays beneficial and profitable toward those ends. -- Glenn R. Kreider, Dallas Theological Seminary This is an important book. The essays it comprises explore the intriguing premise that Lutheran ecclesiology lapses into distortion so long as it fails to reflect upon the nature of the church from within an ecumenical frame of reference. It follows from this vantage point that inter-confessional dialogue should not be viewed as merely a supplementary exercise, but rather as an integral moment within the pursuit of Lutheran ecclesial self-understanding. If this premise is correctand I am convinced it isthen this book makes a very valuable contribution to contemporary discourse about the doctrine of the church. It will reward the attention of any reader who wishes carefully to consider what it means to confess and belong to the one, holy, catholic and apostolic church. -- David J. Luy, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School Lutherans desire to know more about the church. They confess it in their creeds, and they find it in their congregations and among fellow believers confessing Christ. The church is manifest to them where the Word is preached and the Sacraments are distributed to God's people. But the church is also "hidden" in other traditions and denominations with a different history. In this volume thirteen scholars offer thoughts, convictions, and the results of research that guide the reader into ecclesiology fromand aroundthe Lutheran tradition, making this topic speak on biblical, confessional, and ecumenical levels today. Planting the fruits of Lutheran deliberations in a broader landscape of ecumenical estimations ensures that any reader interested in the church and its relationship to Lutheran theology will come away richer after reading. -- Jobst Schöne, Bishop Emeritus of the Independent Evangelical Lutheran Church (SELK, Germany)

List of Abbreviations
ix
Introduction xi
Section I The Individual and the Communal
1 Under Authority: The Freedom of the Church under Christ
3(18)
Jeremiah Johnson
2 Community and Closure: The Church in the Individual Complaint Psalms
21(14)
Paul M. C. Elliott
3 The Reception of Luther's Ecclesiology in Contemporary German Dogmatic Theology
35(24)
Alexander Kupsch
Jonathan Mumme
Section II The Personal and the Institutional
4 Hermeneutical Considerations in Applying Acts to Ecclesiological Concerns
59(16)
Mark W. Birkholz
5 The Ministry of the Saints and the Office of the Ministry: Translation and Theology in Ephesians 4:12
75(18)
James B. Prothro
6 Rightly Called . More or Less: A Primer on Medieval Church and Ministry for the Modern Lutheran
93(18)
Richard J. Serina Jr.
Section III The Particular and the Universal
7 Et Placet Nobis Vetus Partitio Potestatis: The Power of Order and the Power of Jurisdiction in Aquinas and the Augustana
111(18)
Roy Axel Coats
8 Realizing the Potential of a Confessional Lutheran Ecclesiology: Ernst Kinder on the Church
129(20)
Jonathan Mumme
9 Are the Marks of the Church Enough to Authenticate Confessional Lutheranism Then and Now?
149(22)
John J. Bombaro
Section IV The Ecumenical and the Lutheran
10 The Church: A Body under Law and Gospel
171(18)
Jakob Rinderknecht
11 Unity and Diversity in Anglican and Lutheran Ecclesiology
189(16)
Thomas L. Holtzen
12 From an American Geneva: How Confessional Lutherans and Reformed Can Mutually Sharpen "Evangelical" Today
205(22)
Robert Crouse
Section V Epilogue
13 Confessional Lutheranism in Post-Constantinian, Postmodern, and Postlocal Context
227(18)
Jari Kekdle
Index 245(4)
About the Contributors 249
Jonathan Mumme is assistant professor of theology at Concordia University Wisconsin. Richard J. Serina, Jr. is adjunct professor of theology at Concordia College New York. Mark W. Birkholz is adjunct professor of theology at Concordia University Chicago.