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E-raamat: Disclosing Church: An Ecclesiology Learned from Conversations in Practice

(University of Roehampton)
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From 2006 to 2011 researchers at Heythrop College and the Oxford Centre for ecclesiology and Practical Theology (OxCEPT, Ripon College Cuddesdon) worked on a theological and action research project: "Action Research Church and Society (ARCS). 2010 saw the publication of Talking About God in Practice: Theological Action research and Practical Theology (SCM), which presented in an accessible way the work of ARCS and its developing methodology. This turned out to be a landmark study in the praxis of Anglican and Catholic ecclesiology in the UK, showing how theology in these differing contexts interacted with the way in which clergy and congregations lived out their religious convictions. This book is a direct follow up to that significant work, authored by one of the original researchers, providing a systematic analysis of the impact of the "theological action research" methodology and its implications for a contemporary ecclesiology.

The book presents an ecclesiology generated from church practice, drawing on scholarship in the field as well as the results of the theological action research undertaken. It achieves this by including real scenarios alongside the academic discourse. This combination allows the author to tease out the complex relationship between the theory and the reality of church.

Addressing the need for a more developed theological and methodological account of the ARCS project, this is a book that will be of interest to scholars interested not only Western lived religion, but ecclesiology and theology more generally too.
Preface ix
Acknowledgements xi
Acknowledgements 2 xii
1 Disclosing church: attending to people, attending to the Spirit
1(14)
PART I The project: `Action Research - Church and Society' (ARCS)
15(40)
2 The ARCS project: reflections on a research community and its practices
17(11)
3 Theological action research
28(11)
4 Theology in four voices
39(16)
PART II Contextual themes
55(52)
Account of practice A: London Jesuit Volunteers
57(14)
5 The geographical context: London, the global city
71(23)
Account of practice B: Westminster Agency for Evangelisation
82(12)
6 The organisational contexts: dioceses, parishes and faith-based agencies
94(13)
PART III Ecclesiological themes
107(120)
Account of practice C: St Mary's Parish, Battersea, Alpha course
109(11)
7 Church in mission: learning ecclesial ek-centricity
120(27)
Account of practice D: Messy Church, Croydon
132(15)
8 Identifying church: edginess and edgeless-ness
147(22)
Account of practice E: Housing Justice
158(11)
9 Sacrament and sacramentality: celebrating the peri-liturgical sacramental
169(23)
Account of practice F: Roman Catholic Diocese of Portsmouth
180(12)
10 Orders and ordering: life together in the power of the Spirit
192(23)
Account of practice G: The Catholic Agency for Overseas Development (CAFOD)
203(12)
11 Tradition: normativity, creativity and faithful treachery
215(12)
PART IV Conclusions
227(26)
12 What account of church? Edgelessness, fragility and discernment
229(10)
13 What account of theology? Practical fundamental theology
239(11)
14 Ecclesiology by epiphanies. A prospect
250(3)
Appendix: An outline of a (typical) cycle of theological action research 253(2)
Bibliography 255(10)
Index 265
Clare Watkins is Reader in Ecclesiology and Practical Theology at the University of Roehampton, UK, having previously worked as Vice Principal of the Margaret Beaufort Institute, Cambridge. She has researched, taught and published in a range of areas across ecclesiology and sacramental theology, with particular interests in lay vocation, marriage and family and the practical living of ecclesial life in ordinary. Her publications reflect this, including: Living Baptism: Called out of the Ordinary (2006) and Talking About God in Practice: theological action research and practical theology (2010). She ist he Director of the Theology and Action Research Network (TARN), based at the University of Roehampton.