"Towards a Global Vision of the Church"

After the publication of The Church: Towards a Common Vision (TCTCV) in 2013, the major task and challenge for the Faith and Order Commission's Study Group II has been the progress of the multilateral ecumenical dialogue on ecclesiology. The two subgroups of Study Group II have been working in...

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Bibliographic Details
Authors: Boukis, Sotiris (Author) ; Drissi, Ani Ghazaryan (Author) ; Mielcarek, Krzysztof 1963- (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Wiley-Blackwell [2019]
In: International review of mission
Year: 2019, Volume: 108, Issue: 2, Pages: 401-414
IxTheo Classification:KAJ Church history 1914-; recent history
KBN Sub-Saharan Africa
KBR Latin America
KDG Free church
KDJ Ecumenism
NBN Ecclesiology
RJ Mission; missiology
Further subjects:B Pentecostalism
B nature of the church
B Ministry
B Africa
B TCTCV
B Ecclesiology
B Faith and Order Commission
B Mission (international law
B Latin America
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Summary:After the publication of The Church: Towards a Common Vision (TCTCV) in 2013, the major task and challenge for the Faith and Order Commission's Study Group II has been the progress of the multilateral ecumenical dialogue on ecclesiology. The two subgroups of Study Group II have been working in close cooperation with each other, focusing on two major ways to achieve this progress. The focus of Subgroup 2 has been to harvest the fruits of the official responses to TCTCV. This is being done by the collection and analysis of the official responses to TCTCV, the identification of some key themes and issues that emerge from them, and the evaluation of how they point to the next steps. So far 74 responses have been received; however, geographically speaking, there has been essentially no response from the global South (there have been no responses from Africa, no responses from Latin America, and one from Asia); and, denominationally speaking, roughly 10 percent of the responses come from churches or streams that have not been part of the "traditional" ecumenical movement. Nevertheless, the latter regions and denominational families are crucial: they represent the largest and fastest-growing part of global Christianity, and thus it is impossible to have a really "universal" and contemporary-sensitive approach to ecclesiology without substantial input from them. Many of them have also not always been clearly or strongly part of the ecclesiological conversation before TCTCV, and thus it is even more important to include them from now on, and be enriching the multilateral ecclesiological conversation with their contributions as well. Hence, the focus of Subgroup 1 has been to broaden the table of ecclesiological dialogue, by getting into more and wider conversations with ecclesiological perspectives from regions (especially from Asia, Africa, and Latin America), denominational families (e.g., evangelical, Pentecostal, Independent churches, etc.), and forms of being church (e.g., movements, new monasticism, online churches, etc.) "which have not always been clearly or strongly part of discussions on the way to TCTCV, and whose understandings of ecclesiology we want to discover and to enter into dialogue with" (Caraiman minutes, p. 55; cf. Krakow report p. 1).
ISSN:1758-6631
Contains:Enthalten in: International review of mission
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1111/irom.12293