Drawn from the Twelfth Oxford Institute of Methodist Theological
Studies in August, 2007, these essays address the ecclesiological
deficit of Methodism in relation to vocation and mission, crucial
issues that have suffered from theological and practical confusion
in the world Methodist communion these last decades. The authors
enter into an uncommonly honest dialogue across the global divides
and press urgent questions about how world Methodist and Wesleyan
churches can regain a biblically sound view of mission and
ecumenism without traits of colonialism. The answer from all
continents is that this revitalization must and, in fact, is
beginning in the congregation around revived practices of vocation
and sanctification. The essays are suffused by a sense of realism
about the church in a changing world economy and geopolitics and a
contagious encouragement through the gospel and Wesleyan traditions
that world Methodism can be revived in genuine connection.
Contents
1. M. Douglas Meeks: A Home for The Homeless: Vocation, Mission,
and church in Wesleyan Perspective
2. William Willimon: What If Wesley Was Right?
3. Lung-Kwong Lo: Ecclesiology from the Perspective of
Scriptures within Wesleyan and Asian Contexts
4. Tim Macquiban: Work On Earth and Rest in Heaven: Toward A
Theology Of Vocation in the Writings of Charles Wesley
5. Ivan Abrahams: "To Serve the Present Age, Our Calling to
Fulfill:: A Different Church for a Different World
6. Marjorie Suchocki: Christian Perfection: A Methodist Perspective
on Ecclesiology
7. Robin W. Lovin: , Human Rights, Vocation, and Human
Dignity
7. Paulo Ayres Mattos: The World Is My Parish. Is It? Wesleyan
Ecclesio-Missiological Considerations from a Contemporary Latin
American Perspective"
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!