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The Church Made Strange for the Nations - Essays in Ecclesiology and Political Theology (Microfilm)
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The Church Made Strange for the Nations - Essays in Ecclesiology and Political Theology (Microfilm)
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Description: Christians have sometimes professed that the church
ought to be ""in the world but not of it,"" yet the meaning and
significance of this conviction has continued to challenge and
confound. In the context of persecution, Christians in the ancient
world tended to distance themselves from the social and civic
mainstream, while in the medieval and early modern periods, the
church and secular authorities often worked in close relationship,
sharing the role of shaping society. In a post-Christendom era,
this latter arrangement has been heavily critiqued and largely
dismantled, but there is no consensus in Christian thought as to
what the alternative should be. The present collection of essays
offers new perspectives on this subject matter, drawing on
sometimes widely disparate interlocutors, ancient and modern,
biblical and ""secular."" Readers will find these essays
challenging and thought-provoking. Endorsements: ""'Let the Church
be the Church ' In early ecumenical debates, this was a guiding
principle. Churches tried to define a new, critical role in
society, after having failed to speak up for victims of violence
and injustice. Descendents of the Radical Reformation--represented
in this volume--confront us with that challenge anew. In dialogue
with philosophy, history, sociology, and even the arts, a political
theology for an exilic church (or exile-church) is inspired. This
holds the potential to make a real difference--and renew the
church's self-understanding."" --Fernando Enns The Vrije
Universiteit Amsterdam About the Contributor(s): Paul G. Doerksen
is assistant professor of theology at Canadian Mennonite
University. He is the author of Beyond Suspicion: Post-Christendom
Protestant Political Theology in John Howard Yoder and Oliver
O'Donovan (Wipf & Stock, 2010). Karl Koop is professor of
history and theology at Canadian Mennonite University. He recently
published Confessions of Faith in the Anabaptist Tradition,
1527-1660 (2006).
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