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The practice of the sacraments of baptism and the Eucharist allow
Christians to read Scripture in the context of the church and in
unity with the Trinity. Charles Meeks argues here, however, that
over the centuries since the Reformation, Protestant expressions of
the church have often allowed the sacraments to assume a minor role
that has led to a weakening of Protestant ecclesiology and a
disconnection of these ancient rituals from the gospel. To unpack
this reality, Meeks relies on the work of fourth-century bishop
Hilary of Poitiers and modern theologian Robert W. Jenson to
examine the relationship between the sacraments and Scripture, the
Trinity, and the church. With Hilary, he retrieves a hermeneutic
that starts from the interdependence of the sacraments with all
aspects of Christian life, especially the way one reads Scripture,
formulates theology, and understands what the church is and is not.
With Jenson, Meeks applies this hermeneutic to the modern church in
an appeal to recover a premodern sense of God's relationship to
time, and thus how the church relates to God through Word and
Sacrament.
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