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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.
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.
Talking about God in Practice details the challenges and
complexities of real theological conversations with practitioners,
whilst providing an example of appropriate process, and a model of
theological understanding by which to negotiate these complexities
fruitfully. Drawing on, and adapting, action research methods, this
process enables researchers with practitioners to access 'implicit'
theologies, embedded within practices. The disclosure of the
theology borne by practice enables a fresh and often exciting
insight for all concerned, which leads to renewal of both practice
and theology. The "Theological Action Research" process offers
effective and mutually constructive ways of engaging practitioners
and 'academics' in authentic research partnerships, contributing to
the proper rootedness of theological scholarship, and to capacity
building among practitioners for further, self-led research,
reflection, and theologizing.
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