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August 6, 2002
Dear Friends:
I am happy to announce that Father John Ford, Professor of Systematic
Theology at Catholic University will be providing these ecumenical
updates for the coming year. John serves on the Faith and Order
Commission of the National council of Churches and is a noted ecumenist.
I am most appreciative of John's generosity in sharing his talents
with us. I will append a few announcements of upcoming events to
his EcuNotes.
John Crossin, OSFS
Executive Director
Washington Theological Consortium - Ecumenical Update #13
(July
2002):
Gideon Goosen, Bringing Churches Together: A Popular Introduction
to Ecumenism. Second, revised and enlarged edition. Geneva: WCC Publications,
2001.
This volume briefly surveys the principal ecumenical topics: the
theology and history of ecumenism; the Churches of the East, the
Protestant Churches and the Roman Catholic Church; the historical
and theological causes of separation; current ecumenical dialogues;
ecumenical ethics; and inter-religious dialogue. There are some
practical hints for ecumenical efforts, sketches of the Protestant
Reformers, a glossary and a good number of photographs, maps, diagrams
and charts that provide helpful information; each chapter is accompanied
by discussion questions and suggestions for additional reading.
On the plus side, the book is very readable and enthusiastically
ecumenical; on the minus side, the treatment of some issues is over-simplified.
Holy Saints and Fiery Preachers: The Anthology of Protestantism
in Mexico and Central America. Edited by James W. Dow and Alan R.
Sandstrom. Westport, CT and London: Praeger Publishers, 2001.
In 1990, David Stall posed the question: Is Latin America Turning
Protestant? Anthropologists have proposed a variety of empirical
answers to explain this religious phenomenon: social dislocation,
urbanization, economic recession, political repression, changing
value-systems, etc. Five of the eleven essays in this volume are
case studies of Protestant groups in Mexico: another essay considers
an indigenous church in Belize, while three other essays study religious
groups in Guatemala -- these field reports and biographical accounts
provide fascination reading. The introductory and concluding essays
indicate that the factors involved in the explosion of Protestantism
in Latin America are hyper-complex.
Justification:
The Winter 2001 number of The Journal of Ecumenical Studies presents
nine papers from the 2001 annual conference of the North American
Academy of Ecumenists. The conference topic was: The Joint Declaration
on the Doctrine of Justification; Soteriological and Ecclesiological
Implications. The contributors, who view the topic from a variety
of perspectives, are: Catherine Clifford, Alan Falconer, Lynne Lorenzen,
Mutombo Nkulu-N'Sengha, William Petersen, Darlis Swan, Lucian Turcescu,
George Vandervelde, and Geoffrey Wainwright.
Interfaith Dialogue:
Thomas Michel in: A variety of Approaches to Interfaith Dialogue,
in the February 2002 issue of Ecumenical Trends discusses four examples
of interfaith dialogue: (1) a Muslim-Christian association for economic
improvement; (2) Muslim-Catholic seminars on religions in the media;
(3) inter-faith education of future Jesuit leaders; (4) Buddhist-Christian
monastic dialogue. According to Michel, opportunities for encountering
people of other faiths must become an integral part of religious
eduation if we hope to build without our own communities a culture
of Dialogue.
Consultation on Church Union turns to Churches uniting in Christ:
In January 2002, the consultation on Church Union (COCU) was dissolved
in order to inaugurate a new ecumenical relationship: Churches Uniting
in Christ (CUIC) which brings together nine denominations in a journey
of faith that involves mutual recognition of ordained ministries.
The April 2002 issue of Ecumenical Trends contains the keynote presentation
of Michael Kinnamon, former COCU General Secretary, plus essay by
two Roman Catholic observers, John T. Ford and Emmanuel Sullivan.
Information about CUIC is available on the web: www.cuicinfo.org.
Hispanic Ecumenism:
Eduardo Fernandez, in Latinos and Ecumenism: compelling Servants
in a New Era, Journal of Hispanic/Latino Theology 9/2 (November
2002) 6-16, feels that U.S. Latinos are currently in a strategic
place to contribute significantly to a new kairos for ecumenism
since crossing borders is something most of us have had to do in
some way or other.
Upcoming Ecumenical Events:
1. The Friends of the Consortium--a group which supports the Consortium's
ecumenical outreach--will have their first reception on Thursday,
September 26, 2002 at the College of Preachers of the National Cathedral
from 6 to 8 PM. For information please contact the Consortium office
at 202-832-2675 or WTConsort@aol.com.
2. The North American Academy of Ecumenists will meet at the National
Conference Center in Leesburg, Virginia. The Academy's conference
will begin on Friday night, September 27 and end on Sunday. For
information contact Mr. Earl Davis at edavis@ncccusa.org.
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