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Who is the church? [electronic resource] : an ecclesiology for the twenty-first century / Cheryl M. Peterson.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: Baltimore, Maryland : Project Muse, 2013 2015); Minneapolis [Minnesota] : Fortress Press, [2013] 2015)Description: 1 online resource (1 PDF (viii, 153 pages))ISBN:
  • 9781451426380
  • 1451426380
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: No titleLOC classification:
  • BV600.3 .P488 2013
Online resources:
Contents:
Introduction: asking the right question -- 1. Ecclesiology and context in Protestant America -- 2. The Church as word-event -- 3. The Church as communion -- 4. Ecclesiology post-Christendom: the missional Church -- 5. Starting with the Spirit: a narrative method for ecclesiology post-Christendom -- 6. An ecclesiology that "starts with the Spirit": the ecumenical creeds -- Epilogue: a vision for revival.
Summary: Many congregations today focus on strategy and purpose--what churches "do"--but Cheryl Peterson submits that mainline churches need to focus instead on "what" or "who" they are--to reclaim a theological, rather than sociological, understanding of themselves. Peterson suggests that we understand the church as a people created by the Spirit to be a community, and that we must claim a narrative method to explore the church's identity--specifically, the story of the church's origin in the Acts of the Apostles. Finally, here is a way of thinking of church that reconciles the best of competing models of church for the future of mainline Protestant theology.
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Issued as part of UPCC book collections on Project MUSE.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Introduction: asking the right question -- 1. Ecclesiology and context in Protestant America -- 2. The Church as word-event -- 3. The Church as communion -- 4. Ecclesiology post-Christendom: the missional Church -- 5. Starting with the Spirit: a narrative method for ecclesiology post-Christendom -- 6. An ecclesiology that "starts with the Spirit": the ecumenical creeds -- Epilogue: a vision for revival.

Many congregations today focus on strategy and purpose--what churches "do"--but Cheryl Peterson submits that mainline churches need to focus instead on "what" or "who" they are--to reclaim a theological, rather than sociological, understanding of themselves. Peterson suggests that we understand the church as a people created by the Spirit to be a community, and that we must claim a narrative method to explore the church's identity--specifically, the story of the church's origin in the Acts of the Apostles. Finally, here is a way of thinking of church that reconciles the best of competing models of church for the future of mainline Protestant theology.

Description based on print version record.

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