Calling on and thanking God: the role of faith and faith communities in disaster recovery [PDF]
Abstract Faith and faith communities play a critical role in post‐disaster recovery for at least three reasons. First, faith is a socially shared frame through which individuals understand a disaster and evaluate potential means of recovery. Second, faith is a driver or motivator of post‐disaster recovery, providing inspiration, encouragement, and ...
Virgil Henry Storr +2 more
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The Ecclesiological Foundations of Fr. Sergius Bulgakov’s Project for Partial Intercommunion [PDF]
This article examines Fr. Sergius Bulgakov’s project for the establishment of Eucharistic communion between the Anglican and Orthodox Churches in the context of the history of the Fellowship of St. Alban and St.
Yu. N. Antipina
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Disputes on women’s deaconate in the Church of England [PDF]
In the history of the Anglican Church the top-ranked issue of the second half of the 20th century and the beginning of the 21st century was disputes on women’s priesthood. As a result of these debates, the Anglican Church began to ordain women as deacons,
Artem Kokosh
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Auricular confession in the Church of England: history, liturgy and canon law [PDF]
The auricular confession is a widespread and important practice in the Church of England today. Theological discussions around the auricular confession date back to the very dawn of the English Reformation.
Pavel Velikanov, Vasily Chernov
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Molecularity and ‘Sobornost’ on the way to church unity: archpriest Sergey Bulgakov’s theological controversy on the question of eucharistic communion with the non-orthodox [PDF]
The article examines the theological content of the controversy that unfolded between the leaders of the Fellowship of St. Alban and St. Sergius in connection with the proposal of Archpriest Sergiy Bulgakov on the "partial intercommunion" – the ...
Julia Antipina
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Like many other churches, Protestantism in the Netherlands had its own Liturgical Movement during the twentieth century. Unlike some churches, for example the Anglican Communion, the liturgical identity of parts of Dutch Protestantism never led to the ...
Mattijs Ploeger
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N.T. Wright’s New Perspective on Paul: What implications for Anglican doctrine?
The entrance of New Perspectives on Paul as a reinterpretation of what the Apostle Paul wrote evoked varied responses, especially within the evangelical circles of the Reformed community.
Lekgantshi C. Tleane
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Anglican Influence on Old Catholic Liturgy
Old Catholics have leaned on full communion ties with Anglican churches to create forms of worship which, although decidedly Catholic, are just as decidedly non-Roman, thus strengthening the sense of Old Catholic identity.
David R. Holeton, Petr Jan Vinš
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The Reciprocal Causation of the Eucharist and the Church: A Critical Analysis from Catholic Theological Perspective [PDF]
The Catholic Church believes in the intrinsic and inseparable bond of the Holy Eucharist and the Church. In reference to its dogmatic Constitution, Lumen Gentium paragraph 11 (LG 11) the Church professes that the Eucharist, which is the body and blood of
Francis Appiah-Kubi
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The Commom Law of the Anglican Communion [PDF]
The aim of this short paper is to examine whether and how canon law might be acknowledged as one of the instruments of Anglican unity. First, the study proposes that there are principles of canon law recognised by churches. These are rooted in the canonical tradition shared by churches of the catholic and apostolic tradition.
openaire +1 more source

