ABSTRACT

Some hundred years from inception, the ecumenical movement is stagnating. William C. Ingle-Gillis argues that the problem lies in modern ecumenism’s treatment of denominational Churches as provisional entities requiring reunion to be more fully Christ’s Body. In a work unique both to ecumenical studies and to trinitarian theology, the author redefines ecclesial life from the premise that God’s essence is personhood-in-communion and that the ultimate calling of human persons is to share as fully in the divine life as Christ himself. Concluding that the Churches are, by the Spirit’s action, a tangible, dynamic event, wherein God makes visible his on-going reconciliation of the world to himself, Ingle-Gillis argues that the Churches’ true life lies in coming-together, rather than being-together. This conclusion places ecumenism at the heart of Church life and witness.

part |2 pages

PART 1 The provisionalist ecclesiology of modern ecumenism

chapter 1|28 pages

Ecumenism and ecclesiology

chapter 2|24 pages

Survey of ecumenical provisionalism

part |2 pages

PART 2 Trinitarian ontology: the ecclesiological cornerstone

part |2 pages

PART 3 Event-ecclesiology and -ecumenism

chapter 5|38 pages

Ecclesiological principles