Get 20M+ Full-Text Papers For Less Than $1.50/day. Start a 14-Day Trial for You or Your Team.

Learn More →

Book Review: Missa Est! a Missional Liturgical Ecclesiology

Book Review: Missa Est! a Missional Liturgical Ecclesiology ATR/100.2 446 Anglican Theological Review doctrinally, legally, and theologically, the volume insists on deeper engage- ment with the practices of interfaith already in place. With evocative, deeply personal, and theoretically sophisticated propos- als, this volume should be welcome reading for the many practitioners for whom the practice of interfaith ritual has preceded the theorizing and the- ologizing. It is a wonderful introduction to interfaith practice as it announces the study of interreligious ritual as a field of its own. Jeannine Hill Fletcher Fordham University Bronx, New York Missa Est! A Missional Liturgical Ecclesiology. By Eugene Schlesinger. Minneapolis, Minn.: Fortress Press, 2017. 300 pp. $79.00 (cloth). How do mission and liturgy relate? The missionary nature of the church has become axiomatic in recent decades, at least in academic missiology and ecclesiology. Yet much of the missional ecclesiology literature struggles to articulate a central place for liturgy. Most of the predominant voices in the “missional church” conversation have come from Protestant traditions (especially evangelicals) that tend to place little emphasis on formal liturgy. On the other hand, liturgical traditions (whether Anglican, Orthodox, or Ro- man Catholic) have not often developed how their sacramental and liturgical practices relate to the church’s participation http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Anglican Theological Review SAGE

Book Review: Missa Est! a Missional Liturgical Ecclesiology

Anglican Theological Review , Volume 100 (2): 1 – Aug 25, 2021

Loading next page...
 
/lp/sage/book-review-missa-est-a-missional-liturgical-ecclesiology-3Dc7n0dWZH

References (0)

References for this paper are not available at this time. We will be adding them shortly, thank you for your patience.

Publisher
SAGE
Copyright
© 2018 Anglican Theological Review Corporation
ISSN
0003-3286
eISSN
2163-6214
DOI
10.1177/000332861810000239
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

ATR/100.2 446 Anglican Theological Review doctrinally, legally, and theologically, the volume insists on deeper engage- ment with the practices of interfaith already in place. With evocative, deeply personal, and theoretically sophisticated propos- als, this volume should be welcome reading for the many practitioners for whom the practice of interfaith ritual has preceded the theorizing and the- ologizing. It is a wonderful introduction to interfaith practice as it announces the study of interreligious ritual as a field of its own. Jeannine Hill Fletcher Fordham University Bronx, New York Missa Est! A Missional Liturgical Ecclesiology. By Eugene Schlesinger. Minneapolis, Minn.: Fortress Press, 2017. 300 pp. $79.00 (cloth). How do mission and liturgy relate? The missionary nature of the church has become axiomatic in recent decades, at least in academic missiology and ecclesiology. Yet much of the missional ecclesiology literature struggles to articulate a central place for liturgy. Most of the predominant voices in the “missional church” conversation have come from Protestant traditions (especially evangelicals) that tend to place little emphasis on formal liturgy. On the other hand, liturgical traditions (whether Anglican, Orthodox, or Ro- man Catholic) have not often developed how their sacramental and liturgical practices relate to the church’s participation

Journal

Anglican Theological ReviewSAGE

Published: Aug 25, 2021

There are no references for this article.