Fostering Dialogue & Unity Across Christian Traditions
The Ecumenical Dialogue Series seeks to foster engaging dialogue across theological differences. In each of three volumes, contributors explore what it means to be Christian and what it means to identify with a specific tradition in Christianity—Protestant, Roman Catholic, and Eastern Orthodox. These charitable volumes address the challenges and benefits of each author's tradition as well as how we can create dialogue and unity across historically tense divisions.
Here's what you'll get from the Ecumenical Dialogue Series:
“A treasury of saintly wisdom, theological insight, and personal testimony.”
—John Betz, University of Notre Dame
“The volume marks a testimony, not an apology, for his Christian ecclesial commitments, though it is not without a store of gentle persuasions. . . . Levering's limpid discussion takes us through his own sense of blessing, challenge, and hope in his Christian vocation as a Catholic."
—Ephraim Radner, Wycliffe College at the University of Toronto
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Exploring the Strengths and Challenges of the Protestant Tradition
What does it mean to be Protestant? How can its strengths shape faith in the modern world, and how should its challenges be addressed? With clarity, warmth,and theological depth, Beth Felker Jones explores these questions in Why I Am Protestant. This book offers a positive, theologically grounded reflection ...
What does it mean for our daily realities to claim the Roman Catholic tradition? Bringing together theology and personal memoir, Matthew Levering offers this vulnerable, honest, and hopeful of why he identifies as Roman Catholic–without shying away from challenges the tradition presents.