European theologians begin church unity study project

Four theologians began discussions in Geneva, Switzerland this week to define the guidelines of a new project promoted from within the Conference of European Churches. The initiative hopes to study how the different Churches understand unity.

According to a statement released by the Conference of European Churches (CEC), the project is investigating church unity as it relates to church identity at the theological, theoretical level as well as in church practices.

The four theologians taking part in the discussion are British Anglican Dr. Paul M. Collins from the University of Chichester, German Catholic Dr. Myriam Wijlens from University of Erfurt, Finnish Dr. Minna Hietamaki from the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland and Orthodox Dr. Viorel Ionita from the CEC’s Churches in Dialogue Commission.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Religion News & Commentary, Anglican Provinces, Church of England (CoE), Ecclesiology, Ecumenical Relations, Lutheran, Orthodox Church, Other Churches, Roman Catholic, Theology

4 comments on “European theologians begin church unity study project

  1. Conchúr says:

    Wonderful! Another self-congratulatory exercise in mutual admiration.

  2. Lutheran-MS says:

    What is each of them going to have to give up, Lutherans their Confessions and their soul???

  3. Jeff Thimsen says:

    Why so quick to dismiss the hope for Christian unity?

  4. The young fogey says:

    [i]Cui bono?[/i] By now all of these academics know well what the other side believes and most of the people in the churches are not trying to kill the people in the other churches any more. That’s as good as it gets in this life. Union talks beyond that are asking for impossible compromises and are a waste of time. The deadlocked, non-negotiable issues: Catholic: infallible church; Protestant: fallible, changeable church. RC: divinely instituted papacy with universal jurisdiction; Orthodox: it’s a man-made rank of the divinely instituted episcopate for the good order of the church, nothing more.