Ebook
The importance of baptism within Christian history, theology, and practice is of the first order. Rooted in Christian Scripture, baptism is initiation into Jesus Christ and the sacramental beginning of engagement with the church, the body of Christ. In recent decades, the relationship between baptismal theology and ecclesiology has changed. Rather than focusing solely on the implications of baptism for individuals, the center of theological conversation has moved increasingly to the nature of baptism as formative of the church. One of the pioneers in exploring this theological issue in the United States has been the Rev. Dr. Louis Weil, who, from the time he helped author the 1979 Book of Common Prayer, has advocated for an approach called “baptismal ecclesiology.” In a number of essays since the 1980s, Dr. Weil has encouraged an increasingly ecumenical conversation around this particular approach to ecclesiology. This ecumenical collection of essays by a distinguished and international group of sixteen scholars continues the conversation on liturgy and ecclesiology begun by Fr. Weil.
"These essays continue a conversation about baptism that has
reshaped thinking about the nature of the church in our time--and
with the kind of grace-filled commitment to both academy and
church, liturgy and ecclesiology, theory and practice that is
characteristic of Louis Weil’s teaching and writing. How wonderful
to have a work so successful both in reflecting professor Weil’s
contributions and in carrying the conversation forward!"
--L. William Countryman
Sherman E. Johnson Professor Emeritus of Biblical Studies
The Church Divinity School of the Pacific
Lizette Larson-Miller is Nancy and Michael Kaehr Professor of
Liturgical Leadership and Dean of the Chapel at the Church Divinity
School of the Pacific in the Graduate Theological Union in
Berkeley, California.
Walter Knowles is an independent scholar and musician in Seattle,
Washington.
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