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Full Description
The book explores those aspects of Donald MacKinnon's theological writings which challenge the claim of the liberal Catholic tradition in the Church of England to have forged an ecclesiological consensus, namely that the Church is the extension of the incarnation. MacKinnon destabilized this claim by exposing the wide gulf between theory and practice in that church, especially in his own Anglo-Catholic tradition within it. For him the collapse of Christendom is the occasion for a dialectical reconstruction of the relation of the Church to Jesus Christ and to the world on the basis of the gospel. His basic claim is that authentic ecclesial existence must correspond with what was revealed and effected by Jesus along his way from Galilee to Jerusalem to Galilee. Reflection on the Church thus takes the form of a lived response shaped by a Christocentric grammar of faith: the submission of the church to Jesus' contemporaneous interrogation, a sustained attentiveness to him and the willing embrace of his 'hour'.
Contents
Acknowlegements
Introduction
1. Donald MacKinnon and the Discontents of Contemporary Anglicanism
2. MacKinnon's Early Ecclesiology Along the Way of the Cross
3. The Church on the Kenotic Way of Jesus Christ
4. From Galilee to Jerusalem I: Kenotic Ecclesiology, Salvation and Atonement
5. From Galilee to Jerusalem II: Kenotic Ecclesiology, Incarnation and Trinity
6. Conclusion
Bibliography
Index



