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Tuesday, 20 October 2009

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Chris James

Chris,

Thanks for highlighting, this, which I think is one of the most original contributions of Newbigin to the ecumenical discussion. It allows us to extend ecclesiality to all whom we can not deny God has called church. The logical next step is then to willingly call them siblings in Christ. If God has called them the church, we must call them family. And if the unity of our family is a primary witness to the gospel of reconciliation, how then can we not strive to be in a very real and tangible sense "one"?

Chris Sissons

Of course this is the crunch question. Not all churches subscribe to Newbigin's analysis. You write earlier in your post about the visible church (Roman Catholic and Protestant sects) who do not see other Christians as a part of it.

This is why I have difficulty with the concept of 'extending ecclesiality'. I'm not sure what is being extended or who has the authority to do the extending. Indeed some churches would not recognise these authorities.

This means our focus needs to be on process rather than structures (implied by 'ecclesiality'). Doug Gay, a member of the United Reformed Church and previously Brethren, lectured about this a few years ago. I blogged about it some time ago, you might find it interesting. http://chrississons.typepad.co.uk/exploring_ecumenism/2009/02/problems-with-free-church-ecclesiology.html

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