Understanding the Orthodox notion of collegiality or, more exactly, synodality, requires an understanding the vision of ecclesial communion that flows from Orthodoxy's apophatic and Trinitarian anthropology. This chapter interprets the diverse institutional forms of conciliarity in the East from this perspective. It then asks what Catholicism, especially at the universal level, might learn from Orthodox ecclesiology and institutional functioning in these regards
Paul Lakeland is an editor and contributing author, What Does Rome Have to Learn from Geneva? Whole...
Episcopal collegiality is being rethought today on a double basis : the ecclesiology of fellowship b...
One of the basic categories used to describe the nature of the Church is communion with its spiritu...
La synodalité paraît être aujourd’hui un thème très actuel, tant pour le dialogue théologique bilaté...
In the Church, the supra-episcopal institutions of province and patriarcate were ratified by Greek c...
The ecumenical movement seeks to achieve Christian unity through greater visible communion between ...
The questions that underlined and motivated this research project have been: Why do members of the O...
Comprehensive conciliar doctrine to the subject of the Eastern Churches, in- cluding the decree of t...
The major Christian denominations over the centuries have developed structures of authority and deci...
grantor: University of St. Michael's College“The question of authority in the Church has l...
This work explores the ecumenical aspects of liturgy and how it can provide a common ground by which...
The issue of intercommunion as been much discussed since the 1960s, but the accent has too often bee...
I s communion ecclesiology an ideology or a path to dialogue? In the year 2000 I wrote a book that a...
The quest for Christian unity is entering a new phase amidst the movement’s many voices, persp...
Conciliar fellowship became a key concept in the World Council of Churches\u27 discussion on church...
Paul Lakeland is an editor and contributing author, What Does Rome Have to Learn from Geneva? Whole...
Episcopal collegiality is being rethought today on a double basis : the ecclesiology of fellowship b...
One of the basic categories used to describe the nature of the Church is communion with its spiritu...
La synodalité paraît être aujourd’hui un thème très actuel, tant pour le dialogue théologique bilaté...
In the Church, the supra-episcopal institutions of province and patriarcate were ratified by Greek c...
The ecumenical movement seeks to achieve Christian unity through greater visible communion between ...
The questions that underlined and motivated this research project have been: Why do members of the O...
Comprehensive conciliar doctrine to the subject of the Eastern Churches, in- cluding the decree of t...
The major Christian denominations over the centuries have developed structures of authority and deci...
grantor: University of St. Michael's College“The question of authority in the Church has l...
This work explores the ecumenical aspects of liturgy and how it can provide a common ground by which...
The issue of intercommunion as been much discussed since the 1960s, but the accent has too often bee...
I s communion ecclesiology an ideology or a path to dialogue? In the year 2000 I wrote a book that a...
The quest for Christian unity is entering a new phase amidst the movement’s many voices, persp...
Conciliar fellowship became a key concept in the World Council of Churches\u27 discussion on church...
Paul Lakeland is an editor and contributing author, What Does Rome Have to Learn from Geneva? Whole...
Episcopal collegiality is being rethought today on a double basis : the ecclesiology of fellowship b...
One of the basic categories used to describe the nature of the Church is communion with its spiritu...