This study explores juridical aspects of the ecclesiology presented in the World Council of Churches' Faith and Order Commission Paper, The Church: Towards a Common Vision (2013). It does so in the context of systems of church law, order and polity in eight church families worldwide: Roman Catholic, Orthodox, Anglican, Lutheran, Methodist, Reformed, Presbyterian and Baptist. Common Vision does not explicitly consider church law, order and polity or its role in ecumenism. However, many themes treated in Common Vision surface in church regulatory systems. This study examines how these instruments articulate the ecclesiology found in Common Vision (which as such, de facto, offers juridical as well as theological principles), translate these in...
Before the Second Vatican Council, ecclesiastical legislation reflected uniformity throughout the en...
Christianity freedom - concept and problems of acknowledgement in canon law Key words: Theory and Ph...
This book describes in detail the ways in which the life of the Church of England is affected by law...
This study explores juridical aspects of the ecclesiology presented in the World Council of Churches...
This article examines the internal regulation of religious organisations in terms of their law, orde...
This book provides a comparison of the laws and other regulatory instruments of approaching one hund...
There is no recognized corpus of binding law globally applicable to all Churches in the Anglican Com...
The Statement of Principles of Christian Law, produced by an ecumenical panel in 2016, boldly reveal...
A panel of experts has produced a Statement of Principles of Christian Law, drawn from an examinatio...
This paper was originally delivered, at the invitation of the Archbishop of Canterbury, at the Meeti...
The ecumenical movement seeks to achieve Christian unity through greater visible communion between ...
The regulations of the church canon law in the fellowship of the Church are subjects to growing crit...
The theme of Studies in Church History 56 is ‘The Church and the Law’. It explores the legal issues ...
An important recent development in worldwide Anglicanism is the emergence over recent years of a pro...
ABSTRACT: From the beginning of the Church, the Christian faithful, vested with the authority of Jes...
Before the Second Vatican Council, ecclesiastical legislation reflected uniformity throughout the en...
Christianity freedom - concept and problems of acknowledgement in canon law Key words: Theory and Ph...
This book describes in detail the ways in which the life of the Church of England is affected by law...
This study explores juridical aspects of the ecclesiology presented in the World Council of Churches...
This article examines the internal regulation of religious organisations in terms of their law, orde...
This book provides a comparison of the laws and other regulatory instruments of approaching one hund...
There is no recognized corpus of binding law globally applicable to all Churches in the Anglican Com...
The Statement of Principles of Christian Law, produced by an ecumenical panel in 2016, boldly reveal...
A panel of experts has produced a Statement of Principles of Christian Law, drawn from an examinatio...
This paper was originally delivered, at the invitation of the Archbishop of Canterbury, at the Meeti...
The ecumenical movement seeks to achieve Christian unity through greater visible communion between ...
The regulations of the church canon law in the fellowship of the Church are subjects to growing crit...
The theme of Studies in Church History 56 is ‘The Church and the Law’. It explores the legal issues ...
An important recent development in worldwide Anglicanism is the emergence over recent years of a pro...
ABSTRACT: From the beginning of the Church, the Christian faithful, vested with the authority of Jes...
Before the Second Vatican Council, ecclesiastical legislation reflected uniformity throughout the en...
Christianity freedom - concept and problems of acknowledgement in canon law Key words: Theory and Ph...
This book describes in detail the ways in which the life of the Church of England is affected by law...