
Contents
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Introduction Introduction
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The Context of the Early Ecumenical Movement The Context of the Early Ecumenical Movement
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Anglicans and Old Catholics Anglicans and Old Catholics
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Other Relationships of Communion with the Global Anglican Communion Other Relationships of Communion with the Global Anglican Communion
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United and Uniting Churches United and Uniting Churches
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Anglicans and Lutherans Anglicans and Lutherans
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Anglicans and Roman Catholics Anglicans and Roman Catholics
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Anglicans and the Eastern Orthodox Churches Anglicans and the Eastern Orthodox Churches
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Anglicans and Oriental Orthodox Churches Anglicans and Oriental Orthodox Churches
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Anglicans and Moravians Anglicans and Moravians
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Anglicans and Methodists Anglicans and Methodists
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Anglicans and Reformed Churches Anglicans and Reformed Churches
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Anglicans and Baptists Anglicans and Baptists
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Charismatic and Pentecostal Churches and the Global Christian Forum Charismatic and Pentecostal Churches and the Global Christian Forum
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Conclusion Conclusion
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References References
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Further Reading Further Reading
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32 Ecumenism
Get accessCharlotte Methuen is Senior Lecturer in Church History at the University of Glasgow. She has taught previously at the Universities of Oxford, Bochum and Hamburg. Her main areas of research are the intellectual history of Reformation, and particularly interactions between theology, philosophy and astronomy, and twentieth-century ecumenical relations. She has also worked on women and authority in the Early Church. She is the author of Kepler’s Tübingen: Stimulus to a Theological Mathematics (Studies in Reformation History; Aldershot: Ashgate 1998), of Science and Theology in the Reformation: Studies in Theological Interpretation and Astronomical Observation in Sixteenth-Century Germany (T & T Clark: London 2008), of an undergraduate textbook, Luther and Calvin: Religious Revolutionaries (Oxford: Lion 2011), and of numerous articles.
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Published:07 July 2016
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Abstract
This chapter explores Anglican ecumenical engagement. After a brief historical survey of Anglican involvement in the global ecumenical movement, it focuses on the mostly bilateral ecumenical discussions which have taken place since the Second World War, considering relations between Anglicans and Old Catholics, Lutherans, Roman Catholics, Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox, Moravians, Methodists, Reformed, Baptist, United and Charismatic/Pentecostal Churches, offering a snapshot of the state of these relationships in 2012. It concludes that ecumenical dialogue has proved effective in helping churches to know and understand each other better, but that this level of discussion can feel unconnected from the lived reality of individual Christians, particularly in contexts in which confessional boundaries are no longer experienced as clear lines of demarcation. Increasingly, the focus of ecumenical encounter is on shared mission.
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