The Princeton Proposal is a landmark statement on the present situation and future possibilities of modern ecumenism. Drafted by sixteen theologians and ecumenists from various church traditions who met over a period of three years in Princeton New Jersey this document seeks to&#160;steer contemporary efforts at church unity away from social and political agendas which are themselves divisive and back to the chief goal of the modern ecumenical movement &mdash; the visible unity of Christians worldwide of all those who are reconciled &ldquo;in one body through the cross.&rdquo;<BR /><BR /> Since the study group that produced this statement was instituted and its participants were chosen by an independent ecumenical foundation the Center for Catholic and Evangelical Theology their &ldquo;unofficial&rdquo; work presents especially profound and creative reflection on the ecumenical task. With this report the study group members do not claim to speak&#160;<I>for</I>&#160;their churches but hope to speak&#160;<I>to</I>&#160;all the churches out of shared concern for the founding ecumenical imperative &ldquo;that they all may be one . . . so that the world may believe.&rdquo;<BR /> &#160; <P><B>Signatories of the Princeton Proposal:</B></P><P> William Abraham * Mark Achtemeier * Brian Daley * John H. Erickson * Vigen Guroian * George Lindbeck * Lois Malcolm * Bruce McCormack * R.&#160;R.&#160;Reno * Michael Root * William G. Rusch * Geoffrey Wainwright * Susan&#160;K. Wood * Telford Work * J. Robert Wright * David Yeago </P>
Piracy-free
Assured Quality
Secure Transactions
Delivery Options
Please enter pincode to check delivery time.
*COD & Shipping Charges may apply on certain items.