The Rites of Christian Initiation: Their Evolution and InterpretationLiturgical Press, 2007 - 487 עמודים Originally published in 1999, The Rites of Christian Initiation was haled for its clarity and comprehensiveness. Kalian McDonnell, OSB, called it the best overall treatment of Christian initiation available, and Paul Bradshaw predicted it would be the standard textbook on the subject for very many years to come." The current edition draws on new translations of early texts on baptism as well as recent scholarship on the early traditions in the East and West. It is sure to replace itself as the new standard reference on the rites of Christian initiation. Maxwell E. Johnson's expanded and revised text provides a more complete view of the history and interpretation of the rites in the Eastern Church, including two chapters that explore the pre-Nicene Eastern and Western traditions in detail. Revisiting the theology of baptism, this edition also provides more nuanced positions on the Eastern and Western traditions. Finally, recent liturgical developments in American Protestant churches, particularly Lutheran, as well as the ongoing development of the RCIA and confirmation practices of Catholics, made it necessary to revisit the place and meaning of these rites in the church today. Maxwell E. Johnson, PhD, is professor of liturgy at the University of Notre Dame and an ordained minister of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. He has published in Worship and is the editor of and contributor to Living Water, Sealing Spirit: Readings on Christian Initiation (Liturgical Press, 1995) and the revised and expanded edition of E.C. Whitaker, Documents of the Baptismal Liturgy (Liturgical Press and S.P.C.K., 2003), to which this study serves as a companion volume. " |
מתוך הספר
תוצאות 1-5 מתוך 73
... Easter mean , we shall not get far by studying anthropology or game - theory , or by asking ourselves what we think they mean . We must plunge into the enormous stream of liturgical and patristic evidence and wade through it piece by ...
... Easter fellowship between the disciples and the earthly Jesus that provided the pattern for the development of that remarkable sense of fellowship be- tween the early Christians and the risen Lord which is such a feature of primitive ...
... Easter faith in the identity of the crucified and risen Christ . It is from this faith perspective that the evangelists proclaim this iden- tity of Christ , the beloved Son of God , as revealed now already at the Jordan and , hence ...
... Easter situation of the primitive church rather than that of Jesus , the attribution of an explicit baptis- mal command to him may be Matthew's way of underscoring that the roots of Christian baptism do go back to Jesus ' own practice ...
... Easter Pente- cost , the normal pattern of initiation into that continuation of Jesus ' table companionship called church has been some form of baptism " in water and the Holy Spirit . " And , like Jesus ' own eating practices ...
תוכן
x | |
xii | |
xiii | |
xvii | |
xxiv | |
41 | |
Christian Initiation in the Prenicene West | 83 |
Initiation in the Christian East During the Fourth and Fifth Centuries | 115 |
Baptismal Preparation and the Origins of Lent | 201 |
Christian Initiation in the Middle Ages | 219 |
The Rites of Initiation in the Christian East | 269 |
Christian Initiation in the Protestant and Catholic Reforms of the Sixteenth Century | 309 |
Christian Initiation in the Churches Today | 375 |
Back Home to the Font The Place of a Baptismal Spirituality and Its Implications in a Displaced World | 451 |
Index | 479 |
Initiation in the Christian West During the Fourth and Fifth Centuries | 159 |