2020 Catholic Press Association first place award, ecumenism or interfaith relations
In November 2015, Pope Francis called on theologians to explore whether normal Catholic practice should be changed to allow Christians, belonging to other churches, to share fully at the table when they take part in a Eucharist celebrated by Catholics. Thomas O’Loughlin provides his contribution to that challenge in this volume. He argues that the various ways of thinking about what we are doing in the liturgy should lead us to see intercommunion as enhancing our participation in the mystery of the Church and the mystery we celebrate.
Learn more and watch Professor Tom O’Loughlin’s interview with the Aqueduct Project, discussing Eating Together, Becoming One: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8y Sk Mz Htk MU
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Contents
Preface ix
Introduction: A Problem for Pastors and Theologians xi
1. Why This Book Now? 1
2. The Grammar of Meals 21
3. Pray My Sisters and Brothers 33
4. Fictive Families—Real Churches: The Spirit and Intercommunion 47
5. The Ecumenical Meal of Mission 59
6. Building upon Baptism 71
7. The Eucharist and the Pilgrims’ Journey 85
8. A Theology of Divine Acceptance 103
9. Gathered as an Easter People 113
10. The Phenomenon of Conflicting Theologies 125
11. Where Do We Need to Go from Here? 141
Conclusion: Non-Catholics at the Table—Now or Never? 153
Bibliography 159
Index of Scripture 165
Index of Subjects 169
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Thomas O’Loughlin is professor of historical theology at the University of Nottingham, UK. He uses the tools of the historian to look afresh at how we ask and answer theological problems. O’Loughlin was elected president of the Catholic Theological Association of Great Britain in 2016. He is the author of The Rites and Wrongs of Liturgy: Why Good Liturgy Matters and Washing Feet: Imitating the Example of Jesus in Liturgy Today, both from Liturgical Press.