Ebook
This is an introduction to thinking theologically about the Christian church--what is known as ecclesiology. The book covers background questions of conception, history, differences among separated Christian churches, and several modern approaches to the study of the church. It also introduces readers to a specific scriptural way of thinking about the church centered on mission, that takes into account problems associated with past approaches, and sensitive to contemporary concerns with the reality of Judaism and other national identities in a global context.
“Ephraim Radner has already earned a reputation as one of the
most incisive, prophetic theologians of the Anglican Communion.
This book solidifies his status as a pastoral teacher as well. With
the warmth of a seasoned catechist, he takes dense, challenging
theology and demonstrates its necessity, urgency, and beauty. I
plan to sing the praises of this book to clergy and laity alike, to
my theological colleagues as well as my beginning students.”
—Wesley Hill, assistant professor of Biblical Studies, Trinity
School for Ministry, Ambridge, Pennsylvania
“Church is vintage Ephraim Radner: generous of
spirit, learned, rooted in Scripture and centered on Christ,
engaged with ecclesial life as it really is, provocative in its
thesis. The reader will find more than a little influence of his
teacher George Lindbeck—along with his interests in sociology and
an ‘Israel-like’ ecclesiology, here conjoined with professor
Radner’s sustained interest in history. He rightly worries, with
the aid of both theology and philosophy, about how we in our time
can truly think of the church as a ‘we.’ This remarkable book
succeeds both as an introduction for a general audience and a
monograph for professionals, and I enthusiastically commend it to
both.”
—George R. Sumner, Episcopal bishop of Dallas
“In this impressive volume, written with subtlety and
conviction, Ephraim Radner demonstrates how one can love the church
without ignoring her frailties. Building upon the seminal insights
of George Lindbeck, Radner focuses upon the church’s identity as an
expanded Israel engaged in mission to all the peoples of the earth.
In keeping with the biblical figure of Israel, this is also a
people which endures the purifying fire of divine judgment. Radner
helps us see the church as it is in reality, and to love her in the
midst of the fire.”
—Mark S. Kinzer, author of Searching Her Own Mystery:
Nostra Aetate, the Jewish People, and the Identity of the
Church
“There are books about the church that begin on the day
of Pentecost and scarcely mention the Old Testament, ignoring the
fact that Peter’s sermon that day is saturated with Scriptural
argument. I have scanned others recently that have no references
for ‘mission’ in the index (except “see evangelism”). In this
historically informative and theologically stimulating study,
Ephraim Radner avoids both deficiencies. He takes with utmost
exegetical and theological seriousness the implications of the New
Testament identity of the church as Israel in the
body of the Messiah Jesus, and then digs deeply into the ecclesial
and missional implications of the calling and role of
church-as-Israel as a nation among the nations for the sake of the
nations. Steering critically clear of the varied sad
sunderings of anti-semitism (ancient and modern),
dispensationalism, and supersessionism, he challenges us with
thought-provoking reflections that are richly biblical, ecumenical,
and missional. Foremost among them for me is Radner’s perception of
the church, like Israel, as God’s ‘repentant missionary,’ standing
simultaneously under God’s judgment as a sinful people ‘like all
the nations,’ and yet still summoned by God’s grace to be the agent
and model of God’s mission among the nations. With such a
biblically-rooted missional ecclesiology, we can avoid the extremes
of arrogant triumphalism and paralyzing despair.”
—Christopher J. H. Wright, Langham Partnership, Author
of The Mission of God
Ephraim Radner is Professor of Historical Theology, Wycliffe
College at the University of Toronto. An Anglican priest, he has
worked in several parts of the world. His books include The End
of the Church: A Pneumatology of Christian Division in the West
(1998), A Brutal Unity: The Spiritual Politics of the Christian
Church (2012), and A Time to Keep: Theology, Mortality and
the Shape of the Christian Life (2016).