- Title Pages
- Dedication
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- List of Contributors
- Abbreviations
- Prologue to Part I Acts 2: 1–13
- 1 Receptive Ecumenism and Catholic Learning—Establishing the Agenda<sup>1</sup>
- 2 Receiving Gifts in Ecumenical Dialogue
- 3 Authentic <i>Learning</i> and <i>Receiving</i>—A Search for Criteria
- 4 Becoming Catholic Persons and Learning to Be a Catholic People
- 5 The Church—A School of Wisdom?<sup>1</sup>
- 6 ‘Credo Unam Sanctam Ecclesiam’—The Relationship Between the Catholic and the Protestant Principles in Fundamental Ecclesiology<sup>1</sup>
- 7 Text and Contexts—Hermeneutical Reflections on Receptive Ecumenism
- Prologue to Part II Philippians 1: 3–7
- 8 What Roman Catholics Have to Learn from Anglicans
- 9 Receptive Catholic Learning Through Methodist—Catholic Dialogue
- 10 A Methodist Perspective on Catholic Learning
- 11 The International Lutheran—Roman Catholic Dialogue—An Example of Ecclesial Learning and Ecumenical Reception
- 12 Catholic Learning and Orthodoxy—The Promise and Challenge of Eucharistic Ecclesiology
- Prologue 3 to Part III Ephesians 4: 7, 11–16
- 13 Catholic Learning Concerning Apostolicity and Ecclesiality
- 14 The Holy Spirit as the Gift—Pneumatology and Catholic Re‐reception of Petrine Ministry in the Theology of Walter Kasper
- 15 What Might Catholicism Learn from Orthodoxy in Relation to Collegiality?
- 16 Potential Catholic Learning Around Lay Participation in Decision‐making
- 17 Receptive Ecumenical Learning and Episcopal Accountability Within Contemporary Roman Catholicism—Canonical Considerations
- Prologue to Part IV John 11: 43–53
- 18 From Vatican II to Mississauga—Lessons in Receptive Ecumenical Learning from the Anglican—Roman Catholic Bilateral Dialogue Process
- 19 Receptive Ecumenism and Recent Initiatives in the Catholic Church's Dialogues with the Anglican Communion and the World Methodist Council
- 20 Jerusalem, Athens, and Zurich—Psychoanalytic Perspectives on Factors Inhibiting Receptive Ecumenism
- 21 Managing Change in the Irish Civil Service and the Implications for Transformative Ecclesial Learning
- 22 The Fortress Church Under Reconstruction? Sociological Factors Inhibiting Receptive Catholic Learning in the Church in England and Wales
- 23 Receptive Ecumenism, Ecclesial Learning, and the ‘Tribe’
- 24 Organizational Factors Inhibiting Receptive Catholic Learning
- Prologue to Part V Revelation 1: 9–18
- 25 Receptive Ecumenism and Catholic Learning—an Orthodox Perspective
- 26 Anglicanism and the Conditions for Communion—A Response to Cardinal Kasper
- 27 Receptive Ecumenism and the Future of Ecumenical Dialogues—Privileging Differentiated Consensus and Drawing its Institutional Consequences<sup>1</sup>
- 28 Receptive Ecumenism and Catholic Learning—Reflections in Dialogue with Yves Congar and B. C. Butler<sup>1</sup>
- 29 Receptive Ecumenism and the Hermeneutics of Catholic Learning—The Promise of Comparative Ecclesiology<sup>1</sup>
- 30 Receptive Ecumenism—Learning by Engagement
- 31 Learning the Ways of Receptive Ecumenism—Formational and Catechetical Considerations
- 32 Receiving the Experience of Eucharistic Celebration
- Bibliography
- Name Index
- Name Index
The Holy Spirit as the Gift—Pneumatology and Catholic Re‐reception of Petrine Ministry in the Theology of Walter Kasper
The Holy Spirit as the Gift—Pneumatology and Catholic Re‐reception of Petrine Ministry in the Theology of Walter Kasper
- Chapter:
- (p.197) 14 The Holy Spirit as the Gift—Pneumatology and Catholic Re‐reception of Petrine Ministry in the Theology of Walter Kasper
- Source:
- Receptive Ecumenism and the Call to Catholic Learning
- Author(s):
Denis Edwards
- Publisher:
- Oxford University Press
Two issues have dominated the discussion of Catholic ecumenical receptivity: first is the general need for western receptivity to the East with regard to a proper balance between pneumatology and Christology; second is the particular, strategically important issue of Petrine ministry. This chapter argues that the pneumatological theology of Walter Kasper illuminates both issues. It traces his Spirit theology from his Christology to his Trinitarian theology and his view of the church, then presents an example of this pneumatology at work in ecumenical theology — the critical issue of the Petrine ministry.
Keywords: Catholics, ecumenical activity, pneumatology, Christology, Petrine ministry
Oxford Scholarship Online requires a subscription or purchase to access the full text of books within the service. Public users can however freely search the site and view the abstracts and keywords for each book and chapter.
Please, subscribe or login to access full text content.
If you think you should have access to this title, please contact your librarian.
To troubleshoot, please check our FAQs , and if you can't find the answer there, please contact us .
- Title Pages
- Dedication
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- List of Contributors
- Abbreviations
- Prologue to Part I Acts 2: 1–13
- 1 Receptive Ecumenism and Catholic Learning—Establishing the Agenda<sup>1</sup>
- 2 Receiving Gifts in Ecumenical Dialogue
- 3 Authentic <i>Learning</i> and <i>Receiving</i>—A Search for Criteria
- 4 Becoming Catholic Persons and Learning to Be a Catholic People
- 5 The Church—A School of Wisdom?<sup>1</sup>
- 6 ‘Credo Unam Sanctam Ecclesiam’—The Relationship Between the Catholic and the Protestant Principles in Fundamental Ecclesiology<sup>1</sup>
- 7 Text and Contexts—Hermeneutical Reflections on Receptive Ecumenism
- Prologue to Part II Philippians 1: 3–7
- 8 What Roman Catholics Have to Learn from Anglicans
- 9 Receptive Catholic Learning Through Methodist—Catholic Dialogue
- 10 A Methodist Perspective on Catholic Learning
- 11 The International Lutheran—Roman Catholic Dialogue—An Example of Ecclesial Learning and Ecumenical Reception
- 12 Catholic Learning and Orthodoxy—The Promise and Challenge of Eucharistic Ecclesiology
- Prologue 3 to Part III Ephesians 4: 7, 11–16
- 13 Catholic Learning Concerning Apostolicity and Ecclesiality
- 14 The Holy Spirit as the Gift—Pneumatology and Catholic Re‐reception of Petrine Ministry in the Theology of Walter Kasper
- 15 What Might Catholicism Learn from Orthodoxy in Relation to Collegiality?
- 16 Potential Catholic Learning Around Lay Participation in Decision‐making
- 17 Receptive Ecumenical Learning and Episcopal Accountability Within Contemporary Roman Catholicism—Canonical Considerations
- Prologue to Part IV John 11: 43–53
- 18 From Vatican II to Mississauga—Lessons in Receptive Ecumenical Learning from the Anglican—Roman Catholic Bilateral Dialogue Process
- 19 Receptive Ecumenism and Recent Initiatives in the Catholic Church's Dialogues with the Anglican Communion and the World Methodist Council
- 20 Jerusalem, Athens, and Zurich—Psychoanalytic Perspectives on Factors Inhibiting Receptive Ecumenism
- 21 Managing Change in the Irish Civil Service and the Implications for Transformative Ecclesial Learning
- 22 The Fortress Church Under Reconstruction? Sociological Factors Inhibiting Receptive Catholic Learning in the Church in England and Wales
- 23 Receptive Ecumenism, Ecclesial Learning, and the ‘Tribe’
- 24 Organizational Factors Inhibiting Receptive Catholic Learning
- Prologue to Part V Revelation 1: 9–18
- 25 Receptive Ecumenism and Catholic Learning—an Orthodox Perspective
- 26 Anglicanism and the Conditions for Communion—A Response to Cardinal Kasper
- 27 Receptive Ecumenism and the Future of Ecumenical Dialogues—Privileging Differentiated Consensus and Drawing its Institutional Consequences<sup>1</sup>
- 28 Receptive Ecumenism and Catholic Learning—Reflections in Dialogue with Yves Congar and B. C. Butler<sup>1</sup>
- 29 Receptive Ecumenism and the Hermeneutics of Catholic Learning—The Promise of Comparative Ecclesiology<sup>1</sup>
- 30 Receptive Ecumenism—Learning by Engagement
- 31 Learning the Ways of Receptive Ecumenism—Formational and Catechetical Considerations
- 32 Receiving the Experience of Eucharistic Celebration
- Bibliography
- Name Index
- Name Index