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Recognizing the Spirit: An Ecclesial Pneumatology

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Recognizing the Spirit: An Ecclesial Pneumatology

Contributors:
ISBN:

9781978708761

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Lexington Books/Fortress Academic

Publication Date:

2nd April 2026

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Professional and Scholarly

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

1

Dimensions:

Width 152mm, Height 229mm

Description

This book considers the problem of how to negotiate diversities in identity and practice within the unity of ecclesial relationship. As it has arisen in ecumenical and intra-church contexts, this problem often presents itself as a problem of recognition. This project gives theological grounding to the concept of ecclesial recognition by supplementing it with insights from Continental philosophy (particularly Hegelian intersubjective recognition), literary theory (particularly the poetic concept of anagnrisis as it operates in biblical texts), and Pneumatology (particularly in the Augustinian tradition.) While self-consciously situating itself in contrast to trinitarian ecclesiologies, this book follows the work of Eberhard Jungel to propose a correspondence between the existence of the church and the existence of the triune God, in that both exist as a communion of mutual otherness.
This ecclesiological proposal is possible because of a constructive Pneumatology, based in the principles of Augustines doctrine of the Holy Spirit and carried through the writings of Jungel. Ultimately the book argues that, both ecumenically and intra-ecclesially, it is the person of the Holy Spirit who effects the unity of the churches within diversity through recognition. This argument is an explicit attempt to conceive of ecclesial unity in a manner transcending strategies that negotiate differences by means of polity and structures of visible unity, which can function to flatten diversity, vilify difference, and catastrophize conflict, and which may ultimately prove ecclesiologically idolatrous. This work seeks to articulate an overarching ecclesial Pneumatology, which can provide a framework for containing issues of conflict and difference.

Author Bio

Kathryn L. Reinhard is assistant professor of religious studies at Gwynedd Mercy University.

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