'Living the Hard Questions': Presiding Bishop to Address Dec. 12-15 Conference on Anglicanism

Episcopal News Service. November 30, 2004 [113004-1-A]

• TO READ: To Read: MYSTERIES OF FAITH by Mark McIntosh

‘Living the Hard Questions’: Presiding Bishop to address Dec. 12-15 conference on Anglicanism

[ENS] Cathedral College at Washington National Cathedral will host a three-day conference titled Anglicans under Fire: Living the Hard Questions December 12-15. Presiding Bishop Frank Griswold will be among speakers giving principal talks.

Conference participants will explore how Anglicanism fully honors the dynamic interplay between scripture, tradition, and reason. They will also look at how these three elements are the key to how Anglicans preach and through these lenses sort and sift questions and concerns that arrive in the life of the church. Namely, preaching is less about how one arrives at an absolute answer than about how the various dimensions come into play as the questions are lived.

Speakers will include the Most Rev. Frank Griswold, Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America; the Rev. Dr. Michael Battle, assistant professor of Spirituality and Black Church Studies at Duke Divinity School; and the Rev. Dr. Mark McIntosh, associate professor of Theology at Loyola University in Chicago.

For further information and registration contact Joan Roberts at 202-537-6381 or visit http://www.collegeofpreachers.org/.

In addition, the wider community is invited to a free open forum December 12, 7:00pm, in the Cathedral’s Perry Auditorium with Griswold, Battle and McIntosh titled The Anglican Communion: Crucible of Difference. They will discuss the resources in the Anglican tradition and how they can assist as the difficult questions of the 21st century are lived. The Rev. Frank Wade will moderate.

Cathedral College at Washington National Cathedral is a residential continuing education center in Washington, D.C. serving those who are engaged in ministries of proclamation. The College is made up of ordained and non-ordained religious leaders and educators from many faith traditions that come throughout the year to participate in opportunities for learning and renewal.

Note: The following title is available from the Episcopal Book/Resource Center, 815 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10017; 800-334-7626; http://www.episcopalbookstore.org/.

* To Read: MYSTERIES OF FAITH by Mark McIntosh (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Cowley Publications, 2000; 185 pages; $11.95.)

From the publisher: This volume on theology introduces the great mysteries of the Christian faith: the doctrines of creation, revelation, incarnation, salvation, and eschatology, which are all held together by the doctrine of the Trinity. To explain these beliefs for Christians today, particularly the Trinity, McIntosh begins with what we know: the language of relationship and mutuality, of friendship and family ties.

Mark McIntosh is an Episcopal priest in the Diocese of Chicago and associate professor of theology at Loyola University. He is the author of Christology From Within and Mystical Theology: The Integrity of Spirituality and Theology.