Go to Navigation Menu

the premiere academic publication
for interreligious scholarship
since 1964

Volume 31 (1994)

Issue 1–2 $ 23.00 (Add)
Issue 1–2 (non-U.S.) $ 40.00 (Add)
Issue 3–4 $ 23.00 (Add)
Issue 3–4 (non-U.S.) $ 40.00 (Add)

Student orders and multiple issue orders may be eligible for a discount. Please inquire with nkrody@temple.edu with your specific needs.
JOURNAL OF ECUMENICAL STUDIES
INDEX FOR VOLUME THIRTY-ONE, 1994


ARTICLES:
    31:1-2 (Winter-Spring, 1994)

Soteriological Humility: The Christological Significance
of the Humanity of Jesus in the Encounter of Religions
    by Jim Perkinson     1
The Sisters of Sion: From a Conversionist Stance to a
Dialogical Way of Life
    by Mary C. Boys     27
Toward an Evangelical Theology of the Religions
    by Stanley J. Grenz     49
Anabaptism and Eastern Orthodoxy: Some Unexpected Similarities?
    by Thomas N. Finger     67
Ecumenical Historical Method
    by G. R. Evans     93
A Roman Catholic Comment on the Lutheran-Episcopal Concordat
    by Richard J. Schlenker     111
A Lutheran Contribution to the Theology of Judaism
    by Paul R. Hinlicky    123

    31:3-4 (Summer-Fall, 1994)

Mission Volga: A Case Study in the Tensions between
Evangelizing and Proselytizing
    by R. Vito Nicastro, Jr.     223
An Ecumenical Consensus in Pastoral-Care Training
    by Robert L. Kinast     244
"Who Do You Say That I Am?" (Mark 8:29):
A New Jewish View of Jesus
    by Byron L. Sherwin     255
Marriage between Christians and Non-Christians:
Orthodox and Roman Catholic Perspectives
    by Patrick Viscuso and Kristopher L. Willumsen     269
Muslim-Christian Relations in Nigeria: Causes of Tensions
    by Yushau Sodiq     279
One God: Toward a Rapprochement of Orthodox Judaism
and Christianity
    by Barbara J. Redman     307
Ecumenism and "the South": The Irruption of the "Third World"
and Its Impact on the Ecumenical Movement
    by Yacob Tesfai     332

EXPLORATIONS AND RESPONSES:
Ecumenism and ?the South@: Further Considerations
    by Per Hassing     345
"Ecumenism and 'the South'": A Response
    by Jack E. Nelson     349
Electronic Mail as a Tool for Interreligious Dialogue
    by Alfons H. Teipen     354

BOOK REVIEWS    153-192, 357-413
BOOKS RECEIVED    193-195, 414-416
ECUMENICAL EVENTS    196-210, 417-426
ECUMENICAL RESOURCES    211-222, 427-438



The Journal of Ecumenical Studies and its related Dialogue Institute comprise an independent 501(c)(3) (NGO) at Temple University in Philadelphia, PA.