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Christian Unity (the book) - The Maranatha Community

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While organised <strong>Christian</strong> endeavours have little appeal for many peopletoday, spiritual desires and longings have not yet been extinguished.Christendom is no more, but <strong>the</strong>re is a new spirit abroad among many<strong>Christian</strong>s. While old entrenched doctrinal and ecclesiastical positions stillhinder organic and structural union, a sense of sharing a common andtreasured belief is becoming more and more evident.As never before, <strong>Christian</strong>s of many traditions are ready to meet toge<strong>the</strong>r inworship and witness and social action. <strong>The</strong> rise of aggressive secularism and<strong>the</strong> fact of increasing pluralism in Western countries have made many<strong>Christian</strong>s appreciate <strong>the</strong> common ground we share with o<strong>the</strong>r <strong>Christian</strong>believers. <strong>The</strong> realisation of this opportunity has been a long time in coming.As long ago as 1894 thinkers in <strong>the</strong> Church were having to address <strong>the</strong> taunt ofsecularists that <strong>Christian</strong>ity had had its day: it had gone down as a sun that hadset. Joseph Parker, <strong>the</strong> famous London Congregational preacher responded,‘Yes, it has gone down precisely in that way. I am not aware that even when<strong>the</strong> sun has gone out of sight, it has gone out of existence.’ 12<strong>The</strong> Church has not gone out of existence in <strong>the</strong> UK today, but it does needdigging out of <strong>the</strong> existing churches to make itself known in unity and love.Traditionally, <strong>the</strong> Church has made itself known to <strong>the</strong> world by its beliefs – <strong>the</strong>kerygma rooted in <strong>the</strong> Scriptures and expressed in a Creed (which affirms <strong>the</strong>faith to its own people and declares it to <strong>the</strong> world) and in a shared experienceof <strong>the</strong> risen Christ, often expressed sacramentally in Baptism and Communion.And <strong>the</strong>se three elements of <strong>the</strong> <strong>Christian</strong> faith (Scripture, Creed andSacraments) are still to be found in <strong>the</strong> Church today.In each church <strong>the</strong>re are people who delight in <strong>the</strong> Scriptures and live by <strong>the</strong>m,who confess <strong>the</strong> classical faith as expressed in <strong>the</strong> Creeds and have a personalexperience of Christ as God and Man. Sometimes, sadly, <strong>the</strong>se <strong>Christian</strong>s aresurrounded by fellow members and even leaders of <strong>the</strong>ir church who, in oneway or ano<strong>the</strong>r, reject <strong>the</strong> authority of <strong>the</strong> Scriptures and cannot assent to <strong>the</strong>declarations of <strong>the</strong> Creeds, and for whom Christ (and it is usually this way) isnot fully God.12Parker, Joseph, None like it, a plea for <strong>the</strong> old sword, James Nisbet, 1894, p 147.Page 16

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