tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4615496199721498323.post5031909430565032674..comments2024-03-22T08:29:51.173-05:00Comments on UM & Global: Kyle Tau: Mission: The Beginning and End of EcumenismDavid W. Scotthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17024204453848260271noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4615496199721498323.post-67634107021058893262021-04-27T09:35:40.088-05:002021-04-27T09:35:40.088-05:00I couldn't agree more with this post - but fee...I couldn't agree more with this post - but feel I must also note that for those churches that both break apart, break away, and spurn the ecumenical movement it is also all about the mission of the church; a mission that they define in terms of maintaining the purity of the message and its messengers. Or (in the case of the Roman Catholic Church) in terms of an exclusive universality. The challenge of ecumenism is reconciling an understanding of mission that demand purity and one that claims universality with the reality of real divisions and imperfections.Robert Hunthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12733025264316575349noreply@blogger.com