What is Ecumenism?
About the Book Look inside! According to Antoine Arjakovsky, the contemporary crisis of the ecumenical movement is linked to a narrow, secularized, strictly inter-denominational conception of ecclesial life. But when understood as an experience of divine humanity, the life of the Church can neither be limited to an institutional conception nor be hermetically separated from the life of the world. Drawing on the religious philosophy of Nikolai Berdyaev, Sergei Bulgakov, Leo Shestov, Pope Francis, John Milbank, Emmanuel Levinas, Abdennour Bidar, Ken Wilber, as well as his own ecumenical commitment spanning over 40 years, Arjakovsky proposes a metaphysical rethinking of the foundations of ecumenical faith-reason in order to hold together the poles of identity and otherness. He explores the different meanings of ecumenism and opens the way to a further meaning that, by reconciling reason and belief, enables the encounter of all cultures, disciplines, and religious