We have an open communion- in our liturgy, we state that "thhis is not a United Methodist table, but God's table, and all who believe are invited..." We also recognize baptisms from other denominations. As Dannymac noted, however, the average member is intolerant of other faiths, save those that are very close to ours in theology.
How do different churches practice ecumenism?
- 26/09/2009 05:39:54 PM
882 Views
Do your own homework.
- 26/09/2009 05:49:35 PM
604 Views
In general, they don't.
- 26/09/2009 09:07:54 PM
667 Views
Re: In general, they don't.
- 26/09/2009 10:15:23 PM
639 Views
Benedict has never been a uniter, he has always been a strict interpretor of church doctrine.
- 27/09/2009 01:38:08 AM
673 Views
It's all translated...
- 27/09/2009 07:12:18 AM
539 Views
Sacraments, shmackraments. It's all too works-based for my taste.
- 27/09/2009 03:17:06 PM
528 Views
Benedict's Point
- 28/09/2009 07:52:39 PM
646 Views
It's a bad point.
- 29/09/2009 08:53:24 PM
506 Views
Yes, but . . .
- 29/09/2009 10:28:43 PM
806 Views
This is a common misconception concerning the Protestants...
- 30/09/2009 02:42:23 PM
525 Views
Because random nobodies on the internet are always the most accurate of sources
- 26/09/2009 08:32:37 PM
520 Views
- 26/09/2009 08:32:37 PM
520 Views
In the United Methodist Church...
- 27/09/2009 03:04:58 AM
552 Views
I know in my grandfather's Episcopalian (sp?) church...
- 27/09/2009 03:30:31 AM
555 Views
You spelled it correctly, and yes, most Episcopalian churches offer communion to all. *NM*
- 28/09/2009 02:00:50 AM
220 Views
With AK-47s and hand grenades. *NM*
- 27/09/2009 03:41:48 AM
204 Views
I've got to join one of those denominations...
- 27/09/2009 03:43:30 PM
562 Views
