This volume is the fruit of the eleventh Leuven Encounters in Systematic 
      Theology (LEST XI) which was organized by Leuven’s Faculty of Theology 
      and Religious Studies from 11-14 October, 2017. On the occasion of the 
      five-hundredth anniversary of the Reformation, this conference focused 
      on the ongoing need for the renewal and reform of the Churches, a 
      desideratum encapsulated in the well-known adage, Ecclesia semper 
      reformanda. The quest for such renewal constitutes a challenge for 
      theologians of all confessional traditions. This volume focuses 
      particularly on the themes and topics that were at the forefront of the 
      theological controversies which raged during the transitional period 
      between the Middle Ages and the Early Modern Period, some of which are 
      still unresolved.
    
Part I focuses on the foundations of theology, viz. Scripture, tradition(s), and/or reason. Part II investigates the important theological issues that have their roots in the Reformation Era, including the tensile relationship between sin, grace, free will, justification and sanctification, and the controversies related to the Eucharist, including the notion of sacrifice. Part III examines democratization and leadership structures in the Church. Part IV explores what a historically-informed awareness can contribute to an ecumenically-oriented reflection on the renewal and reform of the Church today.
 
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