Pope Francis has been calling for the Church to go to the frontiers to accompany those on the margins with mercy, solidarity, and hope. This joint presentation explores the chief obstacles to overcome and opportunities to embrace in order for liturgy to share in this vision of the Church to be more of a āfield hospitalā than a laboratory in loving God and neighbor. Mescher traces the historical roots of liturgy as a radically inclusive experience of table-fellowship to serve as an imaginative framework to heal the divisions that mark the Body of Christ today. Reynolds explores how liturgy can help to form community in parishes characterized by cultural and racial diversity.
Sponsored by the School of Theology and Ministry
, assistant professor of Christian ethics, Xavier University,
and , Ph.D. candidate in Theology and Education at Boston College STM and adjunct faculty in theology at Belmont Abbey College
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