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  1. Contextual Report of the Central and Eastern European Region.Cristian Sonea, Pavol Bargár, Piotr Kopiec, Doru Marcu, Stefan Zeljković, Adrian Leș & Iustinian Crețu - 2022 - In Risto Jukko (ed.), The Future of Mission Cooperation. The Living Legacy of the International Missionary Council. Geneva: World Council of Churches Publications. pp. 155-181.
    We will explore ecumenical collaboration for the sake of mission in the 21st century in this region. In this sense, we will consider ecumenical relations, theological education, migration and diaspora, and present challenges, and will try to identify the vision of the future. We will do this by focusing on four countries from the region as critical studies: the Czech Republic, Poland, Romania, and Serbia.
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  2.  7
    Narrativity as a Locus Hermeneuticus for Ecumenical Theology: Culture, Koinonia and Transformation.Pavol Bargár - 2018 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 35 (1):30-43.
    This article argues that narrativity has the potential to be a key hermeneutical concept in ecumenical theology. Instead of pursuing a complex elaboration of the notion, it will seek to explore various aspects of narrativity. The thesis will be explicated in three major steps, consecutively discussing culture as the general setting of narrativity, explicating narrativity as a concept that can helpfully address some of the major issues in ecumenical theology and proposing transformation as the ultimate horizon of the faith and (...)
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  3.  15
    The Modern, the Postmodern, and... the Metamodern? Reflections on a Transforming Sensibility from the Perspective of Theological Anthropology.Pavol Bargár - 2021 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 38 (1):3-15.
    There have recently been attempts in the academic discourse to describe what is referred to as the demise of the postmodern due to the perceived insufficiency of the latter concept to adequately express the uniqueness of the 21st-century world. The younger generation of scholars, therefore, suggest adopting a new discourse, termed ‘metamodernism’, to do justice to this transforming sensibility. Metamodernism can be characterised by an oscillation between the modern and the postmodern, enthusiasm and irony, hope and nihilism, construction and deconstruction. (...)
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