Sticking Points
Despite recent rapprochement, evangelicals and Catholics remain far apart on key issues.
Collin Hansen | posted 12/20/2005 12:00AM

3 of 3

So is the Reformation over? Eyeing the serious differences that remain, Noll and Nystrom are not prepared to go that far. But they do explain why the question is now on the table.
Collin Hansen is an associate editor of Christianity Today.
Copyright © 2005 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.
Related Elsewhere:
Is the Reformation Over? An Evangelical Assessment of Contemporary Roman Catholicism is available from Christianbook.com and other book retailers.
Collin Hansen earlier wrote a review for Christian History & Biography.
Books & Culture magazine excerpted the book for the cover story for its July/August 2005 issue.
In Signs of the Reformation's Success?, Timothy George disgust how Pope John Paul II aided Catholic/evangelical dialogue. Other articles on evangelical/Catholic friendship following the death of Pope John Paul II explored more areas in which evangelicals and Catholics have come together.
Pope's Funeral Spotlights Kinship Between Catholics and Evangelicals | Once antagonistic communities are now on the same side of several cultural issues. (April 8, 2005)
Pope Gave Evangelicals the Moral Impetus We Didn't Have | Timothy George discusses how "the greatest pope since the Reformation" changed evangelicalism without us knowing. (April 06, 2005)
Pope 'Broadened the Way' for Evangelicals and Catholics | Theologian Tom Oden sees continued cooperation ahead. (April 05, 2005)
How the Pope Turned Me Into An Evangelical | A Christianity Today associate editor recalls growing up Catholic in John Paul II's Poland. (April 04, 2005)
Pope John Paul II and Evangelicals | Protestants admired his lifelong admonition to "Be not afraid! Open the doors to Christ!" An interview with George Weigel. (April 04, 2005)
He Was my Pope, Too | Now that John Paul II is gone, I am even more of an orphan than the Christians in the Roman church. (April 04, 2005)
Protestants Laud Pope for Ecumenical, Social Stands | He was 'unquestionably the most influential voice for morality and peace in the world during the last 100 years,' says Billy Graham. (April 04, 2005)