File Washington National Cathedral Twilight.jpg thumb upright Washington National Cathedral Ecclesiology ... sense, ecclesiology deals with the Origins of Christianity church s origin , its relationship ..., self described or otherwise hence phrases such as Roman Catholic ecclesiology , Lutheran ecclesiology , and ecumenical ecclesiology . Etymology The roots of the word ecclesiology come from the Ancient ... , published in January 1845 that society the CCS claimed that they had invented the word ecclesiology ref name TCM48 quote ...as a general organ of Ecclesiology that peculiar branch of science ... England and Wales in the second half of the 19th century. Its successor Ecclesiology Today is still ... the etymology is summed up by the Blackwell Encyclopedia of Modern Christian Thought Ecclesiology ... The Ecclesiologist, ecclesiology now stands for the study of the nature of the Christian ... Thought chapter Ecclesiology page 127 year 1999 publisher Blackwell location Oxford url http www.google.co.uk books?id DvPMFcGIZgkC ref Issues addressed by ecclesiology Who is the Church? Is it a visible ... ? Roman Catholic ecclesiology Roman Catholic ecclesiology today has a plurality of models and views ... ecclesiology. In his work Models of the Church, he defines four basic models of Church ... Congar argued that the ultimate reality of the Church is a fellowship of persons. This ecclesiology ... document Lumen Gentium Ecclesiology .28chapter I.29 Lumen Gentium that the Body of Christ Subsistit ... structure. Eastern Orthodox ecclesiology From the Orthodox perspective, the Church is one, even though She is manifested in many places. Orthodox ecclesiology operates with a plurality in unity and a unity ... and the churches, and vice versa. sup 3 sup Protestant ecclesiology Main Protestant ecclesiology Magisterial Reformation ecclesiology Martin Luther argued that because the Catholic Church had ... Church was indefectible and infallible in its dogmatic teachings. Radical Reformation ecclesiology ... more details
The term Protestant ecclesiology refers to the spectrum of teachings held by the Protestant Reformers concerning the nature philosophy nature and Esotericism mystery of the Christian Church Church . Theology of grace Martin Luther argued that because the Catholic church had lost sight of the doctrine of grace , it had lost its claim to be considered as the authenthic Christian church. this argument was open to the counter criticism from Catholics that he was thus guilty of schism and a Donatist position, and in both cases therefore opposing central teachings of Augustine of Hippo . ref McGrath, Alistair. 1998. Historical Theology, An Introduction to the History of Christian Thought . Oxford Blackwell Publishers. p. 200. ref Against denominationalism and schism Yet Luther, at least as late as 1519, argued against denominationalism and Schism religion schism , and the Augsburg Confession of 1530 can be interpreted e.g. by McGrath 1998 as conciliatory ref McGrath, op.cit. p.201 ref others, e.g. Rasmussen and Thomassen 2007 argue convincingly with evidence that Augsburg was not conciliatory but clearly impossible for the Roman Catholic Church to accept ref Rasmussen, Tarald, and Thomassen .... ref McGrath. op.cit. p.202. ref Systematic ecclesiology John Calvin is among those working ... doctrine of the church i.e. ecclesiology in the face of the emerging reality of a split with the Catholic .... ref Thus, Calvin s ecclesiology is progressively more systematic. Emphasis on predication The second ... Reformation ecclesiology There is no single Radical Reformation Ecclesiology . A variety of views ... contrast to the hierarchical, sacrement sacremental ecclesiology that characterised the encumbant ... of the Reformation . Some other Radical Reformation ecclesiology holds that the true church is in heaven .... 200. ref A more conservative analysis of ecclesiology was given in the mid 20th century by the Methodist .... ref References references Category Ecclesiology Category Protestant Reformation ... more details
Sister Churches is a term used in 20th century ecclesiology to describe ecumenical relations between the Roman Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church , and more rarely and unofficially, between the Roman Catholic Church and the Anglican communion. The term is also used among Protestants to refer to different Christian denomination denominations of the same religious tradition. Use in the 12th century seealso Christianity in the 12th century The expression, allegedly in use among the Orthodox since the fifth century among the patriarchal sister Churches , appeared in written form in two letters of the Metropolitan Nicetas of Nicomedia Nicetas of Nicomedia 1136 and the Patriarch John Camaterus in office from 1198 to 1206 , in which they protested that Rome, by presenting herself as mother and teacher , would annul their authority. In their view, Rome was only the first among sisters churches of equal dignity, see first among equals . According to this idea of Pentarchy , there are five Patriarchs at the head of the Church, with the Church of Rome having the first place of honor among these patriarchal sister churches. According to Pope Benedict XVI, however, no Roman pontiff ever recognised this Orthodox equalization of the sees or accepted that only a primacy of honor be accorded to the See of Rome. ref name Ratzinger Second Vatican Council In modern times, the expression sister Churches first appeared in John XXIII s letters to the Orthodox Patriarch of Constantinople, Athenagoras I. In his letters, the pope expressed the hope of seeing the unity between the sister churches re established in the near future. Later the term appeared in a Joint Declaration between Pope Paul VI and Patriarch Athenagoras in 1965, representing their respective sees, Rome and Constantinople, respectively. ref name Ratzinger The Second Vatican Council adopted the expression sister Churches ... ref See also Mother Church References reflist Category Ecclesiology Category Christian terms Category ... more details
Sister Churches may refer to The Sister churches Norway , two side by side churches in Granavollen, Gran, Hadeland, in Norway Sister Churches ecclesiology , a term used in 20th century ecclesiology disambiguation ... more details
Triumphans may refer to Cortinarius triumphans is a basidiomycete mushroom of the genus Cortinarius found in Europe Ecclesia Triumphans is a term of Christian ecclesiology which comprises those Catholics who are in Heaven. Juditha triumphans is an oratorio by Antonio Vivaldi. disambiguation ... more details
Perfect society may refer to Societas Perfecta , the name given to one of several political philosophies of the Roman Catholic Church in the fields of ecclesiology and canon law. Utopia , a name for an ideal community or society, taken from the title of a book written in 1516 by Sir Thomas More. disambiguation ... more details
Unreferenced date July 2008 Head of the Church is a title given in the New Testament to Jesus . Roman Catholic theology will commonly distinguish between Visible Head and Invisible Head in order to allow the term to apply to human leadership in the Church. New Testament It is found for example in Colossians 1.18, Colossians 2.19, Ephesians 4.15 and Ephesians 5.23. Roman Catholic theology In Roman Catholic ecclesiology , Jesus is called the Invisible Head , while the Pope is called the Visible Head . Therefore, the Pope is often called the Vicar of Christ . Roman Catholic theology claims a close collaboration between christology and ecclesiology . English Reformation At the time of the English Reformation , Henry VIII of England Henry VIII took for himself the title of Supreme Head of the Church of England , which was theologically problematic his daughter Elizabeth I changed this to Supreme Governor of the Church of England . Evangelical literature In fundamentalist Evangelical literature, this Roman Catholic distinction between Visible Head and Invisible Head is often attacked ferociously as being ideas not founded in scripture. Evangelical literature harmonizes christology and ecclesiology within a strictly scriptural context. See also Names and titles of Jesus in the New Testament Category Biblical phrases Category Christ the King Category Jesus ... more details
Wikisource Satis Cognitum Satis Cognitum was an encyclical of Pope Leo XIII from June 29, 1896 on the unity of the Church and some heresies of his time. The document teaches the ecclesiology that was commonly held in the years before the Second Vatican Council . The Church is said to be a perfect society and a divine kingdom . It strongly defends the primacy of the Roman Pontiff that was taught at the First Vatican Council . Category Documents of Pope Leo XIII Category Papal encyclicals de Satis cognitum it Satis Cognitum la Satis cognitum ... more details
The Faith and Order Commission is an important assembly group within the World Council of Churches which has made numerous and significant contributions to the ecumenical movement . The FOC has been successful in working toward consensus on Baptism , Eucharist , and religious ministry Ministry , on the date of Easter , on the nature and purpose of the Christian church church ecclesiology , and on ecumenical hermeneutics . The 1952 meeting of the Faith and Order Commission, held in Lund , Sweden , produced the Lund Principle for ecumenical co operation. The Commission has 120 members, including representation of churches who are not members of the World Council of Churches, among them the Roman Catholic Church. Members are men and women from around the world pastor s, laity , academic s, church leaders nominated by their church. A major study on the church ref http www.wcc coe.org wcc what faith nature1.html Ecclesiology ref is being undertaken examining the question What it means to be a church, or the Church? Baptism, Eucharist and Ministry was published in 1982. In particular with a focus on ecclesiology and ethics focusing on the churches Church s prophetic witness and its service to those in need . ref http www.wcc coe.org wcc what faith eeintro.html world council of churches faith and order Ecclesiology and Ethics Introduction to . . . ref Faith and Order collaborates with Justice, Peace and Creation to answer the questions How can the search for unity be a source of renewal for both the Church and the world? What does our increasing cooperation on issues of justice, peace and the creation teach us about the nature of the Church? What is the relationship between ethnicity, nationalism, and church unity? Material for the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity ref http www.wcc coe.org wcc what faith wop2004.pdf 04 Worship Bot generated title ref is prepared annually with the Roman Catholic Church. Other work of the Commission includes facilitating the coordination of ... more details
Orphan date December 2011 Expand Spanish Nikolay Afan siev date November 2011 Nikolay Afan siev 1893 1986 was a Russia n theologian. Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Afan siev, Nikolay ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 1893 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1986 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Afanasiev, Nikolay Category Russian theologians Category 1893 births Category 1986 deaths Category Ecclesiology Russia bio stub es Nikolay Afan siev ... more details
Theo Hobson born 1972 is a United Kingdom British theologian . He was educated at St Paul s School London St Paul s School in London he read English Literature at the University of York , then theology at Cambridge University , where he was a member of Hughes Hall, Cambridge Hughes Hall . He focused on the strongest voices of Protestant tradition Martin Luther , Kierkegaard , and Karl Barth . His PhD thesis became the basis of his first book, The Rhetorical Word &ndash a study of the role of authoritative rhetoric in Protestantism . He gradually turned his attention to ecclesiology . His next book was Against Establishment An Anglican Polemic . In this book he announced that the Church of England was doomed, and that he considered himself a post Anglican . His third book was Anarchy, Church and Utopia Rowan Williams on the Church &ndash a critique of the Archbishop s ecclesiology, and perhaps of all ecclesiology. He has written for various journals and newspapers including The Guardian , The Times , The Spectator , and The Tablet . His principal interests are the relationship between Protestant Christianity and secularism, which he believes is more positive than is generally understood the relationship between theology and literature and the post ecclesial renewal of worship. He thinks that large scale carnival style celebration must replace church worship. He lives in Harlesden , London and is married with two children. Hobson has argued that although there is an instinctive mistrust of spectacle in the Protestant church, Catholic style theatricality is an essential part of religion. ref http www.guardian.co.uk commentisfree belief 2009 sep 22 protestant catholic st therese The Protestant drama deficit ref External links http www.theohobson.co.uk Official website http commentisfree.guardian.co.uk theo hobson Comment is Free articles References references Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Hobson, Theo ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIR ... more details
Richard Gaillardetz is an American theologian specializing in questions relating to Catholic ecclesiology and the structures of authority in the Roman Catholic Church . For his dissertation he researched the Theology of the Ordinary Universal Magisterium of Bishops . He is the author of seven books, the most recent of which is Ecclesiology for a Global Church Orbis Books . Born in a Texas military family, he obtained his BA in humanities in 1981 from the University of Texas and an M.A. in biblical theology at St. Mary s University, Texas St. Mary s University in San Antonio, Texas in 1984. He also received an M.A. and a Ph.D. in systematic theology from the University of Notre Dame. From 1991 to 2001 he taught at the University of St. Thomas Texas University of St. Thomas Graduate School of Theology in Houston, Texas . Since 2001 Gaillardetz has held the Thomas and Margaret Murray and James J. Bacik Chair in Catholic Studies at the University of Toledo . He has served on the Board of Directors of the Catholic Theological Society of America and on the U.S. Roman Catholic Methodist Ecumenical Dialogue. ref http www.gaillardetz.com index.php about autobiographical sketch Autobiographical sketch ref In 2011 Gaillardetz left the University of Toledo to accept the Joseph McCarthy Chair of Catholic Systematic Theology at Boston College . ref cite web url http www.bc.edu schools cas theology faculty RichardGaillardetz.html title Richard Gaillardetz publisher Theology Department Boston College ref Books The Church in the Making Ecclesiology for a Global Church A Daring Promise By What Authority? Readings in Church Authority Teaching with Authority Transforming Our Days Witnesses to the Faith References references Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Gaillardetz, Richard ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Gaillardetz, Richard Category American theologians Category Dissident Roman Catholic theologians ... more details
On the Councils and the Church 1539 is a treatise by Protestant Reformer Martin Luther on ecclesiology , on a later stage of his life. On the Councils and the Church is known best for its teaching, dealt in the third part of the book, of the seven marks of the Church , of which the One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church can be recognized. These marks are holy word of God , effective means of grace mean of grace holy sacrament of baptism , Regeneration theology regeneration holy sacrament of the altar office of keys exercised publicly , although not the office of pope . Includes also private confession as a mean of grace. it consecrates or calls ministers, or has offices that is to administer , bishops, pastors, preachers, but Ordination of women not women . prayer, public praise, and thanksgiving to God , the liturgy holy possession of the sacred cross , suffering and carrying the cross as followers of Christ. English translation Luther s Works vol. 41 See also Four Marks of the Church External links http books.google.com books?id 5 oDAAAAQAAJ&printsec frontcover v onepage&q &f false Authority of Councils and Churches . tr. by C.B. Smyth. London William Edward Painter, 1847. Martin Luther Lutheran stub Christian book stub Category Works by Martin Luther Category Ecclesiology Category 1539 books ... more details
Orphan date February 2009 Other uses Surrogate disambiguation Surrogate from Latin language Lat. surrogare , to substitute for , a deputy of a bishop or an ecclesiastical judge , acting in the absence of his principal and strictly bound by the authority of the latter. Canon 128 of the canons of 1603 lays down the qualifications necessary for the office of surrogate and canon 123 the regulations for the appointment to the office. At present the chief duty of a surrogate in England is the granting of marriage licences, but judgments of the arches court of Canterbury have been delivered by a surrogate in the absence of the official principal. See also Ecclesiology 1911 Category Bishops by type Category Christian group structuring Category Ecclesiastical titles Category Religious occupations ... more details
Vartabed is the rank of a Doctor of the Church doctor or teacher in the Armenian Apostolic Church . Members of this order of Ecclesiology ecclesiastic s frequently have charge of diocese s, with Episcopal polity episcopal functions . Dzayrakuyn Vartabed on the other hand is the rank of supreme Doctor of the Church doctor of Dogma Dogma in religion Christian dogma in the Armenian Apostolic Church . It is bestowed upon a vartabed, a pastor , who has shown outstanding educational and leadership qualities. See also Dzayrakuyn Vartabed External links http www.thefreedictionary.com Vartabed The Free Dictionary Category Armenian Apostolic Church Category Religious leadership roles OrientalOrthodoxy stub de Vardapet pl Wartabed ... more details
Ru ena is a feminine given name, meaning Rose. Other forms are R ena, Rosa, Rosalie, Rosita, or Rosalia. Nicknames are R e, R enka, or Ru i ka. The name days are 13 March Czech R ena, Rosalie , 30 August Slovak Ru ena , and 4 September Czech Rozalia . The ecclesiology ecclesiastical name day is in August 23. It may refer to R ena Jesensk , a Czech writer Ruzena Bajcsy Ru ena Bajcsy , a specialist in robotics R ena Ko lov , a Czechoslovak sprint canoer R ena Maturov R ena Novotn , Czechoslovak slalom canoer disambiguation DEFAULTSORT Ruzena Category Czech feminine given names Category Slovak feminine given names ... more details
Baptism, Eucharist and Ministry , also known as the Lima Document , is an important Christian ecumenical document published by members of the World Council of Churches in Lima in 1982 . ref http www.wcc coe.org wcc what faith bem1.html Baptism, Eucharist, and Ministry ref Ecclesiology of communion The document attempted to express the convergences that had been found over the years. It was sent to all member churches and six volumes of responses compiled. The approach used in the document has been called ecclesiology of communion by ecumenical theologians, in that the sacrament s are presented as a means to achieve greater Church unity. ref http www.oikoumene.org en resources documents wcc commissions faith and order commission i unity the church and its mission baptism eucharist and ministry faith and order paper no 111 the lima text baptism eucharist and ministry.html c10470 Baptism, Eucharist and Ministry Faith and Order Paper No. 111 ref New agreements and discussions As a result, some churches have changed their liturgical practices, and some have entered into discussions, which in turn led to further agreements and steps towards unity. For instance, Protestant churches began to mutually recognize the validity of each other s ministers. Similar agreements in sacramental theology have affected Catholic Orthodox relations and Catholic Protestant relations, notably the recognition of Trinitarian baptism s. Eucharistic and ministerial doctrine The question of eucharistic theology is more delicate, given the fact that historic Reformation churches have given no indication that they will recognize the Roman Catholic dogma of transubstantiation , which is essential to the formation of the Catholic priesthood . References references Category Christian ecumenism da Limadokumentet de Lima Erkl rung sv Limadokumentet ... more details
The Right of Magistrates fr icon Du droit des magistrats , la icon De jure magistratuum was a 1574 work written by Theodore Beza in 1574, and published anonymously, as a polemical contribution to the pamphlet literature of the French Wars of Religion . ref Tadataka Maruyama, The Ecclesiology of Theodore Beza the reform of the true Church 1978 , p. 60 http books.google.co.uk books?id ERc pLlvYkC&pg PA60&lpg PA60&dq 22Resistance theory 22 Erastianism&source bl&ots eDQJnYYjHj&sig gj AXOk9hK17OPTbaJrdoSgdHQg&hl en&ei 0nmBTviBG6OZ0QWR0cW AQ&sa X&oi book result&ct result&resnum 2&sqi 2&ved 0CB4Q6AEwAQ v onepage&q&f false Google Books . ref It emphatically protested against French state tyranny in religious matters, and affirmed the resistance theory that it is legitimate for a people to oppose an unworthy magistracy in a practical manner and if necessary to use weapons and depose them. http fly.hiwaay.net pspoole Beza1.htm Notes reflist poli book stub Category 1574 works ... more details
, Salvation Outside the Church? genre subject Ecclesiology , Theology , Patristics , Christology ... of ecclesiology and the magisterium . Early Life and Jesuit Formation Francis Frank A. Sullivan ... of Theology and Ministry . ref Michael Anthony Novak, An Ecclesiology of Charisms in the Work of Francis ... excitedly soaked up both his first experience abroad and the new coursework. ref An Ecclesiology of Charisms ... of Ecclesiology . At the Gregorian, Sullivan studied with two Ecclesiologists the Dutch Sebastiaan ... the Theology of Revelation at the Gregorian. Ecclesiology at the time was centered on the text ... with the Pope. For all this ecclesiological work, Tromp was not the professor of Ecclesiology ... positions possible as demonstrated by his own teachers. ref An Ecclesiology of Charisms ... had been tapped to teach Ecclesiology back at the Gregorian. Zapelena was approaching the mandatory ... a little exiled, Sullivan returned to Rome to teach Ecclesiology at the Gregorian University, an academic ... 1992, Sullivan was professor of ecclesiology at the Pontifical Gregorian University Gregorian University ... as professors of Ecclesiology. Zapelena did not end up leaving the Gregorian immediately, and the two ... Zapelena had already prepared for his own Ecclesiology course. Zapelena had been teaching a two ... An Ecclesiology of Charisms , 20 21 ref The Second Vatican Council re articulated the theology of the Church ... for the first time having regular sabbaticals toward that end. ref An Ecclesiology of Charisms , 21 23 ref A number of prominent Catholic Ecclesiology ecclesiologists have worked with or studied under ... more details
Merge to Pastoral care date March 2011 In some denominations of Christianity , the cure of souls lang la cura animarum , an archaic translation which is better rendered today as care of souls, is the exercise by a priest of his office. This typically embraces instruction, by sermon s and admonitions, and administration of sacrament s, to the Wiktionary congregation congregation over which they have authority from the Christian Church church . In countries where the Roman Catholic Church acted as the national church, the cure was not only over a congregation or congregations, but over a district. The assignment of a priest to a district subdividing a diocese was a process begun in the 4th century AD. The term parish as applied to this district comes from the Greek word for district, polytonic . See also Curate Privilege of competency External links http www.newadvent.org cathen 04572a.htm Cure of Souls at the Catholic Encyclopaedia DEFAULTSORT Cure Of Souls Category Ecclesiology Category Catholic priesthood Category Ecclesiastical titles Category Priests Category Religious occupations de Kurat fr Cur it Curato ... more details
For sodality in social anthropology Sodality social anthropology In Christian theology , a sodality is a form of the Universal Church expressed in specialized, task oriented form as opposed to the Christian church in its local, diocesan form which is termed modality theology modality . In English, the term sodality is most commonly used by groups in the Catholic Church , where they are also referred to as confraternities . See Sodality Catholic Church . Sodalities are expressed among Protestants through the multitude of mission organizations, societies, and specialized ministries that have proliferated, particularly since the advent of the modern missions movement, usually attributed to Englishman William Carey missionary William Carey in 1792. However they rarely use the term sodality in their names. See also Modality theology Sodality Catholic Church Sodality of Our Lady External links http www.newadvent.org cathen 14120a.htm Catholic Encyclopedia entry Category Ecclesiology christian theology stub de Sodalit t fr Sodalit http www.sacraspina.it Brotherhood of the Holy Thorn ... more details
The Swankites were an offshoot of the Wengerites formed in Ohio in 1861. This occurred over issues of meeting length, Ecclesiology church order and method of baptism. They called themselves the Brethren in Christ, a name used by both the Wengerites and the River Brethren at that point. ref http books.google.com books?id w4USAAAAYAAJ&pg PA88&lpg PA88&dq Swankites&source web&ots YFMDF2DX89&sig uzi0hlFDbX1ZKmXXkEupSPNGpMA&hl en&sa X&oi book result&resnum 5&ct result History of the Mennonite Brethren in Christ Church ref In 1883 the Swankites united with Evangelical United Mennonite s and formed the Mennonite Brethren in Christ . ref cite web author Bender, Harold S. year 1957 title Mennonite Brethren in Christ publisher Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online accessdate 07 July 2010 url http www.gameo.org encyclopedia contents M465ME.html ref References references Category Mennonite denominations Category Religious organizations established in 1861 ... more details
Neologism date May 2011 Ecclesiastical Positive Law is the law that emanates from the Legislature legislative power of Roman Catholic Church the Catholic Church in order to govern its members in accordance with the Gospel of Jesus Jesus Christ . ref name Socias Rev. James Socias gen. edit. , Our Moral Life in Christ . Chicago Midwest Theological Forum, 2003 , 84. ref Examples of Ecclesiastical Positive law Positive Law are fasting during the liturgical season of Lent and religious monks, nuns, etc. being required to have permission by their superiors to publish a book. ref name Socias ref Canon 832 as found in http www.vatican.va archive ENG1104 P2Q.HTM ref The principal laws of the Catholic Church are found in its Code of Canon Law , promulgated in 1983. ref name Socias References References Category Christian law Category Roman Catholic Church Category Ecclesiology ... more details
other uses Keys of the Kingdom disambiguation Primary sources date January 2010 The keys of the kingdom is a Christian concept of apostolic authority present in some denominations, such as the Roman Catholic Church , The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints LDS Church and Children of God religious group The Family International . ref http www.thefamily.org en about our beliefs keys kingdom Verify credibility date January 2010 ref Its origins can be traced to a passage in the New Testament where Jesus gives St. Peter the keys of the kingdom of heaven Matt. 16 19 . In the LDS Church the concept is strongly tied to the Priesthood Latter Day Saints Priesthood keys priesthood keys held by the President of the Church President of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints President of the Church and the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles LDS Church Quorum of the Twelve Apostles . See also Keys of Heaven References reflist christianity stub Category Ecclesiology Category Christian terms ... more details