Morrill also marshals the work of many scholars concerning the concept of anamnesis which has proven crucial to the progress of ecumenical dialogues on Church order and the Eucharist. The effort is to understand how the Church's liturgical commemoration of God's salvific deeds in history, especially in Jesus, allows for neither a timeless form of religious piety nor a ritualism detached from the commerce of life in the world. A concluding investigation of the relationship between anamnesis and eschatology leads to further considerations about the dialectical character of the praxis of faith. Anamnesis as Dangerous Memory, while written in the field of systematic theology, offers a fresh perspective and framing of the issuesfor readers of Christian ethics and moral theology.
Chapters are "The Promise and Challenges in the Renewal of the Eucharistic Liturgy", "Johann Baptist Metz's Political Theology of the Subject", "Alexander Schemann's Liturgical Theology: Joyous, Thankful Remembrance of the Kingdom of God", "Christian Memory: Anamnesis of Christ Jesus", and "Conclusion".