It is good to have two of the wisest men of our time talking within the covers of one slim book and it is enheartening to find that, in both, cheerfulness conquers gloom and is the senior partner of realism' (Methodist Recorder). `We have here the spectacle of two prelates of different churches, harmoniously and joyfully exploring matters of common concern, in a series of eloquent and penetrating discussions in which frankness and honesty are matched with warmth and friendliness' (The Month). `There can be no doubt of the significance of this book, modest though it is in size, and that on at least three counts. It illuminates for the reader the mind of the present Archbishop of Canterbury on matters of fundamental importance. It does the same for the mind of one of the most outstanding prelates of Roman Catholicism. And it throws light, too, on the prospects of reunion between their two churches' (Church Times). `A thoughtful, theological and properly ecumenical assessment of the possible dispensations of grace which might yet translate Christianity, through the organization of the church, into the language of the later twentieth century' (The Spectator).