• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 37
  • 18
  • 12
  • 8
  • 6
  • 3
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 141
  • 36
  • 30
  • 26
  • 23
  • 21
  • 20
  • 19
  • 18
  • 17
  • 17
  • 17
  • 16
  • 16
  • 15
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
21

Biblical Metaphors for God in the Primary Level of the Religious Education Series To Know Worship And Love

Carswell, Margaret F, res.cand@acu.edu.au January 2006 (has links)
To Know Worship and Love is the religious instruction curriculum produced and mandated for use by the Archdiocese of Melbourne. The primary series comprises a Teaching Companion and Student Text for every level of education, Preparatory to Year 6. This study undertakes examination of the series to determine if biblical metaphors for God which contain a physical vehicle are used and presented within it in accord with the accepted exegetical practices of the Church. The study begins by examining Church documents that pertain to both religious instruction and Scripture to determine a set of principles which should guide the use of Scripture. Notable among the six principles elucidated is the expectation that the use of Scripture should reflect accepted exegetical practices of the Church. These are defined as those which enable a clear understanding of the literal sense of Scripture, as ascertained through use of the Historical-Critical method. In order to come to a sound understanding of the literal sense of metaphors, the study reviews how they work and what results from their use. Such a review is important for two reasons. First, in the finding that metaphors for God prompt the formation of a concept of God, the need for their valid interpretation in religious instruction is stressed. Second, it enables the articulation of eight specific requirements for the interpretation of biblical metaphors for God. Subsequent examination of the series against what is required reveals that of the eight requirements, only one is provided within the series. No unit or activity identifies the sixty-three biblical metaphors cited in the series and no unit teaches students how they work to communicate meaning. No unit provides information of the vehicles used within their historical setting and no unit explains the historical circumstances which gave rise to the dominance of certain metaphors. In order to explain why biblical metaphors for God are presented so poorly in To Know Worship and Love, the use of Scripture generally in the series is examined against the six principles drawn from Church documents. The finding that the series does not observe the principles which should guide the use of Scripture, in particular, the finding that the series does not use accepted exegetical practices of the Church, provides significant insight into the inadequate presentation of metaphors. The study concludes by making three recommendations. First, it recommends that a process of rewriting To Know Worship and Love must be undertaken immediately. Second, it recommends that the use and placement of Scripture in religious instruction programmes in the future adhere to the six principles of the Church outlined in this study. Third, it recommends that the clear and accurate teaching of what metaphors and how they work be made a priority in religious instruction programmes.
22

"The Self-Attestation of Scripture as the Proper Ground for Systematic Theology"

Wireman, Matthew Scott 14 December 2012 (has links)
Matthew Scott Wireman, Ph.D. The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, 2012 Chair: Dr. Stephen J. Wellum This dissertation examines the Protestant doctrine of Scripture's self-witness of divine authority. Chapter 1 examines the current evangelical milieu. The doctrine has become nearly obsolete in the discussion of systematic theology. Consequentially, wherein lies authority has been greatly misunderstood in Protestant circles. Chapter 2 surveys the doctrine through the history of the church. Particular note is made of Augustine, John Calvin, John Owen, and Herman Bavinck. This chapter evinces the near consensus of the church that the authority for the Church is found preeminently in the Scriptures. Chapter 3 summarizes post-conservative, Stanley J. Grenz and John R. Franke, attempts to ground theology in Scripture plus culture and tradition. This chapter does not offer a critique as much as it aims to represent post-conservatives in their own words. Chapter 4 looks at how the Old Testament viewed itself--particularly through the ministries of Moses and the prophets. YHWH chose representatives who would speak to the covenant community and write down the stipulations and history of YHWH's relationship with Israel for posterity. Chapter 5 looks at the New Testament, which follows the paradigm instituted by the Old Testament. In the person and work of Jesus Christ, God's promises find their fulfillment, which foments his commissioning of the Twelve Apostles to be his spokesmen. Chapter 6 ties together the threads that cohere in the two testaments of Scripture. It makes explicit the claims of Scripture that God is a se, he communicates with his creation, he uses spokesmen, and his written Word is its own witness for its authority. Chapter 7 defines the doctrine of Scripture's self-witness and applies it to tradition, culture, and the task of apologetics. The chapter explicates the thesis of the dissertation that Scripture's self-witness must be the ground of systematic theology.
23

A Hermeneutical Examination of Creation in Islam at Georgia State University

Owuo-Hagood, Ndola M'Balia 29 April 2010 (has links)
In traditional Islam, Adam is the first human created. Eve, or Hawa, was created to be his mate and she was made from Adam’s uppermost left rib. There has been a move to argue that Eve and Adam were created simultaneously. I will argue that, because of the negative patriarchal and misogynistic imagery that has been attached to Islam, some feminist Muslim thinkers are attempting to move Islam into a realm where they believe is revolutionary enough to make a new statement in the modern world. These feminist Muslims are making strides to make the Qur'an the sole authority in Islam, while simultaneously dismissing all traditional accounts that have historically been used to assist in interpreting the Qur’an. Although their conclusions are interesting, their methods will be the focus of my thesis. What these feminists are attempting is a method of interpretation that has never been widely accepted in Islam.
24

A study of affective and intellectual emphases in education in the junior high Sunday school material of Scripture Press Publications

Chapman, Marcella Beth. January 1968 (has links)
Thesis (M.R.E.)--Conservative Baptist Theological Seminary, 1968. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves [48]-50).
25

Resurrection and Scripture : the relationship between two key doctrines in reformed apologetic methodology / by Steven West

West, Steven Donald January 2010 (has links)
In this study three apologetic methodologies (evidentialism, Reformed epistemology, and presuppositionalism) are analyzed to determine which method is most coherently related to Reformed theology. It is argued that comparing how each methodology relates the doctrine of Scripture with the doctrine of the resurrection can demonstrate which method is best suited to defending Christianity in its Reformed interpretation. The doctrine of Scripture is taken to be that of full plenary inspiration and inerrancy, and the question is which apologetic method can be successful in defending that position. After contemporary arguments for the historicity of the resurrection of Jesus Christ are surveyed, each of the three respective apologetic methodologies is subjected to an examination and critique. Each method is intra–systematically evaluated to determine whether it suffers from internal contradictions or incoherencies. Each method is further tested to determine whether, on its own internal principles, it is capable of a logical defense of a high doctrinal view of Scripture. The respective methods are also compared and contrasted with each other. A prominent issue is the direction of the methodology, i.e., its sequence. Some strands of evidentialism attempt to move from the historical fact of the resurrection to their doctrine of Scripture; Reformed epistemologists do not necessarily require any historical argumentation at all; presuppositionalists take their doctrine of Scripture and the resurrection as both necessary and mutually reinforcing points in their worldview. In the final analysis, it is the presuppositional methodology which emerges as that which is most capable of coherently defending a doctrine of Scripture that includes full inspiration and inerrancy. This is due to the transcendental nature of the argument that it presents. It is urged in this study, however, that evidences, historical details, and logical analysis are all critically important for a fully–orbed apologetic system. Presuppositionalism needs to be ramified with evidential arguments, even if they are transposed into a transcendental key, as supporting details in a transcendental framework. / Thesis (Ph.D. (Dogmatics))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2011.
26

Resurrection and Scripture : the relationship between two key doctrines in reformed apologetic methodology / by Steven West

West, Steven Donald January 2010 (has links)
In this study three apologetic methodologies (evidentialism, Reformed epistemology, and presuppositionalism) are analyzed to determine which method is most coherently related to Reformed theology. It is argued that comparing how each methodology relates the doctrine of Scripture with the doctrine of the resurrection can demonstrate which method is best suited to defending Christianity in its Reformed interpretation. The doctrine of Scripture is taken to be that of full plenary inspiration and inerrancy, and the question is which apologetic method can be successful in defending that position. After contemporary arguments for the historicity of the resurrection of Jesus Christ are surveyed, each of the three respective apologetic methodologies is subjected to an examination and critique. Each method is intra–systematically evaluated to determine whether it suffers from internal contradictions or incoherencies. Each method is further tested to determine whether, on its own internal principles, it is capable of a logical defense of a high doctrinal view of Scripture. The respective methods are also compared and contrasted with each other. A prominent issue is the direction of the methodology, i.e., its sequence. Some strands of evidentialism attempt to move from the historical fact of the resurrection to their doctrine of Scripture; Reformed epistemologists do not necessarily require any historical argumentation at all; presuppositionalists take their doctrine of Scripture and the resurrection as both necessary and mutually reinforcing points in their worldview. In the final analysis, it is the presuppositional methodology which emerges as that which is most capable of coherently defending a doctrine of Scripture that includes full inspiration and inerrancy. This is due to the transcendental nature of the argument that it presents. It is urged in this study, however, that evidences, historical details, and logical analysis are all critically important for a fully–orbed apologetic system. Presuppositionalism needs to be ramified with evidential arguments, even if they are transposed into a transcendental key, as supporting details in a transcendental framework. / Thesis (Ph.D. (Dogmatics))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2011.
27

Disruptive presence : the ontology, theology and ethics of reading the Bible as scripture in Karl Barth's theological exegesis

Saragih, Denni Boy January 2016 (has links)
The dissertation offers a new reading of Karl Barth’s hermeneutics in relation to the task of the church in reading the Bible as Scripture. The study argues that the distinctiveness of Barth’s hermeneutics lies in its complex coordination of several doctrinal loci in construing biblical hermeneutics. In this reading, the church’s interpretation of the Bible is theologically located in the reality defined by the Trinitarian decision to be God in Jesus Christ. The relationship between the Word of God and the word of man is decided by God’s election of God’s being in Jesus Christ. As a contribution to Barth studies, the work offers a corrective reading of Barth’s earlier account of biblical hermeneutics in the doctrine of revelation by drawing the insights of Barth’s later theological ontology in the doctrines of election and Christology. The church’s reading of scripture is reformulated in the ontology of being in becoming in which the freedom of God in revelation is coordinated with the history of God in Jesus Christ. As such, it maintains the continuity and the discontinuity between the biblical natural history and the divine address to the church. The practical implication of this approach is not a method of interpretation but an ethics of biblical interpretation as a human response to God’s communicative presence. As an activity of listening to the Word of God, the church’s reading of the Bible is marked by moral freedom in obedience and responsibility to the Word of God. But the divine presence is not only communicative but also commanding, and it remains “a disruptive presence” that challenges the church to be faithful to her calling as a creature of the Word of God.
28

Autoria no videoclipe: tensionamentos valorativos da expressão artística e da cultura midiática

ARAÚJO, Carlos Eduardo Dias de 03 March 2015 (has links)
Submitted by Rafael Santana (rafael.silvasantana@ufpe.br) on 2017-12-06T17:09:43Z No. of bitstreams: 2 license_rdf: 811 bytes, checksum: e39d27027a6cc9cb039ad269a5db8e34 (MD5) tese deposito Eduardo Dias.pdf: 13485018 bytes, checksum: 3e7ed9b8bb164286f2486067e8bcc8c2 (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2017-12-06T17:09:43Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2 license_rdf: 811 bytes, checksum: e39d27027a6cc9cb039ad269a5db8e34 (MD5) tese deposito Eduardo Dias.pdf: 13485018 bytes, checksum: 3e7ed9b8bb164286f2486067e8bcc8c2 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2015-03-03 / A investigação que esta pesquisa empreende procurou desenvolver uma perspectiva para a compreensão dos julgamentos de valor de autoria do videoclipe e as atribuições que decorrem desse processo, observando como as transformações na materialidade do videoclipe estão articuladas a mudanças na própria ideia de autoria, abordada nesta tese como autoria múltipla. A abrangência dessa discussão pretende incorporar as qualidades artísticas dos clipes articulando-as com as suas características promocionais e midiáticas, desenvolvendo um resgate das principais perspectivas sobre a autoria nas indústrias culturais com o intuito de instrumentalizar uma noção que priorize esta natureza ambígua do videoclipe. O intuito é amplificar o panorama da discussão sobre autoria no videoclipe desenvolvido a partir das suas próprias particularidades como um formato cultural. Esse panorama foi construído a partir de discussões sobre as características de produção e reconhecimento do clipe que despertaram as atribuições e manifestações de autoria ao longo de sua história. A proposta se concretizou através da promoção de uma perspectiva da valoração autoral no videoclipe cuja abrangência atinja os modos de produção e consumo juntamente com a percepção das ações dos indivíduos envolvidos na criação, produção e reconhecimento. Assim, hoje, para além da perspectiva dos videoclipes como um formato ligado às grades televisivas, é importante pensá-los em suas formas de autoria múltipla como ambientes visuais que acionam valorações e atribuições de autoria aos clipes. / This research seeks to develop a perspective to the comprehension of value judgments of authorship and their assignments, noticing the transformations in how the materialization of music vídeo are articulated to the change in the ideia of authorship, addressed in this research as multiple authorship. This discussion coverage intend embody the artistic qualities of music vídeos in an articulation with their marketing and media characteristics with the assistence of the majors perspectives about authorship in the cultural industry to promote an view which honors the ambiguous essence of music videos. The intention is amplify the survey of discussion about authorship in music video developed on their own features as cultural format. This survey was built from discussions about features of production and consumption of music vídeo which arouse the attributions and manifestations of authorship in their own history. The proposition was materialized through the production of a perspective of authorship valuation in music vídeo whick coverage reachs the forms of production and comsumption along with perception of individuals’ attitudes who are attendants in the conception, production and consumption. Thus, beyond the production television-centered, it is important considering forms of multiple authorship as visuals ambients which operates valuations and attributions of authorship in music video.
29

On The Presence of Christ

Peacock, William A. 01 January 2018 (has links)
On the Presence of Christ is a musical work for septet (three strings, three winds, percussion) exploring Christ’s presence throughout all time as described in Scripture, wherein the individual movements are thematically grounded and arranged from ancient past to coming future. “In the Beginning” is based on Genesis 1:1-2 and John 1:1-5; “At the Throne” is based on Revelation 4:2-11; and “With His Saints Forever” is based in Revelation 21:1-5a and 22-23. I use these chosen Scriptures to guide my musical exploration, allowing my reflections and perspectives on them to give this music its substance and form My hope is that this works points beyond my limited perspective concerning these Scriptures, and even the Scriptures themselves, to their divine source, and the goodness, beauty, and truth therein.
30

Isaiah's Burden Prophecies As Spirtual Formulas

Top, Justin Brent 05 December 2007 (has links) (PDF)
The Book of Mormon makes it clear that Isaiah's message is of great importance to the modern reader. In order to facilitate modern and personal spiritual application of Isaiah's writings, spiritual "formulas" or principles may be discovered or formulated. These formulas are statements of truth based on the prophet's writings that may be applied in multiple situations and time periods. Such formulas of truth offer valuable insighst across time. These formulas may be understood by analyzing the historical setting of the chapter(s) under review, and through critical examination of the text itself. These formulas provide a solid foundation upon which can be built the framework of personal application. The burden chapters of Isaiah (chapters 13-23) each offer an important formula that can have powerful spiritual application. This work explores each burden prophecy, using historical research and critical analysis of the text to postulate a formula. Each burden chapter has its own message that can lead to spiritual insight.

Page generated in 0.0401 seconds