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Struggle for the centre : South Africsn Pentacostal missiology in contextWatt, Charles Peter 06 1900 (has links)
This study examines that which forms the 'centre' of Pentecostal Missiology and
makes it particularly relevant to the South African context. In order to arrive at
my conclusions I have concentrated on the history and present situation in postapartheid
South Africa of the three oldest classical Pentecostal movements, the
Apostolic Faith Mission, the Full Gospel Church of God and the Assemblies of
God.
Chapter one describes the rise of the Pentecostal movement and its arrival in
South Africa shortly after the Second Anglo-Boer War (1899-1902). That
Pentecostalism took root among the poor in this country is a matter of historical
record. The dimensions of poverty in South Africa are probed in order to evaluate
Pentecostalism' s success with that class of people. Chapter two examines the
Pentecostal model of mission and its essentially holistic nature in order to
understand why it so effectively helped the poor to escape the enslaving cycle of
poverty. However, Pentecostalism around the world and in South Africa appears
to be in crisis. Chapter three discusses the reasons for the crisis and outlines the
nature and evidence of it - the 'centre' of Pentecostalism seems to be
fragmenting, and with it the relevance of the Pentecostal Church to the South
African situation.
The book of Exodus provides a metaphor that naturally holds together dimensions
of the model of mission essential to Pentecostalism. Chapter four describes the
metaphor, how it applies to Pentecostal missiology and why the struggle for the
'centre' is a struggle vital to the mission of the Pentecostal Church. The thesis
concludes with a reminder that Pentecostals have a history of 'success' among the
poor and that perhaps it is within this stratum of society that Pentecostals should
focus their efforts. With a renewed model of mission the Pentecostal Church can
still be relevant to the situation of poverty in post-apartheid South Africa.
However, Pentecostals need to clarify the distinctives that lie at the 'centre' of
their existence and mission and be prepared to struggle for them / Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology / D.Th. (Missiology)
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Struggle for the centre : South African Pentecostal missiology in contextWatt, Charles Peter 06 1900 (has links)
This study examines that which forms the 'centre' of Pentecostal Missiology and
makes it particularly relevant to the South African context. In order to arrive at
my conclusions I have concentrated on the history and present situation in postapartheid
South Africa of the three oldest classical Pentecostal movements, the
Apostolic Faith Mission, the Full Gospel Church of God and the Assemblies of
God.
Chapter one describes the rise of the Pentecostal movement and its arrival in
South Africa shortly after the Second Anglo-Boer War (1899-1902). That
Pentecostalism took root among the poor in this country is a matter of historical
record. The dimensions of poverty in South Africa are probed in order to evaluate
Pentecostalism' s success with that class of people. Chapter two examines the
Pentecostal model of mission and its essentially holistic nature in order to
understand why it so effectively helped the poor to escape the enslaving cycle of
poverty. However, Pentecostalism around the world and in South Africa appears
to be in crisis. Chapter three discusses the reasons for the crisis and outlines the
nature and evidence of it - the 'centre' of Pentecostalism seems to be
fragmenting, and with it the relevance of the Pentecostal Church to the South
African situation.
The book of Exodus provides a metaphor that naturally holds together dimensions
of the model of mission essential to Pentecostalism. Chapter four describes the
metaphor, how it applies to Pentecostal missiology and why the struggle for the
'centre' is a struggle vital to the mission of the Pentecostal Church. The thesis
concludes with a reminder that Pentecostals have a history of 'success' among the
poor and that perhaps it is within this stratum of society that Pentecostals should
focus their efforts. With a renewed model of mission the Pentecostal Church can
still be relevant to the situation of poverty in post-apartheid South Africa.
However, Pentecostals need to clarify the distinctives that lie at the 'centre' of
their existence and mission and be prepared to struggle for them / Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology / D.Th. (Missiology)
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Verhouding tussen staatsbeleid en sendingbeleid in die Tomlinsonverslag, 1954Truter, Petrus Jurgens 11 1900 (has links)
Interaction between South Africa's government policy and the Nederduitse Gereformeerde Kerk's
mission policy from 1948 tot 1954 were analysed. This interaction proved simbiotic. To meet
black people's needs - seen as disrupted through straying from their ancestry - and to prove the
credibility of apartheid, government appointed the Tomlinson Commission. They found christian
mission to do wonders towards changing black people's so called attitude of obstinacy and
therefore proposed a vital role to christian mission in realization of the Bantu Development
Programme. Thus government and church became team members defining christian mission as
answering to a Godly call to custodianship over black people seen as of a lesser race.
Custodianship ends when black people reached a stage of self sufficiency. Meantime church
members were challenged to bring offerings of missionary acts. This call resulted in missionary
involvement of many church members and stirred a missiological revival in the N G Church. / Interaksie tussen Suid-A:frikaanse staatsbeleid en Nederduitse Gereformeerde Kerk-sendingbeleid
tussen 1948 en 1954 is geanaliseer. Hierdie interaksie is simbioties bevind. Om swartmense -
gesien as ontwrig weens vervreemding van hulle afstamming - se behoeftes aan te spreek asook die
kredietwaardigheid van apartheid te bewys, benoem die owerheid die Tomlinsonkommissie. Hulle
bevind christelike sending doen wonders om swartmense se sogenaamde onwil te verander en
verleen daarom aan christelike sending 'n sleutelrol in die Bantoegebiede-ontwikkelingsgprogram.
Sodoende word kerk en staat spanmaats en word sending gedefinieer as 'n Godgegewe roeping tot
voogdyskap oor swartmense wat as 'n mindere ras gesien is. V oogdyskap eindig wanneer
swartmense selfstandigheid bereik het. Tussentyd word lid.mate opgeroep tot sendingofferdade.
Hierdie oproep het tot grootskaalse sendingbetrokkenheid en sendingherlewing in die N G Kerk
gelei. / Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology / Th. M. (Sendingwetenskap)
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Verhouding tussen staatsbeleid en sendingbeleid in die Tomlinsonverslag, 1954Truter, Petrus Jurgens 11 1900 (has links)
Interaction between South Africa's government policy and the Nederduitse Gereformeerde Kerk's
mission policy from 1948 tot 1954 were analysed. This interaction proved simbiotic. To meet
black people's needs - seen as disrupted through straying from their ancestry - and to prove the
credibility of apartheid, government appointed the Tomlinson Commission. They found christian
mission to do wonders towards changing black people's so called attitude of obstinacy and
therefore proposed a vital role to christian mission in realization of the Bantu Development
Programme. Thus government and church became team members defining christian mission as
answering to a Godly call to custodianship over black people seen as of a lesser race.
Custodianship ends when black people reached a stage of self sufficiency. Meantime church
members were challenged to bring offerings of missionary acts. This call resulted in missionary
involvement of many church members and stirred a missiological revival in the N G Church. / Interaksie tussen Suid-A:frikaanse staatsbeleid en Nederduitse Gereformeerde Kerk-sendingbeleid
tussen 1948 en 1954 is geanaliseer. Hierdie interaksie is simbioties bevind. Om swartmense -
gesien as ontwrig weens vervreemding van hulle afstamming - se behoeftes aan te spreek asook die
kredietwaardigheid van apartheid te bewys, benoem die owerheid die Tomlinsonkommissie. Hulle
bevind christelike sending doen wonders om swartmense se sogenaamde onwil te verander en
verleen daarom aan christelike sending 'n sleutelrol in die Bantoegebiede-ontwikkelingsgprogram.
Sodoende word kerk en staat spanmaats en word sending gedefinieer as 'n Godgegewe roeping tot
voogdyskap oor swartmense wat as 'n mindere ras gesien is. V oogdyskap eindig wanneer
swartmense selfstandigheid bereik het. Tussentyd word lid.mate opgeroep tot sendingofferdade.
Hierdie oproep het tot grootskaalse sendingbetrokkenheid en sendingherlewing in die N G Kerk
gelei. / Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology / Th. M. (Sendingwetenskap)
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From reductionism to contextualization : towards a relevant Pentecostal missiology in South AfricaChetty, Dilipraj 30 June 2002 (has links)
In the first part of this dissertation I investigate whether the Pentecostal Churches in
South Africa has a reductionist understanding of crucial missiological issues. Issues such
as the definition of mission, motivation for missions, the role of the Holy Spirit in
mission, mission as a quest for social justice, mission as anti-racism, mission as a quest
for gender equality and mission as inter-religious encounter. In the second part of the
dissertation I present a more contextual approach to these missiological issues,
challenging the Pentecostal churches to move: towards the formation of a more relevant
missiology. l finally present the 'cycle of missionary praxis' or 'the Pastoral cycle' as a
tool that can be used to formulate a contextual missiology / Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology / M.Th.
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Discerning an African missional ecclesiology in dialogue with two uniting youth movementsNel, Reginald Wilfred 02 1900 (has links)
Churches are confronted with the reality of younger, mobile generations challenging existing understandings of church and witness. They seem to live according to a different (postcolonial) script. This study probes the question as to how these churches are to understand and respond meaningfully, but also missiologically, to these transformations. Coming as a missiologist from a particular ecclesiological, theological, cultural background, I had two rationales for this study, namely to review the current theories we have about church and mission, i.e., missiological ecclesiology, and in order to do this, we need to craft a sensitive and creative dialogue, in the form of a missiological methodology with younger people.
I address these rationales, guided by a research question: How can I design a creative dialogue with younger generations, to pick up the impulses, in order to discern a Southern African missional ecclesiology. Working with the metaphor of ―remixing‖, this discernment process started off where I engaged my own embeddedness. These were the older ―samples‖ to work with, in order to produce something new and in tune with the sensibilities, the ―soul‖ of newer communities. I then attempt to understand the current social transformations that younger generations are responding to. Through this, I want to design a methodology for a creative dialogue with these youth movements on the basis of an intersubjective epistemology. Using this methodology, I could develop a thick description from the dialogue with the two uniting youth movements. Lastly, I present the engagement (remixing) between these rich new impulses with the old (the existing), in carving out an appropriate missional ecclesiology for the audiences I‘ve been with. Starting with an outdated and colonial gereformeerde missionary ecclesiology, but then also the anti-colonial ecclesiologies and a postmodern (predominantly Western) emerging missionary ecclesiology, I discern a particular postcolonial African ecclesiology, which I call a Southern African missional ecclesiology. Instead of exclusion, I propose remixing church in terms of five dimensions as social network, spiritual home, mobile community, movement in the Holy Spirit and as story. These can serve as a map to guide Southern African congregations in their dialogue with younger generations. / Christian Spirituality, Church History & Missiology / D. Th. (Missiology)
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From reductionism to contextualization : towards a relevant Pentecostal missiology in South AfricaChetty, Dilipraj 30 June 2002 (has links)
In the first part of this dissertation I investigate whether the Pentecostal Churches in
South Africa has a reductionist understanding of crucial missiological issues. Issues such
as the definition of mission, motivation for missions, the role of the Holy Spirit in
mission, mission as a quest for social justice, mission as anti-racism, mission as a quest
for gender equality and mission as inter-religious encounter. In the second part of the
dissertation I present a more contextual approach to these missiological issues,
challenging the Pentecostal churches to move: towards the formation of a more relevant
missiology. l finally present the 'cycle of missionary praxis' or 'the Pastoral cycle' as a
tool that can be used to formulate a contextual missiology / Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology / M.Th.
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Discerning an African missional ecclesiology in dialogue with two uniting youth movementsNel, Reginald Wilfred 02 1900 (has links)
Churches are confronted with the reality of younger, mobile generations challenging existing understandings of church and witness. They seem to live according to a different (postcolonial) script. This study probes the question as to how these churches are to understand and respond meaningfully, but also missiologically, to these transformations. Coming as a missiologist from a particular ecclesiological, theological, cultural background, I had two rationales for this study, namely to review the current theories we have about church and mission, i.e., missiological ecclesiology, and in order to do this, we need to craft a sensitive and creative dialogue, in the form of a missiological methodology with younger people.
I address these rationales, guided by a research question: How can I design a creative dialogue with younger generations, to pick up the impulses, in order to discern a Southern African missional ecclesiology. Working with the metaphor of ―remixing‖, this discernment process started off where I engaged my own embeddedness. These were the older ―samples‖ to work with, in order to produce something new and in tune with the sensibilities, the ―soul‖ of newer communities. I then attempt to understand the current social transformations that younger generations are responding to. Through this, I want to design a methodology for a creative dialogue with these youth movements on the basis of an intersubjective epistemology. Using this methodology, I could develop a thick description from the dialogue with the two uniting youth movements. Lastly, I present the engagement (remixing) between these rich new impulses with the old (the existing), in carving out an appropriate missional ecclesiology for the audiences I‘ve been with. Starting with an outdated and colonial gereformeerde missionary ecclesiology, but then also the anti-colonial ecclesiologies and a postmodern (predominantly Western) emerging missionary ecclesiology, I discern a particular postcolonial African ecclesiology, which I call a Southern African missional ecclesiology. Instead of exclusion, I propose remixing church in terms of five dimensions as social network, spiritual home, mobile community, movement in the Holy Spirit and as story. These can serve as a map to guide Southern African congregations in their dialogue with younger generations. / Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology / D. Th. (Missiology)
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A Morula tree between two fields : the commentary of selected Tsonga writersMaluleke, Samuel Tinyiko 06 1900 (has links)
The thesis of this study is that indigenous Tsonga literature forms a valid
and authoritative commentary on missionary Christianity. In this study, the
value of literary works by selected Tsonga writers is explored in three basic
directions: (a) as a commentary on missionary Christianity, (b) as a source
of and challenge to missiology, and (c) as a source of a Black missiology of
1 i berat ion. The momentous intervention of Swiss missionaries amongst the
Vatsonga, through the activities of the Swiss Mission in South Africa (SMSA)
must be granted. Similarly, its abiding influence formerly in the Tsonga
Presbyterian Church (TPC), now the Evangelical Presbyterian Church in South
Africa (EPCSA), the Vatsonga in general and Tsonga literature in particular
must be recognized. But our missiological task is to problematise and explore
both missionary instrumentality and local responses variously and creatively.
The first chapter introduces the thesis, central issues of historiography and
ideology as well as an introductory history of the SMSA. In the second
chapter, the commentary of Tsonga writers through the media of historical and
biographical works on missionary Christianity is sketched. Selected Tsonga
novels become the object of inquiry in the third chapter. The novels come
very close to a direct evaluation of missionary Christianity. They contain
commentary on a wide variety of issues in mission. The fourth chapter
concentrates on two Tsonga plays and a number of Tsonga poems. In the one
play, missionary Christianity is likened to garments that are too sho· ~'
whilst in the other, missionary Christianity is contemptuously ignored and
excluded - recognition granted only to the religion and gods of the Vatsonga.
The fifth and final chapter contains the essential commentary of indigenous
Tsonga literature on missionary Christianity as well as the implications for
both global and local missiology. / Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology / D. Th. (Missiology)
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A Morula tree between two fields : the commentary of selected Tsonga writersMaluleke, Samuel Tinyiko 06 1900 (has links)
The thesis of this study is that indigenous Tsonga literature forms a valid
and authoritative commentary on missionary Christianity. In this study, the
value of literary works by selected Tsonga writers is explored in three basic
directions: (a) as a commentary on missionary Christianity, (b) as a source
of and challenge to missiology, and (c) as a source of a Black missiology of
1 i berat ion. The momentous intervention of Swiss missionaries amongst the
Vatsonga, through the activities of the Swiss Mission in South Africa (SMSA)
must be granted. Similarly, its abiding influence formerly in the Tsonga
Presbyterian Church (TPC), now the Evangelical Presbyterian Church in South
Africa (EPCSA), the Vatsonga in general and Tsonga literature in particular
must be recognized. But our missiological task is to problematise and explore
both missionary instrumentality and local responses variously and creatively.
The first chapter introduces the thesis, central issues of historiography and
ideology as well as an introductory history of the SMSA. In the second
chapter, the commentary of Tsonga writers through the media of historical and
biographical works on missionary Christianity is sketched. Selected Tsonga
novels become the object of inquiry in the third chapter. The novels come
very close to a direct evaluation of missionary Christianity. They contain
commentary on a wide variety of issues in mission. The fourth chapter
concentrates on two Tsonga plays and a number of Tsonga poems. In the one
play, missionary Christianity is likened to garments that are too sho· ~'
whilst in the other, missionary Christianity is contemptuously ignored and
excluded - recognition granted only to the religion and gods of the Vatsonga.
The fifth and final chapter contains the essential commentary of indigenous
Tsonga literature on missionary Christianity as well as the implications for
both global and local missiology. / Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology / D. Th. (Missiology)
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