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Communication models in the Holy Qurʾān : God-human interactionIbrahim, Mohammed Zakyi. January 1997 (has links)
This thesis presents an indepth examination of the exegetical treatment of Qur'anic themes and concepts. It explains the process of communication between God and human beings by using communication models. The invisibility of God to human beings, coupled with His difference in nature, make their interaction difficult to conceive but not impossible. This thesis will thus seek to show how that interaction is feasible, making it as comprehensible as possible. / Muslim theologians studied exhaustively the subject of God's speech and its nature without actually revealing its process in any detail or in systematic fashion. This thesis concludes that the theological differences have little bearing on God as a communicator. Finally, it demonstrates that the process of God-human interaction is entirely different from that of ordinary interpersonal communication.
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Communication models in the Holy Qurʾān : God-human interactionIbrahim, Mohammed Zakyi January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
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Communication for maintenance and propagation : the forms of communication used by the cell church as an emerging organisationReddy, Mike Megrove January 2002 (has links)
A thesis submitted in fulfillment ofthe requirements for the degree of
MA cum bude in Communication Science University of Zululand, 2002. / In this thesis I describe the development of the Cell Church from a movement to an organisation, based on empirical data analysis, in comparison with three similar religious movements that developed from movements to church organisations, namely the early Christian church, the Protestant Reformation and the Millerite Advent movement. My conclusion is that the Cell Church is at the early stage of changing from a movement to an organisation.
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'n Verkenning van die begrip religieuse kommunikasie en die daarstel van 'n religieuse kommunikasiemodelSlabbert, Anna 20 October 2014 (has links)
D.Litt. et Phil. (Communication Studies) / Please refer to full text to view abstract
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Communication habits for the pilgrim Church : Vatican teaching on media and social communicationKappeler, Warren. January 2006 (has links)
This study examines the communication habits of the pilgrim Church with focus upon Vatican documents on mass media and social communication. Attention is given to the historical context of Vatican Councils I and II. As the Church engaged modernity, it shifted ecclesial organization from closed to become open. This study documents the importance of sociology, especially communication theory and cybernetics for Catholicism today. / It is argued that the pivotal event in the Roman Catholic Church's self-exploration for self-awareness and realization was the Second Vatican Council. At that Council, the Church re-examined itself and its own identity to come to grips with the modern world. The teachings of the Council were concerned mainly with the pastoral dimension of the Church and its self-realization. Reflexivity is an important theme of this study as it speaks about understanding the very identity of the modern Church. It is explained that the process of communication within the Roman Catholic Church is itself linked to this insight of reflexivity. / The first chapter shows that behind the pilgrim Church lies an emerging vision of the threefold offices of priest, prophet, and king. The history behind the Roman Catholic Church's transition from the First to the Second Vatican Council is provided. John Henry Cardinal Newman influenced nineteenth-century Catholic theology with his own study of the threefold office. In chapter four we return to the threefold office and examine the contribution of John Paul II. It includes an analysis of how the politics of the magisterium shapes Catholic social teaching. Chapter two examines the text and context of the Second Vatican Council's pastoral decree "Inter Mirifica". Chapter three provides a documented history of the Vatican's Pontifical Council for Social Communication and its teachings. Chapter five develops major tenets of a critical analysis of the communication of the post-Vatican II Church: attention is given to the discursive aspects of religious authority, argumentation, bureaucratization, and market culture. Chapter six takes a step towards examining the pragmatics of contemporary Vatican teaching. / This study concludes that there are three basic sociological and theological aspects of the pilgrim Church. These include a ritual approach to communication, the generational experience of Catholics and their respective attitudes toward Church teaching, and the important link in the faith's praxis between reflexivity and forming habits of communication.
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Communication habits for the pilgrim Church : Vatican teaching on media and social communicationKappeler, Warren. January 2006 (has links)
No description available.
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Community pastoral care : a critical empirical study of the role of the pastor in the communityMee, Richard 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MTh)--Stellenbosch University, 2012. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Pastors and congregations need to communicate the faithfulness and care of God within the real life
contexts of the communities that they are a part of. The problem is that pastoral theology has been predominantly linked to individual psychology rather than to theory that facilitates a specifically Christian care for whole communities.
This study asks how pastors can engage with the concrete realities of their communities, caring for real
and practical needs, within the context of the specifically Christian focus of the Gospel. The chief goal is
to make a clear contribution to the way in which Community Pastoral Care is thought about and carried
out. This is a contribution that encourages engagement with the needs of the communities together with
the Gospel. This requires a methodology that involves interdisciplinary understanding, calling for a hermeneutical
study. The study engages firstly with Systems Theory, gaining an understanding of the way in which communities and groups function and change. Linked to this is the study of Communicative Action and Social Constructionism, these contribute understanding of the way in which communication functions within the community system. Thirdly, a study of Community Psychology, including Social Capital,
emphasises the importance of focusing on the relationships within the community. Community care
in this context is predominantly care for relationships and communication within the community. This
includes the understanding that problems form within the relationships that make up the community,
rather than individuals within the community. It also places the focus of care on building strengths rather
than fixing pathologies. The specif cally Christian character of Community Pastoral Care is given through a study on sin/evil,
the gospel and revelation. Th is introduces the action and communication of a faithful God. Community
Pastoral Care is seen to incorporate the revelation of the Kingdom of God and its blessings, as well as the possibility of a direct relationship with Him that transforms the life of the community and individuals. Semi-structured interviews, with a small selection of pastors, give an empirical aspect to the study. This
helps to ground the study in the actual experiences of pastors, giving a chance for their experience to add to and engage the theory study. The first two theory chapters suggest that the key to community care is developing positive relationships
between the parts of the system. With the introduction of a relationship with a faithful God, the understanding of care expands. Revelation of His Kingdom, and the changed relationships that it brings, transforms the earlier Communicative Action into both an expression of and a communication of a
faithful God and the promise of His Kingdom. What is concluded is that Community Pastoral Care is primarily the revelation of God to the community. This is carried out through relationship with the congregation including, and guided by, the ministry of
the pastor. This is a Pastoral Care that is less about technique and more about mutual relationships of
trust and open, positive communication with God, the congregation and the community. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Predikante en gemeentes moet die trou en sorg van God kommunikeer binne die werklike lewens
kontekste van die gemeenskape waarvan hulle deel is. Die probleem is dat pastorale teologie grootendeels
verbind is aan individuele sielkunde eerder as teorie wat ‘n spesifi eke Christelike sorg vir hele gemeenskape
fasiliteer.
Hierdie studie vra hoe predikante kan betrokke raak by die konkrete realiteite van hulle gemeenskape en
soedoende werklike behoeft es praktiese kan aanspreek binne die raamwerk van die spesifi ek Christelike
fokus van die evangelie. Die hoefdoel is om ‘n duidelike bydrae te maak aan die teorie en praktyk van
Gemeenskapspastoraat.
Dit vra ‘n metodologie wat interdisiplinêr en hermeneuties van aard is. Hierdie studie gebruik eers Sisteem
Teorie om te analiseer hoe groepe funksioneer en verander. In verband hiermee word die studies van
Kommunikatiewe Aksie en Sosiale Konstruksie gebruik om te verstaan hoe kommunikasie funksioneer
binne die gemeenskapsisteem. Derdens, word die lens van Gemeenskapssielkunde, veral die konsep
van Sosiale Kapitaal, gebruik om die belang van verhoudings binne die gemeenskap te beklemtoon.
Gemeenskapsorg in hierdie konteks is hoofsaaklik die sorg van verhoudings en kommunikasie binne die
gemeenskap. Daaruit word daar geargumenteer dat probleme in die verhoudings binne die gemeenskap
ontstaan eerder as in die individuë wat die gemeenskap vorm. Dit plaas die fokus van sorg op die uitbou
van dít wat werk eerder as op die herstel van patologieë.
Die besonder Christelike karakter van Gemeenskapspastoraat word uitgelig deur ‘n studie van sonde/
kwaad, die evangelie en openbaring. Dit stel die aksie en kommunikasie van ‘n getroue God voor.
Gemeenskapspastoraat sluit in die openbaring van die konninkryk van God en die seëninge daarvan,
sowel as die moontlikheid van ‘n direkte verhouding met Hom wat die lewe van die gemeenskap en die
individu transformeer.
Gedeeltelik-gestruktureerde onderhoude, met ‘n klein steekproef van predikante, het ‘n empiriese
komponent aan die studie verleën. Dit help om die studie in die werklike ervaring van predikante te
fundeer sodat hulle ervaringe in verband met die teorie gebring kan word.
Die eerste twee hoofstukke stel voor dat die sleutel tot gemeenskapssorg is om positiewe verhoudinge te
bou tussen die verskillende dele van die sisteem. Met die introduksie van ‘n verhouding met ‘n getroue God,
word die verstaan van sorg uitgebrei. Die openbaring van sy Konninkryk, en die veranderde verhoudinge
wat dit bring, omskep die vroeër kommunikatiewe aksie na ‘n uitdrukking van en kommunikasie van ‘n
getroue God en die beloft e van sy Konninkryk. Die gevolgtrekking word gemaak dat Gemeenskapspastoraat primêr die openbaring van God tot die
gemeenskap is. Dit word uitgedra deur die verhouding tussen God en die gemeente, insluitend en gelei
deur die bediening van die predikant. Dit is dan ‘n soort pastoraat wat minder oor tegniek en meer oor
getroue verhoudings en oop, positiewe kommunikasie met God, die gemeente en die gemeenskap gaan.
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Die gemeente as interpreterende gemeenskap in die preekmaakprosesVan der Westhuyzen, Albertus 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (DTh (Practical Theology and Missiology))--Stellenbosch University, 2008. / In the Reformed tradition the autonomy of the local congregation - as the concrete community of people who interpret the Gospel with their words and deeds - as well as the maturity of the ordinary believers, rest precisely in the fact of their knowledge of and in their being formed by, as well as having been brought up by the Gospel, and that they not stay dependent on the clerical office for ever. It was exactly against any form of sacerdotalism that the Reformation aimed their protest, because they saw that that would estrange ordinary believers from their God-given task to take up their office as believers in God’s interpretative community in the world. It is therefore regrettable in the Dutch Reformed Church19 to have to admit that - after so many centuries - the official church has for the greater part still failed its members in this regard, and are still not trusting them enough and engaging them fully as theologians in their own right into the congregation’s discerning process in general, and the sermon making process in particular.
It is our belief that the stagnation of the congregation as the primary hermeneutic of the Gospel20 arises to a great extent from the church's inherited style of pastorship as well as it's process of sermonmaking, being solely the responsibility of the all-knowing and all-doing pastor. The pastor centered homiletical situation exclusively holds the dominee responsible for inter alia the whole sermon making process, the exegesis of the Biblical text, the understanding of the message of the Scriptures, to even discerning the will of God for the congregation! This leads the ordinary church members to sit passively and eventually loose their confidence to personally engage with the Scriptures as a whole. Their participation as theologians in any conversation usually ends up in “the sharing of ignorance by well-intentioned but ill-informed people”21. There is still today, to a great extent, a total lack of handling skills of, as well as a wisdom perspective on the Bible as a whole, although many would be most competent in reciting a number of impressive Bible verses. While biblical scholars have moved into a postmodern and post-structuralistic phase, we find that many ordinary members are still stuck in a pre-modern phase, which makes teaching with regard to their equipment as interpretative community extremely difficult. ...
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The dynamics of communication in the thought of H.E. Fosdick.Hubble, Bridget June. January 1986 (has links)
Abstract not available. / Thesis (M.A)-University of Durban-Westville, 1986.
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Material beliefs in a virtual church : a heuristic study of the limitations of virtual religionHendrix, Jeffrey D. 23 May 2012 (has links)
This thesis compares an online church with a local physical church in terms of communication dimensions of the community, communication dimensions of sacramental practice, and communication dimensions of faith in general. In a local physical church, these have been traditionally conceived, defined, and profoundly understood in phenomenal or physical terms. In this, the objects of faith and the related rituals deal with the “real” and give even the transcendent physical and actual meaning. However, in an online environment, what was previously physical has become virtual, thus causing the transcendent to be virtualized as well. As such, two guiding questions for this thesis are: 1) Given the virtual nature of the Internet, do the beliefs that a church advocates seem to be or become less real or phenomenal when a church predominantly employs religious practices online; and, 2) Given the power and range of responses that individuals can have when responding to Internet content, do the beliefs that a church advocates become more ideocentric and emotional for its online users?
Given the tremendous variations that are employed in religious groups, these two questions will naturally generate more heuristic rather than universal findings, as the title recognizes. LifeChurch.tv has been chosen as the subject for this heuristic investigation due to its manifestation in both an online church and in local physical counterparts. Each is examined through the LifeChurch.tv website using a method of ethnographic research, combined with a longitudinal study, and the resulting findings are interpreted through cluster criticism. A less grounded and more individualistic experience was found in the rhetoric surrounding the online church. / Literature review & theoretical background -- Methods for analysis -- A cluster analysis of a local physical church and online church website -- Major findings, limitations and suggestions for future research. / Department of Telecommunications
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