• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 149
  • 12
  • 8
  • 3
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 208
  • 155
  • 77
  • 61
  • 37
  • 31
  • 21
  • 21
  • 21
  • 20
  • 20
  • 19
  • 18
  • 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.
81

The experienced impact of Wesleyan theology on pastoral burnout

Jones, Gary W. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (D. Min.)--Boston University, 2002. / Abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 212-221).
82

Fred Wesley innovations, styles, and analysis /

Cailliet, Claude. Wesley, Fred. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (D.M.A.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1998. / Typescript. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 220-225).
83

Calvin's and Wesley's doctrine of assurance a comparative study /

Lyons, Dennis D. January 1986 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.T.S.)--Talbot School of Theology, 1986. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 66-70).
84

The relationship between evangelism and social reform in the theology of primitive Methodism as taught by John Wesley

Fitch, Fred. January 1986 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, 1986. / Abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 188-193).
85

Calvin's and Wesley's doctrine of assurance a comparative study /

Lyons, Dennis D. January 1986 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.T.S.)--Talbot School of Theology, 1986. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 66-70).
86

The presence of God in the Christian life : John Wesley and the means of grace /

Knight, Henry Hawthorn, January 1900 (has links)
Texte remanié de: Diss. Ph. D--Atlanta--Emory university, 1987. Titre de soutenance : The presence of god in the Christian life : a contemporary inderstanding of John Wesley's means of grace. / Bibliogr. p. 238-242. Index.
87

The decline of God a model for understanding Christian doctrine in the local United Methodist Church /

Royals, Gary C. January 1991 (has links)
Thesis (D. Min.)--Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, 1991. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 243-247).
88

Agô alafiju, odara! a presença de Clyde Wesley Morgan na Escola de Dança da UFBA, 1971 - 1978

Oliveira, Nadir Nóbrega January 2006 (has links)
317f. / Submitted by Suelen Reis (suziy.ellen@gmail.com) on 2013-04-01T14:47:34Z No. of bitstreams: 11 NadirComSegParaExtract11.pdf: 65474 bytes, checksum: d7899d749f25c8c149d2c655061236d2 (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract10.pdf: 54344 bytes, checksum: 2c18611726cc6392fba8a8182a8b94c5 (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract09.pdf: 64190 bytes, checksum: 809a37cd82c5f8351b6f62d9469ebce5 (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract08.pdf: 56851 bytes, checksum: 0a51fc131da002549f1a78de8a37fa72 (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract07.pdf: 6837107 bytes, checksum: bdef8c9274fa48b171ad14dfe1be1a68 (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract06.pdf: 7269803 bytes, checksum: 12d7d286324e68064a6d9f207e3c2637 (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract05.pdf: 7251246 bytes, checksum: bdf38be244194330e54e1d1fedaedb13 (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract04.pdf: 6443699 bytes, checksum: 81a0a3523af8eb352cc3bac3c3be93c8 (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract03.pdf: 8165345 bytes, checksum: e70cf358b0f602485e9cd0e9b229303f (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract02.pdf: 20171984 bytes, checksum: ea8f923f15744e5ae4aada398c831d00 (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract01.pdf: 5130027 bytes, checksum: 9cbc735ce698859717ee4778362cb433 (MD5) / Approved for entry into archive by Ednaide Gondim Magalhães(ednaide@ufba.br) on 2013-04-10T13:55:01Z (GMT) No. of bitstreams: 11 NadirComSegParaExtract11.pdf: 65474 bytes, checksum: d7899d749f25c8c149d2c655061236d2 (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract10.pdf: 54344 bytes, checksum: 2c18611726cc6392fba8a8182a8b94c5 (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract09.pdf: 64190 bytes, checksum: 809a37cd82c5f8351b6f62d9469ebce5 (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract08.pdf: 56851 bytes, checksum: 0a51fc131da002549f1a78de8a37fa72 (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract07.pdf: 6837107 bytes, checksum: bdef8c9274fa48b171ad14dfe1be1a68 (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract06.pdf: 7269803 bytes, checksum: 12d7d286324e68064a6d9f207e3c2637 (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract05.pdf: 7251246 bytes, checksum: bdf38be244194330e54e1d1fedaedb13 (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract04.pdf: 6443699 bytes, checksum: 81a0a3523af8eb352cc3bac3c3be93c8 (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract03.pdf: 8165345 bytes, checksum: e70cf358b0f602485e9cd0e9b229303f (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract02.pdf: 20171984 bytes, checksum: ea8f923f15744e5ae4aada398c831d00 (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract01.pdf: 5130027 bytes, checksum: 9cbc735ce698859717ee4778362cb433 (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2013-04-10T13:55:01Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 11 NadirComSegParaExtract11.pdf: 65474 bytes, checksum: d7899d749f25c8c149d2c655061236d2 (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract10.pdf: 54344 bytes, checksum: 2c18611726cc6392fba8a8182a8b94c5 (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract09.pdf: 64190 bytes, checksum: 809a37cd82c5f8351b6f62d9469ebce5 (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract08.pdf: 56851 bytes, checksum: 0a51fc131da002549f1a78de8a37fa72 (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract07.pdf: 6837107 bytes, checksum: bdef8c9274fa48b171ad14dfe1be1a68 (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract06.pdf: 7269803 bytes, checksum: 12d7d286324e68064a6d9f207e3c2637 (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract05.pdf: 7251246 bytes, checksum: bdf38be244194330e54e1d1fedaedb13 (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract04.pdf: 6443699 bytes, checksum: 81a0a3523af8eb352cc3bac3c3be93c8 (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract03.pdf: 8165345 bytes, checksum: e70cf358b0f602485e9cd0e9b229303f (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract02.pdf: 20171984 bytes, checksum: ea8f923f15744e5ae4aada398c831d00 (MD5) NadirComSegParaExtract01.pdf: 5130027 bytes, checksum: 9cbc735ce698859717ee4778362cb433 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2006 / Esta dissertação destaca a trajetória artística e institucional de Clyde Wesley Morgan, de modo a favorecer estudos analíticos do legado coreográfico e cultural deixado por este profissional, para a dança e sua contextualidade étnica na Bahia. Além disso, consiste em uma análise estética e reflexiva dos processos de criação e encenação do espetáculo coreográfico Porque Oxalá Usa Ekodidé, dirigido por Clyde Wesley Morgan, em 1973, baseado no conto homônimo afro-brasileiro de Deoscóredes dos Santos, identificando suas matrizes estético-culturais (princípios, códigos, vocabulários e conteúdos), assim como as interfaces que apresenta transitando entre a dança e os demais elementos cênicos no espetáculo. O estudo averigua o papel central que a dança ocupa nos processos de concepção, criação e encenação dos trabalhos de Clyde Morgan. Dentre os objetivos desta pesquisa destacam-se: identificar, a partir de um breve enfoque antropológico, a origem e a presença da gestualidade abstraída no espetáculo, refletindo a sua utilização na coreografia do mesmo; ressaltar a contribuição deste coreógrafo como elemento formador e recriador de identidade cultural negra, na Bahia; identificar as principais manifestações afro descendentes que ocorreram na Bahia deste período, reconhecendo como processos propositivos de afirmação e cultura negra. A dança apresentada neste e em outros espetáculos reúne, de forma híbrida e singular, características de diversas matrizes estético-culturais (africanas, européias, brasileira, norte-americana, vocabulários da dança afro-brasileira, balé clássico e dança moderna). Além disso, foi detectado o encontro do tradicional e do moderno, determinando assim um dos mais expressivos resultados da criação proporcionada por Clyde Morgan, que também não perdeu de vista o conjunto de relações sociais e de poder vividos pelo grupo. / Salvador
89

To 'men of reason and religion' : John Wesley as an apologist for 'Methodism' : with special reference to his debates with Josiah Tucker, Thomas Church, and 'John Smith'

Banza, Pierre Alain January 2010 (has links)
Apologetic has been an ongoing activity in the Church since the apostolic times. The eighteenth century witnessed one of the most famous apologists in Christian history: John Wesley. Wesley, a subscribed minister in the Church of England, defended himself against criticism from his fellow churchmen when they charged him with differing from the ‘common interpretation’ of the Thirty-Nine Articles. This thesis examines critiques of John Wesley and Methodism, and how Wesley dealt with them. It concentrates on the debates between John Wesley and three of his major opponents; namely, Josiah Tucker, Thomas Church, and ‘John Smith’.The defensive position in which Wesley found himself in following criticism from fellow clergymen shaped his methodology throughout his ministry when defending Christianity in general and ‘Methodism’ in particular; consequently, placing apologetic at the centre of his writings. When defending ‘Methodism’ against those who attacked it as an enthusiastic aberration, this thesis demonstrates that Wesley customarily appealed to the formularies of the Church of England: The Articles, the Homilies and the Common Book of Prayer. To those who attacked his doctrine of salvation by faith alone, Wesley responded by appealing to the formularies, and demonstrated that his interpretation of the formularies was in accordance with the Church Fathers, and with the compilers of the formularies. By excluding good works as conditions of justification and rejecting the charge of ‘enthusiasm to the highest degree’, Wesley showed that his doctrines, including salvation by faith alone were grounded in Scripture and took reason into account in their elaboration. Despite some hesitations in defining his doctrine of perfection, Wesley showed that he did not teach sinless perfection. When defending his connections with the Moravians, Wesley demonstrated that he rejected some Moravian tenets that did not meet his consent. Wesley contended that ‘Methodism’ contributed to Church renewal and robust Christian faith in individuals. When dealing with the ‘perceptible inspiration’ or the ‘witness of the Spirit’. Wesley based his arguments on Scripture and his interpretation of the formularies. Wesley insisted that the Holy Spirit inwardly convinces the recipient that their sins are forgiven and that they are a child of God. According to Wesley, the Holy Ghost witnesses to the believer directly. When facing those who believed that miracles had ceased with the apostles, and who argued that God gave the apostles an ‘implicit faith’ which allowed them to work miracles with the aim of establishing the church at that precise time, and God had withdrawn the gift after the fulfillment of the mission, Wesley rejected any possibility of an ‘implicit faith’ and insisted that God still worked miracles in the eighteenth century. All the correspondence between Wesley and his first three major opponents in the early life of ‘Methodism’ is critically examined in this thesis. Wesley’s hesitations when building up his doctrines are also highlighted. This thesis instructs us that when facing adversity Wesley in the defence of ‘Methodism’, frequently adapted his methodology to meet new circumstances.
90

Sociální práce jako významný rys metodistického hnutí v jeho počátcích / Social Work as a significant Feature of Methodism in its Origins

Rendošová, Lenka January 2012 (has links)
This graduation thesis deals with the manifestations of social activity Methodism in its origins. It starts with a description of the period in which the Methodist movement was born, it focuses mainly on the description of the life and works of John Wesley. The next section describes the basic concepts related to social work and provides an overview of particular social activities of the first Methodists. Finally, the author presents a brief description of the documents Social principles and Social creed and provides a brief overview of the social activities of the Methodist Church in Slovakia and the Czech Republic.

Page generated in 0.0552 seconds