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Causes and implications of apostasy in the West Zimbabwe conference of the Seventh-Day Adventist Church, 1998-2008Mazibisa, Robson Dube 06 August 2013 (has links)
This study seeks to investigate the causes and implications of apostasy in the West
Zimbabwe Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church from 1998 to 2008. The
research was undertaken due to the realisation that apostasy has reached a point of
concern to both members and local church leadership. The researcher also noted with
concern that not much if any has been done on the causes and implications of apostasy
since the introduction of the Church in Zimbabwe over one hundred years ago and the
organisation of the West Zimbabwe Conference about forty years ago.
The research was motivated by these concerns coupled with the increasing number of
apostasy which continuously reflect negatively on the church and may subsequently limit
the church’s ability to evangelize the communities. The aim of the study therefore is to
investigate the causes and implications of apostasy and make recommendations that will
assist both church members and the church leadership in formulating policies and
programs geared towards minimizing apostasy in the church.
The study combines both the quantitative and the qualitative research designs. The
population for the study consisted of the one hundred and seventy one (171) churches
with a total church membership of one hundred and fifty three thousand, seven hundred
and two (153,702). A sample percentage of ten was adopted for the selection of churches while the proportional stratified sampling technique was used. The instruments used for
the study were both face and content validated and a pilot study carried out to determine
the reliability of the questionnaire. The data collected from the study was analysed using
descriptive statistics and a descriptive interpretive method.
Findings from the study confirm that there is apostasy within the WZC of the Seventhday
Adventist Church. Accordingly, the data analysis revealed that the causes of apostasy
in order of magnitude are external, internal and doctrinal respectively. The study also
revealed that youths, females and urban church members are highly susceptible to
apostasy than their adult, male and rural counterparts respectively. Apostasy had a
considerable effect on church membership as well as the receiving of tithes and offerings.
Recommendations were made based on the findings of the research. / Christian Spirituality, Church History & Missiology / D. Th. (Church History)
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Causes and implications of apostasy in the West Zimbabwe conference of the Seventh-Day Adventist Church, 1998-2008Mazibisa, Robson Dube 06 August 2013 (has links)
This study seeks to investigate the causes and implications of apostasy in the West
Zimbabwe Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church from 1998 to 2008. The
research was undertaken due to the realisation that apostasy has reached a point of
concern to both members and local church leadership. The researcher also noted with
concern that not much if any has been done on the causes and implications of apostasy
since the introduction of the Church in Zimbabwe over one hundred years ago and the
organisation of the West Zimbabwe Conference about forty years ago.
The research was motivated by these concerns coupled with the increasing number of
apostasy which continuously reflect negatively on the church and may subsequently limit
the church’s ability to evangelize the communities. The aim of the study therefore is to
investigate the causes and implications of apostasy and make recommendations that will
assist both church members and the church leadership in formulating policies and
programs geared towards minimizing apostasy in the church.
The study combines both the quantitative and the qualitative research designs. The
population for the study consisted of the one hundred and seventy one (171) churches
with a total church membership of one hundred and fifty three thousand, seven hundred
and two (153,702). A sample percentage of ten was adopted for the selection of churches while the proportional stratified sampling technique was used. The instruments used for
the study were both face and content validated and a pilot study carried out to determine
the reliability of the questionnaire. The data collected from the study was analysed using
descriptive statistics and a descriptive interpretive method.
Findings from the study confirm that there is apostasy within the WZC of the Seventhday
Adventist Church. Accordingly, the data analysis revealed that the causes of apostasy
in order of magnitude are external, internal and doctrinal respectively. The study also
revealed that youths, females and urban church members are highly susceptible to
apostasy than their adult, male and rural counterparts respectively. Apostasy had a
considerable effect on church membership as well as the receiving of tithes and offerings.
Recommendations were made based on the findings of the research. / Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology / D. Th. (Church History)
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The Church of Christ in Zimbabwe Identity- and Mission-Continuity (in Diversity)Masengwe, Gift 06 1900 (has links)
Bibliography: leaves 255-295 / The study of the Church of Christ’s ‘Identity- and Mission-Continuity’ in the Zimbabwean context explores how the Christian faith should be interpreted and contextualised in Africa. The Church of Christ in Zimbabe (COCZ) is a Christian movement claiming to be representative of the ethos of the Church that was founded by Jesus Christ on the day of Pentcost. The thesis raises critical questions of Christian identity and transformation in missionary founded churches like the COCZ in an attempt to contribute towards a locally based study of the Church. Consciousness to being a Church founded by Jesus Christ has implications for Christian unity (oneness) and ecumenism in the COCZ, and its wider Christian networks1. Use of its theological tenets, which are indeed congruent with its projected identity, to explore its history when it came to Zimbabwe in relationship to its founding charism helped because of scarcity of literature on the history of Christian denominations in Zimbabwe.
This thesis has followed four objectives that are related to the four stages of experiences by the Church Jesus Christ founded, namely, the (1) early Church, (2) reformation evangelism, (3) missionary enterprise and, (4) contemporary (African) expressions of the faith. This study has investigated the origin and reasons for the formation of the Church in the midst of others; and why its missionaries chose Zimbabwe where there were other denominations. Local experiences of the Church after the departure of white missionaries motivated this study with questions on how the process of inculturating the gospel in the COCZ raised, especially the tension between continuity and discontinuity, linking and delinking, similarity and dissimilarity as well as diversity and diference. Creative synthesis on what Jesus intended; what missionaries brought; and what the God of history is doing in the contemporary life and efforts of the Church were implied and/or explicated.
Using a two-pronged approach to the study, the thesis has, first, unearthed (primary) documents like minutes from church board meetings by Europeans (with misionary thinking that developed from these origins), to contextual (secondary) documents (on how local theologians in the context have engaged the different Christian doctrines in the Zimbabwean context). Secondly, an empirical method was used to interview and distribute questionnaires to a number of individuals, inclusive of those who were in the COCZ leadership and ordinary members. Data collection tools were semi-structured, giving respondents freedom to express themselves and/or their views on what the COCZ was doing and what they believe must be done. Data from interviews and questionnaires were correlated with views expressed in the written sources. The data was interpreted heuristically, in order to give light to new knowledge that was being formed in the process. As an interpretive tool, hermeneutics (the phenomenological approach using Atlas.ti 8 (SPSS, Nvivo 8) - for verbatim transcription) was made key in looking into the context, culture and religion of the COCZ.
The thesis attempted to create a dialogue by relating identity, communal ontology and epistemology to the empirical study findings, literature and the methodology. Ecology and gender were some of the indispensable aspects of theology, crucial for human survival, harmony and peace that were discussed because they were neglected in the COCZ. The thesis also revisted differences and similitudes found in the gospel in relationship to the intended and unintended
1 Unity and oneness expressed in John 17 [“Et Unum Sint” – That they may be one], emphasise the sociality of the Godhood through the doctrine of perichoresis, which is unity of the Godhead in the economy (our) of salvation.
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cultural contributions of the Ndebele and Shona so far, with the purpose of repositioning the COCZ within its own transformative framework. This helps the Church with a strategy of how to model its theology in an African context and how to learn from its past with the view to transform itself for the 21st century Zimbabwe.
The study is not exhaustive on the nature, history and mission of the COCZ, and many avenues like hermeneutics, church polity, public theology, conflict studies and church doctrine can be carried out using the COCZ as a case study. In all, the study has laid a foundation for the contextualization, evangelization, inculturation and incarnation of the gospel of Jesus Christ through the COCZ in a postmodernist society. / Philosophy, Practical and Systematic Theology / D. Phil. (Systematic Theology)
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Storying widowhood in Shona cultureShumbamhini, Mercy 30 June 2005 (has links)
A group of four widows undertook this research journey with me. They reflected on their widowhood experiences. Narrative and participatory practices guided our conversations. Participatory, contextual, postmodern, liberational feminist theology, poststructuralism and the social construction theory of reality informed this work.
Reflective and summarising letters after each group meeting played a central part in the research. The letters were structured to make visible the "taken-for-granted" which informed the widows about who and what they are. The alternative stories of preferred widowhood practices that emerged during and between sessions were centralised in the letters. Elements of transformation, hope and empowerment surfaced as counter stories to the culture of oppression, providing the scaffolding for re-storying their lives. The group formed Chiedza Widows Association in order to support other widows who are still marginalised. / Practical Theology / (M.Th - Specialisation Pastoral Therapy))
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Soil and blood : Shona traditional region in late 20th century ZimbabweManley, Marcelle 06 1900 (has links)
This qualitative study focuses on two questions:
a) Do present-day Shona still subscribe to the world-view of their ancestors?
b) How does this world-view relate to that of the modern (Western) world?
Interviews were conducted with government representatives, chiefs in Masvingo Province
and people in all walks of life. Virtually all interviewees, even when participating in the
"modern" sector (including Christianity), still subscribe to the traditional system.
Government, however, has adopted the model of the pre-Independence government, with
some concessions to tradition.
The traditional world-view (emphasising its key symbols, blood and soil) and the history of
the two dominant tribes in Masvingo Province are outlined. A case study of a current
chieftaincy dispute illustrates the dilemma.
Conclusion: searching dialogue between the two belief systems is needed to resolve the
potentially creative ambivalence. Some key issues are suggested as starting points for such
dialogue. / M.A. (Religious Studies)
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Storying widowhood in Shona cultureShumbamhini, Mercy 30 June 2005 (has links)
A group of four widows undertook this research journey with me. They reflected on their widowhood experiences. Narrative and participatory practices guided our conversations. Participatory, contextual, postmodern, liberational feminist theology, poststructuralism and the social construction theory of reality informed this work.
Reflective and summarising letters after each group meeting played a central part in the research. The letters were structured to make visible the "taken-for-granted" which informed the widows about who and what they are. The alternative stories of preferred widowhood practices that emerged during and between sessions were centralised in the letters. Elements of transformation, hope and empowerment surfaced as counter stories to the culture of oppression, providing the scaffolding for re-storying their lives. The group formed Chiedza Widows Association in order to support other widows who are still marginalised. / Philosophy, Practical and Systematic Theology / (M.Th - Specialisation Pastoral Therapy))
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Soil and blood : Shona traditional region in late 20th century ZimbabweManley, Marcelle 06 1900 (has links)
This qualitative study focuses on two questions:
a) Do present-day Shona still subscribe to the world-view of their ancestors?
b) How does this world-view relate to that of the modern (Western) world?
Interviews were conducted with government representatives, chiefs in Masvingo Province
and people in all walks of life. Virtually all interviewees, even when participating in the
"modern" sector (including Christianity), still subscribe to the traditional system.
Government, however, has adopted the model of the pre-Independence government, with
some concessions to tradition.
The traditional world-view (emphasising its key symbols, blood and soil) and the history of
the two dominant tribes in Masvingo Province are outlined. A case study of a current
chieftaincy dispute illustrates the dilemma.
Conclusion: searching dialogue between the two belief systems is needed to resolve the
potentially creative ambivalence. Some key issues are suggested as starting points for such
dialogue. / M.A. (Religious Studies)
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Death rituals among the Karanga of Nyajena, Zimbabwe: praxis, significance, and changesChitakure, John 10 1900 (has links)
This study was about death rituals among the Karanga of Nyajena, Masvingo, Zimbabwe, who are a sub-group of the Shona people. This inquiry’s primary purpose was tripartite in outlook. First, it described the Karanga causes of sickness and death, and Karanga death rituals. Second, it explored the significance of these rituals to the Karanga people. Third, the study traced and identified the changes in the practice and significance of some of the rituals. The overall goal of this inquiry was to compose a brief manual for the performance of some of the Karanga death rituals. The inquiry divided the Karanga death rituals into three major categories, namely, pre-burial rituals, burial rituals, and post-burial rituals. The investigation employed qualitative research traditions, particularly ethnography, in the collection and interpretation of the relevant research data, in pursuit of the goals mentioned above. Postcolonial theory was used to give a theoretical framework to this study. This study was necessitated by the need of a written manual on the performance of Karanga death rituals. The study compiled the participants’ narratives concerning the praxis, meaning, and changes in the Karanga death rituals in an attempt to analyze and write them down for posterity. The inquiry found out that although the praxis of the rituals was still rememberd by many Karanga people, some of them were no longer performed, and their significance had been lost. Although the study acknowledged the inevitable dynamism of culture, it held that every ethnicity should have some cultural or religious constants so that its identity is not lost. Hence, the Karanga of Nyajena should retrace their footsteps back to their death rituals in order to rediscover and reaffirm their battered cultural identity and integrity. / Religious Studies and Arabic / D. Phil. (Religious Studies)
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