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  • 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

J.A. HEYNS EN DIE NEDERDUITSE GEREFORMEERDE KERK EN APARTHEID

Williams, Henry Hofmeyr 28 June 2006 (has links)
Not available
22

KERKBEGRIP, BELYDENIS EN KERKORDE IN DIE KERKHERENIGINGSPROSES VAN DIE NG KERKFAMILIE IN SUID-AFRIKA

Kleynhans, Hermanus Johannes 14 August 2009 (has links)
The Lord wants His church on earth to be One, as He is One, âin order that the world may knowâ (John 17:23) â for the sake of the credibility and the effectiveness of the preaching of the Gospel and its testimony. This unity is first and foremost a spiritual unity of faith, but then also a visible unity in the institutionalising of His church. Churches relate to one another due to a common confession of faith and the main features of church institution and church government. In the first chapter it was indicated clearly that, in the resolutions of the Dutch Reformed Church family, there is a recognition of the Godly gift of and commission to visible church unity. Every member desires visible church unity, keeping in mind that there are obstacles that have to be removed first. Research has also been done about the understanding of the image of a church and the church doctrines of the members of the Dutch Reformed Church family, which showed resemblance to a great extent with the Dutch Reformed Church according to the reformed principles of the presbyterial-synodal church governing system. However, numerous influences from other governing systems could also be indicated. In chapter two the common, above-historical and universally accepted creeds, which linked believers together over time and space, was pointed out. True creeds stem from a certain situation, but formulates those truths of the Gospel which are of a core, timeless nature. Denominations are therefore the relation between congregations sharing the same confessions and the main principles of church institution, and is formed to strengthen their church-being, to enrich them spiritually and to save them from one-sidedness. The conclusion was also made that Belhar does not answer to the requirements of a reformed creed. In chapter three an analysis was made of the content and implications of the constitution, supreme court verdicts and legal opinions to point out several legal indications for the church reunion process in the Dutch Reformed Church family, from which it was obvious that the law in South-Africa sees the church as a âuniversitasâ which must be judged according to the law of contrasts. In chapter four, it was attempted to indicate the direction on the way forward with church reunion, and it was indicated that the Dutch Reformed Church family in South-Africa must urgently tend to the following matters: 1. To clarify a common foundation for a creed for the united church. 2. To clarify the structure and the form of governing of the united church. 3. To clarify the process through which church unity can be accomplished. 4. Clarification of the material matters of the churches at church unity. 5. Clarification of the RCAâs insisting on keeping its own identity. 6. Clarification of matters such as theological training, the mutual recognition of the legitimacy of clergymen, the name, the language and the liturgical matters in the new denomination. 7. Lastly that recognition in mutual relationships is of vital importance.
23

"WEDERDOOPERS" OF "DOOPGEZINDEN"? 'N KAAPS-HOLLANDSE PERSPEKTIEF OP DIE BAPTISTE, 1820-1877

Pretorius, Johannes P 12 September 2006 (has links)
There is a possibility that in practising (church)history writing, certain perceptions about both the past as whole, as well as specific events in the past may be absorbed without evaluating them in the light of primary sources. Britz 7 shows that conscious and unconscious characterizations play a too significant role in South African (church)historiography to be ignored. These characterizational representations do not rest on what can be inferred from primary historical documents. A perception found in Dutch Reformed Church historiography â especially evident in discussions about the South African church development during the 19 th century â concerning the South African Baptists, is that the Baptist Church has had a negative influence on the South African ecclesiastical landscape. This perception can be found in the writings of Hanekom, Kotzé and Van der Watt. This study shows that this perception is not based on the study of primary sources. For the purpose of this study, an examination was made of 19 th century Cape Dutch ecclesiastical magazines.8 These magazines were examined as ecclesiastical documents which both in their nature and their readership, could provide an analysis of the influence which Baptist circles had on the Cape Dutch Church, whether positive or negative. These sources do not only give a good impression of the historical framework within which this research was done, but also of the theological framework with which the Cape Dutch Church identified herself during that time. Two keywords are used in these magazines to report on the (South African) Baptists: "Anabaptists" and "Baptizers." Although the magazines hold that both of these groups had their origin in the 16 th century Radical Reformation, and that both these groups reject infant baptism, a clear distinction is made between them. The "Anabaptists" were consistently portrayed negatively while the "Baptizers" were highly esteemed. The South African Baptists were reckoned under the "Baptizers." The official magazine of the Dutch Reformed Church, De Gereformeerde Kerkbode, even petitioned that the South African Baptists ("Baptizers") not be confused with the "Anabaptists." Finally, it will be shown that Hanekom and Kotzé did not take this positive evaluation of the (South African) Baptists into consideration. Furthermore, Van der Watt took their conclusions over almost verbatim. In this manner a perception arose which was, in all likelihood, based on theological considerations, without proper consideration of primary sources.
24

THE PROPHETIC VOICE OF THE SOUTH AFRICAN COUNCIL OF CHURCHES AFTER 1990 â SEARCHING FOR A RENEWED KAIROS

Göranzon, Anders Bengt Olof 19 October 2011 (has links)
This thesis is a study of how the prophetic voice of the South African Council of Churches (SACC) has changed over time. The focus is on the relationship between the SACC and the South African government of the day. The thesis analyses central texts from the National Conferences of the SACC held from 1969 to 2004. The analysed texts are Minutes and Resolutions, General Secretariesâ Reports, and the Presidentsâ Addresses. The thesis asks how the prophetic voice has changed since 1990, which is chosen as the cutoff year. This choice was not a matter of course. 1990 was the year when Mandela was released and the liberation movements were unbanned; but 1994 could be seen as the more obvious alternative. The author argues that the role of the SACC had already changed by 1990. The period between 1990 and 1994 is different from both the time before 1990 and the post-1994 situation. With the use of a method built on hermeneutical and discourse theoretical premises, a number of orders of discourse are delimited. In the first reading the prophetic voice is analysed in relation to intersectionality (with ethnicity, religious diversity, gender, and social class as suborders of discourse), violence versus non-violence, HIV and AIDS, and the Zimbabwe issue. A number of different discourses are discerned, some of them based on terminology borrowed from the Kairos Document. One paragraph treats the HIV and AIDS pandemic as a case study that deals with how the prophetic voice has been articulated within the different orders and sub-orders of discourse. Special attention is also given to the relationship between a prophetic ministry and a moralising ministry (which also is a kind of prophetic ministry). With inspiration from Walter Brueggemannâs theories about Mosaic and Davidic trajectories in the Old Testament, the second reading deals with the relationship between âthe prophetic voiceâ and âreconciliationâ as two nodal points in the material. Discourses that are discerned here are the âDavidic Propheticâ, âMosaic propheticâ, âState Theologyâ, âChurch Theologyâ, âProphetic Theologyâ, âDevelopmentâ, âLiberationâ, âNation-buildingâ, âCritical Solidarityâ, and âCritical Engagementâ discourses. With the sub-title of the thesis, the author argues that the SACC is searching for a renewed Kairos (or focus). After the dismantling of apartheid, the question is whether or not this focus is found. In the final discussion, reconciliation (and unity) is put alongside justice, development alongside liberation, and liberation alongside reconciliation.
25

DIE CHRISTELIKE GELOOF IN DIE ARABIES-SPREKENDE LANDE VAN DIE MIDDE-OOSTE. âN KERKHISTORIESE STUDIE

Du Plooy, Marius 21 August 2012 (has links)
This study tells in a cursory manner the story of the Christian faith and church in the regions that over the centuries is known as the Arab countries. It is a remarkable story. During the first seven centuries of the Christian era, this faith joined the Arab world and established itself among the Arabs. In large parts it even became the predominant religion. Ecclesiologically and theologically it portrays a differentiated and blended picture. In the seventh century a post- Christian religion - Islam â announced itself and quickly became a religion of this great land. The Christian faith and churches were challenged and were even supplanted in many places. For Christians a new phase in their history was introduced. The study therefore continued to focus on the relationship of the two religions and brings to light how Christians with a typical coexistence as interlocutors continued to preach the gospel linked to its historicity. A second major turning point came in the twelfth century, when the Christian crusades overwhelmed the Muslim world. The crusades as historical events, replaced the original orientation towards the historical Calvary by a new historical image that would in the centuries to come define the relationship between Muslims and Christians. In addition, Islam identified himself in a powerful and dominant world empire. Injustice and power underlie the historical and theological comprehension with which Christians are viewed ever since. The Christian response since the twelfth century was unbundled in the laden concept mission. The research traces this history until the beginning of the 21st century, but focuses on the Protestant version thereof. The 9/11 event strengthened the âcrusadeâ historical image of Muslims and as another powerful filter slid in between them and the proclamation of the gospel. In order to acknowledge and critique the question and image of history held by Muslims, the study is of opinion that the service of the Gospel to Arab Muslims cannot be underpinned by or associated with the Western concept of mission. It can only be embodied in humility, in full acknowledgment of history, based on the event of Calvary.
26

A history of the parish of Banchory-Ternan to 1929 : a study in national and local ecclesiastical interaction

Waugh, Alexander Somerville January 2003 (has links)
The history of the Parish is a significant microcosm of general Scottish Church history.  In particular, it illustrates the medieval and post-Reformation origins of the major obstacles which had to be overcome before the reunion of the Church of Scotland could be achieved in 1929. The first obstacle concerned Church-State relations in matters spiritual.  The UK Parliament’s re-imposition of Patronage in 1712 had indeed caused the Secessions of 1733 and 1752.  However when, before the Disruption (1843), the civil courts acted to support patrons in intruding Parish Ministers contrary to local opinion and also interfered with the structures and membership of the Church Courts, the issue became not so much Patronage as such but that of the Church’s independent spiritual jurisdiction.  Accordingly, the UK Parliament’s abolition of Patronage in 1874 was not enough to heal any of the divisions in Scottish Presbyterianism. The second obstacle concerned the Church’s properties and endowments.  The Churches of the Secessions and the Disruption - and thus the United Free Church from 1900 - had necessarily adopted a voluntary position, free of secular involvement in such matters.  Therefore it was necessary to ensure that, in a reunited Church, the provision, ownership and maintenance of properties, the ownership and control of endowments and thus the determination and funding of all stipends would all come within the Church’s internal structures, free from external responsibility or intervention. Thus an understanding of the historically differentiated elements in the Scottish Church and not least in the Parish of Banchory-Ternan, requires consideration of all such interacting national and local ecclesiastical factors. Accordingly, the object of this thesis is to detail, in their national contexts, relevant developments in the Parish from the medieval period onwards, the resulting fragmentation on Scottish Presbyterianism and subsequent progress culminating in the Reunion of 1929.
27

The episcopal of Walter Langton, bishop of Coventry and Lichfield 1296-1321, with a calendar of his register

Hughes, Jill Blackwell January 1992 (has links)
No description available.
28

Primitive Methodism in Shropshire, 1820-1900

Garratt, Delia January 2002 (has links)
This thesis extends our understanding of the history of the Primitive Methodist Connexion by examining the denomination in a part of the country - Shropshire - in which it enjoyed considerable success during the nineteenth century, but on which there has been very little research. It takes as its starting point the relative lack of historical research on the Methodist circuit, a crucial innovation in religious provision, which gave Wesleyan Methodism and its subsequent offshoots considerable flexibility to coordinate their work in a highly effective way. To expand our understanding of Primitive Methodism in Shropshire, the structure and organisation of the Primitive Methodist circuit is outlined, and the nature of the experience provided for its followers is examined. The socio-economic profile of Primitive Methodist followers is explored and a close correlation between the social background of the preachers and their congregations is established. The factors underlying the denomination's success in the county are examined, and its progress in relation to other religious bodies is analysed. The effects of changing missionary tactics, internal dissension, sub-division and chapel building are investigated. Particular attention is paid to denominational administration, local governance, and changes in the spatial structures of circuits, as Primitive Methodism moved from early evangelistic enthusiasm towards consolidation as a major denomination.
29

Between superstition and skepticism a study of the first-century worldview of the miraculous /

Schuler, Mark T. January 1987 (has links)
Thesis (S.T.M.)--Concorida Seminary, 1987. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 217-227).
30

The motif of order and unity in First Clement and disorder and disunity in the post-apostolic Corinthian church

Peterlin, Davorin. January 1988 (has links)
Thesis (M.C.S.)--Regent College, 1988. / Abstract. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 131-140).

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