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1 Timothy 2:8-3:1 (a), women's ordination in the light of the Christian self-definition of women in EphesusCairns, Helen Dorothy 11 1900 (has links)
Throughout church history, traditional interpretations of I Timothy 2:8-3:1 (a) have excluded women from ordained ministry in the church universal. The aim of this dissertation was to propose an alternative hermeneutical framework to effect fresh understanding of this text. A social-scientific approach utilised . models from sociology and communication theory. The socio-religious climate of Asia Minor particularly Ephesus between 59 and 64 C E is described. An assessment is made of the status of women in Asia Minor as well as in Hellenism, Romanism and Judaism. A textual analysis provided pointers to the aspects under research. Research findings strongly suggest that neither the text or the world beyond can be used to exclude women from full participation at all levels in the church. / Biblical and Ancient Studies / M.A. (Biblical Studies)
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A comparative study of the Paraclete statements and references to the Holy Spirit in the Johannine GospelJoubert, Johann van Dijk 19 April 2007 (has links)
Please read the "Conclusions" in the section 05chapter5 of this document / Thesis (PhD (NT Studies))--University of Pretoria, 2007. / New Testament Studies / unrestricted
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Virtue and vice: the personal application of epistolary ethical lists in their historical, canonical, and hermeneutical contextsFrench, John William 30 November 2003 (has links)
Interpretation of Scripture is not complete until it has been applied. Virtue and Vice examines the personal application of New Testament ethical lists.
Catalogues of virtue and vice were common modes of instruction for both Greco-Roman philosophers and the rabbis of Hellenistic Judaism. New Testament writers also used this method to teach Christian morality. Their theological perspective and worldview, however, came from the Old Testament and its fulfilment in Jesus, the Messiah.
In context, the NT ethical lists instruct, motivate, warn, and guide Christians toward right behaviour and harmonious relationships. The lists occur as one mode of instruction in larger paraenetic material. They must therefore be studied as sub-genres of these larger units. The classic list of Philippians 4:8 provides a guide to moral discernment (and action) that preserves the unity of the congregation in the humility of Christ.
Personal application takes places in a biblical theological framework. The interpretation of a passage is viewed within the overall biblical progress of God's redemptive purposes. Biblical theology also assists the student to position himself/herself in relation to the passage under study. The literary nature of scriptural texts makes it necessary to distinguish the abiding theological principles from the merely cultural or occasional. A principle can be re-applied in a parallel contemporary context. Different genres (such as ethical lists) suggest ways to apply the text. For instance, ethical lists serve as ideals and examples of Christian conduct. The personal dynamics of faith in Christ, dependence upon the Holy Spirit, and a continual process of obedience contribute to the relevance of the text. These three together give the confidence that God's Word may be both understood and lived with fresh power for today.
Several of the catalogues occur in contexts of Christian unity in the midst of ethnic and social diversity (Gal. 5:16-25;Eph. 4-6;Phil. 4:8;Col. 3:1-17). They depict an ideal of oneness in Christ between Jew and Gentile. This new identity in Christ does not remove, but transcends ethnic and status differences in local congregations. Models for intentionally implementing Christian unity are assimilation, diversity, and networking. / Systematic Theology / D.Th.
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Freiheit zum Verzicht: Exegetisch-Missiologische Untersuchung zur Missionarischen Ethik in Afrika nach 1. Korinther 9,1-27 / Freedom for renunciation: an exegetic missiological study on missionary ethic in Africa based on 1 Corinthians 9:1-27Meier, Alfred 01 January 2002 (has links)
Text in German and English / Basing the following on the premise that one-seded balance of power in mission work impedes fellowship and partnership (chapter 2), it is the intention of this treatise to investigate, with the help of the method of text pragmatics and incorporating the Malian context (chapter 1), what findings from 1 Corinthians 9 are helpful towards dealing with the problem (chapters 3-4). Paul describes the problem of financial support in detail, yet actually it serves to lead to the real aim of the text, i.e. Paul, while in Corinth, lived exemplarily by renouncing, on his own free will, his apostolic rights, thus demonstrating a model of how the "strong" and the "weak" could treat each other in good partnership.
Paul lived his apostolic freedom being bound to Christ and in responsibility for people. This mentality of incarnational lifestyle (chapter 5) enables us to put the missionary's behaviour and the partnership problem between Western mission agency and African church in their proper place both, christlogically, and ecclesiologically (chapter 6).
When applying this to practice in missionary life (chapter 7), it becomes evident ...
- what consequences renunciation on his own free will has on the missionary's status and social and communicative behaviour (chapter 7.2 and 7.3);
- how "power, control and one-sidedness" may be reduced where partners in missionary work cooperate.
When putting this in concrete terms we have to ask, how missionaries can contribute to strengthen their partner in the host country by renouncing their right to a say, within the structures on the national level (chapter 7.4). Additionally, possibilities of the African partner having more say in administering finances and in where the missionaries are to serve, are shown.
On the international level, suitable management structures are to make clear that the West is ready to renounce one-sided control, and to invite African partners to share responsibilities on the highest level. Finally, it becomes clear that more interchurch partnership certainly reduces the hegemony of the mission agency, but, in the end, may stimulate the missionary effort (chapter 7.5). Annotations on financial support of missionary work ends this treatise. / Ausgehend von der Prämisse, dass einseitige Machtverhältnisse in der Missionsarbeit Gemeinschaft und Partnerschaft negativ beeinträchtigen (Kap. 2) verfolgt die vorliegende Studie das Ziel, mit Hilfe der textpragmatischen Methodik und unter Einbeziehung des malischen Kontextes (Kap. 1) zu untersuchen, welche Einsichten aus 1 Kor. 9 hilfreich sind, um dieser Problematik zu begegnen (Kap. 3-4). Obwohl Paulus das Problem der materiellen Unterstützung ausführlich darstellt, dient es letztlich nur als Hinführung zum eigentlichen Skopus des Textes. Dieser besteht darin, dass Paulus in Korinth freiheitlichen Verzicht auf Inanspruchnahme apostolischer Rechte exemplarisch gelebt hat und so ein Modell aufzeigt, wie "Starke" und "Schwache" partnerschaftlich miteinander umgehen können.
Paulus lebt apostolische Freiheit als Bindung an Christus und in Verantwortung für Menschen. Diese Mentalität des inkarnatorischen Lebensstil (Kap. 5) ermöglicht es, das Verhalten des Missionars heute und die Partnerschaftsproblematik zwischen westlicher Missionsgesellschaft und afrikanischer Kirche sowohl christologisch als auch ekklesiologisch einzuordnen (Kap. 6).
Bei der missionspraktischen Anwendung (Kap. 7) wird deutlich, ...
- wie sich freiheitlicher Verzicht auf den Status und das soziale und kommunikative Verhalten des Missionars auswirkt (Kap. 7.2 und 7.3).
- wie "Macht, Kontrolle und Einseitigkeiten" in der Kooperation der am missionarischen Handeln beteiligten Partnern reduziert werden können.
Die Konkretionen beziehen sich auf die Frage, wie Missionare im Gastland durch freiwilligen Verzicht auf Mitspracherechte in den Strukturen auf nationaler Ebene zur Stärkung des Partners beitragen können (Kap. 7.4). Des Weiteren werden die Möglichkeiten verstärkter Mitsprache afrikanischer Partner bei der Verwaltung von Finanzen und dem Einsatzort der Missionare aufgezeigt.
Auf internationaler Ebenen sollen adäquate Leitungsstrukturen die Bereitschaft des Westens zum Verzicht auf einseitige Kontrolle verdeutlichen und afrikanische Partner zur Mitverantwortung auf höchster Ebene einladen. Schliesslich wird deutlich, dass verstärkte zwischenkirchliche Partnerschaften zwar die Vormachtstellung der Missionsgesellschaft reduziert, aber letztlich die Missionsarbeit befruchten kann (Kap. 7.5). Anmerkungen zur finanziellen Unterstützung missionarischer Arbeit beschliessen die Abhandlung. / Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology / D.Th. (Missiology)
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Paul's argumentation on sexual issues in Corinth, specifically pertaining to 1 Corinthians 5-7Schaller, Markus 31 January 2005 (has links)
This study is devoted to Paul's rhetorical argumentation on sexual issues (`porneia') in Cor-inth, and focuses especially 1. Corinthians 5:1-7:9.
Paul uses `porneia' according to the Jewish tradition as body violation, pollution and as Satanic power. The term describes different forms of sexual behaviour which Paul rejects (like incest or intercourse with prostitutes at Roman banquets) and can be summarised as `illegiti-mate sexual intercourse'. For Paul, the only legitimate sexual intercourse is that within mar-riage (7:1-9). Therefore Paul's reference to the marriage is his answer to the problem of `por-neia', even if Paul sees many advantages in celibacy.
As a probable background which explains the occurrences of `porneia' in Corinth, we see next to sexual abstinence within existing marriages (7:1-7) the strong influence of a Roman élite, which based its behaviour on hedonistic slogans and on the mortality of the body. Ac-cordingly, Paul's argumentation emphasises the high significance of the human body (6:12-20) and ascribes an eschatological perspective to it with the references to the resurrection of the body in 1 Corinthians 6:14 and chapter 15. / New Testament and Ancient Near Eastern Studies / (M. Th. (New Testament))
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Gossip's role in constituting Jesus as a shamanic figure in John's gospelDaniels, John William 11 1900 (has links)
Reading the Fourth Gospel, one is struck by the amount of talk about Jesus. Many of the reports in John describing such talk reflect the social process of gossip in concert with other processes and dynamics involved in constituting social personages in the ancient Mediterranean world.
Although there have been a few general treatments of gossip in the New Testament, none have focused on the subject of the gossip in John’s gospel, Jesus, the generative cause of the emergence of gossip traditions. The aim of this research project is to explore how gossip is involved in constituting Jesus as a shamanic figure in the Fourth Gospel.
Building on the research of Pieter F. Craffert, and thus beginning with understanding Jesus as a shamanic figure, a viable framework for identifying and explaining features and functions of gossip is constructed after considering sociolinguistic studies and a number of ethnographies of extant traditional cultures of the Mediterranean. The framework is then brought to bear on texts in the Fourth Gospel reporting or describing gossip, in order to see how gossip contributes to constituting Jesus as a shamanic figure.
As a result, this research offers a significant contribution to New Testament studies as it 1) represents an exploration and appropriation of gossip that has scarcely been exploited in the field, 2) provides a viable theoretical framework for positioning gossip vis-à-vis other pivotal first-century Mediterranean social values and processes, 3) models a new way to see and understand John’s gospel, and 4) is suggestive of an alternative to the reigning paradigm of conventional historical Jesus research in that it involves linking literary features about oral phenomena in John to a historically plausible figure thoroughly embedded in his social, cultural, and historical world. / New Testament / D.Th. (New Testament)
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Alms or legs? : a contextual reading of Acts 3:1-10 in the light of an alternative theory of human developmentSpeckman, McGlory Tando 06 1900 (has links)
Text in English / The central thesis of the present study, entitled Alms or legs? A contextual reading of Acts 3:1-10 in the light of an alternative theory of hwnan development, is that when read contextually, some biblical texts are capable of empowering individuals and small groups for social and structural transformation (Human Development). A contextual reading of the story of the crippled beggar at the Jerusalem temple entrance (Acts 3: 1- 10), within a context of begging and lack of initiative in a small community in the Eastern Cape provides a good example of such texts. The "horizons" of the text's author and the text's present reader are drawn together, in the creation of a "symbolic universe" for the context of underdevelopment. This serves as a vision, a positive alternative
for the underdeveloped and non-developed communities.
Following an introductory chapter in which the purpose and context of the study are outlined, and methodological problems introduced, the study proceeds, in the second chapter, with an outline of the contextual approach, undergirded by the "alternative theory" of development, namely, a people centered development (as opposed to the
"economic growth" approach). This does not only result in a grid or categories against which to read the text, it also provides a broad framework within which subsequent discussions of the subjects of beggars (Chapter 3) and miracles (Chapter 4) respectively,
take place. The topics of beggars and miracles, like "alms or legs", are used on the same semantic level, thus suggesting that if beggars constitute a problem, then miracles provide a solution.
In communities of antiquity under investigation, no evidence is found to support almsgiving as the basis of Christian social action. On the one hand, Christians advocated charity, which was a reflection of deep friendship and oneness; on the other, miracles in the Christian context served in part, to integrate those on the margins into the community (or church) by transforming their physical and psychological conditions.
This makes a developmental reading, which then follows in chapter 5, the main chapter of the study, possible. The conclusions of chapter 5, which amount to a vision for Human Development, lead to the concluding chapter (Chapter 6) in which a way forward for development in the post-apartheid South Africa is suggested. / New Testament / D. Th. (New Testament)
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Early Buddhist interpersonal ethics : a study of the Singalovada Suttanta and its contemporary relevanceClasquin, Michel 11 1900 (has links)
This dissertation discusses the Singalovada suttanta, a
text which is part of the Pali Canon and variants of which
are also found in the Mahayana corpus. The Pali Text
Society edition of this text is translated into both English
and Afrikaans, and its place within the greater scheme of
Buddhist religious philosophy and canonical literature is
examined. It is concluded that the Singalovada suttanta is
an integral part of Buddhist ethical teaching and that it
displays clear connections to fundamental early Buddhist
philosophy. The text is also checked for internal coherence
and for variation between its different versions.
It is shown how the ethical principles and practices that are
expounded in the singalovada Suttanta can be applied to
life in a modern society, and what this implies for the
relationship between contemporary society, philosophy,
religion and ethics generally / Religious Studies and Arabic / M.A. (Religious Studies)
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Teksbetekenis en kanoniese betekenis : 'n empiriese studie aan die hand van 1 Konings 21Cloete, Jan Petrus 06 1900 (has links)
Text in Afrikaans / "Teksbetekenis" staan sedert die opkoms van strukturalisme
in die middelpunt van die diskussie in literere Kringe. Die
ontwikkeling van lesersgeorienteerde teoriee en die opkoms
van die konsep van "intertekstualiteit" het veral bygedra
tot die bevraagtekening van die opvatting dat tekste 'n
"eintlike" betekenis "het".
In konserwatiewe kerklike kringe word daar egter nog baie
gemaak van die Skrif as 'n regulatiewe dokument met een
sensurerende eintlike of korrekte betekenis. Die opvatting
is ook dat prediking Skrifprediking moet wees waarin slegs
die Skrifwoord 'n plek het. Die opvatting strook nie met
literere insigte nie.
In hierdie studie word sekere aspekte van die literere
gestalte van die Masoretiese 1 Konings 21 ontleed en die
resultaat hiervan vergelyk met soortgelyke analises van
die weergawe van die verhaal in vertalings (LXX, Vulgaat,
Wycliffe, Purvey, en die Geneva Bible), oorvertellings
(deur Josefus en Lukas), kommentare (in die kantlyne van
Purvey-en Geneefse vertalings), preke en in 'n akademiese
artikel. Die bevinding is dat elke weergawe, ongeag die
genre daarvan, die verhaal op een of ander manier verander
het en dat interpretasies wissel van mindere uitbouings tot
die skep van nuwe verhale. Die situasie van die interpreteer-
der het telkens die interteks gevorm wat 'n nuwe vertelling
laat ontstaan het.
Hoewel tekste betekenis mag he (wat dit moontlik maak om
hulle met mekaar te vergelyk) is elke interpretasie 'n
kontekstualisering wat onvermydelik 'n nuwe teks produseer.
Die bevinding bring konserwatief-teologiese definisies van
Skrifbeskoulike konsepte soos kanon, kanoniese betekenis,
Skrifgesag en Skrifprediking ernstig in gedrang en noodsaak
dringende herbesinning op daardie terreine / Since the rise of structuralism "textual meaning" has been at
the centre of the literary debate. The formation of reader
orientated theories and a concept like "intertextuality"
contributed a great deal to the questioning of the idea that
texts "have" a "real" meaning.
However, in conservative church circles much is still being
made of scripture as a regulative document with one censuring
"real" or correct meaning. The conviction is, further, that
preaching should be "scriptural", that is, sermons should
only repeat what Scripture says. This view does not tally
with insights gained from current literary theory.
In this study certain aspects of the literary shape of the
Massoretic version of 1 Kings 21 are analysed and the results
compared with similar analyses of accounts of this narrative
in translations (LXX, Vulgate, Wycliffe, Purvey and the
Geneva Bible), re-tellings (by Josephus and Luke),
comnentaries (Purvey and Geneva Bible margins), sermons and
an academic article. It was found that each account,
irrespective of its genre, in some or other way changed the
narrative and that the interpretations vary from lesser
extentions to the creation of completely new narratives. The
situation of the interpreter constantly functioned as the
intertext generating a new narrative.
Even though texts may "possess" meaning (enabling one to
compare them with one another) every interpretation is a
contextualisation inevitably producing a new text. This
conclusion seriously questions conservative theological
definitions of concepts such as canon, canonical meaning,
scriptural authority and scriptural preaching and
necessitates urgent rethinking in these areas / Biblical and Ancient Studies / D. Th. (Ou Testament)
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Reinventing ourselves : white male biblical scholars and the responsibility towards the otherPérez, Garcés Juan Luis 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (DTh)--Stellenbosch University, 2003 / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The problem discussed in this thesis is how to resist and subvert the complicity of
biblical studies with neo-colonialism as a white male biblical scholar. Traditionally
the interpretation of the bible by white male biblical scholars has not been
recognised as an interested and situated practice, unlike the interpretations by
readers from marginalised backgrounds. The thesis put forward here is that it is
the other - understood as infinite and irreducible - that opens up the habitual
vicious circle of identity formation and identifiable practices. This interruption is a
moment of true decision, i.e. a moment where the self cannot follow any preestablished
ethico-political programme but has to respond in a truly innovative
way. This innovation is understood to be brought about in a double strategy,
which juxtaposes a hegemonic practice with its binary opposition in a nondialectical
way. The space in which such an interruption occurs is the interstitial
borderline, the liminal space and interface between the self and its other. In the
first part, the thesis critically engages with the work of three white male biblical
scholars - Daniel Patte, Jeffrey Staley, and Gerald West - who try to overcome
the traditional academic discourse of biblical studies by problematising the
relationship between their own identities and their academic practices. In the
second part, deconstruction, as shorthand for the work of Jacques Derrida, is
subsequently presented as a thoroughly postcolonial critique of western
ontological concepts and as a viable manner in which to theorise the critical
contributions of Patte, Staley, and West. In the third and final part, three
approaches within biblical studies - historicism, the bible as popular text, and
literary approaches - are singled out and discussed as possible liminal spaces
within which the identity of the white male biblical scholar can be reinvented in
responsibility to the other. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Die vraagstuk onder bespreking in hierdie verhandeling is hoe om, as blanke
manlike bybelgeleerde die onderlinge medepligtigheid tussen die studie van die
bybel en neo-kolonialisme te weerstaan en te ondermyn. Volgens tradisie word die
vertolking van die bybel deur blanke manlike bybelgeleerdes nie erken as 'n
ge·interesseerde en gelee praktyk nie, in teenstelling met die vertolkings van
geleerdes afkomstig uit minderheidsgroepe. Die stelling wat hier gemaak word is dat
dit die 'ander' is - begryp as oneindig en onverminderbaar - wat die gebruiklike
bose kring van identiteitsvorming en identifiseerbare praktyke oopmaak. Hierdie
onderbreking is 'n oomblik van ware besluitneming, i.e. 'n oomblik waarbinne die self
nie enige voorafbepaalde eties-politiese program kan volg nie, maar waarbinne die
self werklik op 'n oorspronklike en nuwe wyse moet reageer. Dit word verstaan dat
hierdie nuwigheid tot stand gebring word in a dubbele strategie wat die heersende
praktyk op 'n nie-dialektiese wyse langs sy binere opposisie plaas. Die ruimte
waarbinne hierdie onderbreking plaasvind is die tussengrenslyn, die oorgangsruimte
en skakel tussen die self en die 'ander'. Die eerste gedeelte van die verhandeling is
'n kritiese bespreking van die werke van drie blanke manlike bybelgeleerdes,
naamlik Daniel Patte, Jeffrey Staley en Gerald West, wat poog om die tradisionele
akademiese diskoers oor die studie van die bybel te bemeester deur die verhouding
tussen hulle eie identiteite en hul akademiese gebruike te problematiseer. Die
tweede gedeelte bied dekonstruksie, as snelskrif vir die werk van Jaques Derrida
aan as 'n deurdagte post-koloniale kritiek van westerse ontologiese konsepte en as
'n lewensvatbare wyse waarop die kritiese bydraes van Patte, Staley en West
teoretiseer kan word. In die derde en laaste gedeelte word drie benaderings tot die
studie van die bybel, naamlik 'n historiese benadering, die bybel as populere teks en
litirere benaderings uitgesonder en bespreek as moontlike oorgangsruimtes
waarbinne die identiteit van die blanke manlike bybelgeleerde herversin en bedink
kan word met verantwoordelikheid teenoor die 'ander'.
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