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Discerning an African missional ecclesiology in dialogue with two uniting youth movements

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dc.contributor.advisor Kritzinger, J. N. J. (Johannes Nicolaas Jacobus), 1950-
dc.contributor.author Nel, Reginald Wilfred
dc.date.accessioned 2013-07-24T08:45:43Z
dc.date.available 2013-07-24T08:45:43Z
dc.date.issued 2013-02
dc.identifier.citation Nel, Reginald Wilfred (2013) Discerning an African missional ecclesiology in dialogue with two uniting youth movements, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/10160> en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/10160
dc.description.abstract Churches are confronted with the reality of younger, mobile generations challenging existing understandings of church and witness. They seem to live according to a different (postcolonial) script. This study probes the question as to how these churches are to understand and respond meaningfully, but also missiologically, to these transformations. Coming as a missiologist from a particular ecclesiological, theological, cultural background, I had two rationales for this study, namely to review the current theories we have about church and mission, i.e., missiological ecclesiology, and in order to do this, we need to craft a sensitive and creative dialogue, in the form of a missiological methodology with younger people. I address these rationales, guided by a research question: How can I design a creative dialogue with younger generations, to pick up the impulses, in order to discern a Southern African missional ecclesiology. Working with the metaphor of ―remixing‖, this discernment process started off where I engaged my own embeddedness. These were the older ―samples‖ to work with, in order to produce something new and in tune with the sensibilities, the ―soul‖ of newer communities. I then attempt to understand the current social transformations that younger generations are responding to. Through this, I want to design a methodology for a creative dialogue with these youth movements on the basis of an intersubjective epistemology. Using this methodology, I could develop a thick description from the dialogue with the two uniting youth movements. Lastly, I present the engagement (remixing) between these rich new impulses with the old (the existing), in carving out an appropriate missional ecclesiology for the audiences I‘ve been with. Starting with an outdated and colonial gereformeerde missionary ecclesiology, but then also the anti-colonial ecclesiologies and a postmodern (predominantly Western) emerging missionary ecclesiology, I discern a particular postcolonial African ecclesiology, which I call a Southern African missional ecclesiology. Instead of exclusion, I propose remixing church in terms of five dimensions as social network, spiritual home, mobile community, movement in the Holy Spirit and as story. These can serve as a map to guide Southern African congregations in their dialogue with younger generations. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (xii, 415 leaves)
dc.language.iso en en
dc.rights University of South Africa
dc.subject Youth Movements en
dc.subject Missional Church en
dc.subject Missional ecclesiology en
dc.subject African Theology en
dc.subject Postcolonial en
dc.subject Hybridity en
dc.subject Mobile Community en
dc.subject Network Society en
dc.subject Inclusivity en
dc.subject.ddc 266.00968
dc.subject.lcsh Missions -- Africa, Southern en
dc.subject.lcsh Youth movements -- Africa, Southern en
dc.subject.lcsh Church work with youth -- Africa, Southern en
dc.subject.lcsh Postcolonial theology -- Africa, Southern en
dc.title Discerning an African missional ecclesiology in dialogue with two uniting youth movements en
dc.type Thesis en
dc.description.department Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology en
dc.description.degree D. Th. (Missiology)


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