The Bible in Korean Christian Life and Mission

Author(s):  
Je Soon Chung
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Greger Andersson

Pentecostal hermeneutics: How do Swedish Pentecostal preachers interpret the Bible? In this article I present a study of Swedish Pentecostal preachers’ interpretations and applications of biblical texts. The study is based on 19 sermons that were published on the website “Söndag hela veckan”, January 19, 2020, by churches with “Pingst” (Pentecostal) in their name. The aim of the study was to contribute to the field of Pentecostal hermeneutics through an analysis of interpretative patterns in present day preachers’ sermons. The study shows that the preachers address a putative desire for a more devoted Christian life and that they do not practice exegetics in the sense of making historical readings searching for the original authors’ intention. Instead they apply the texts to the present here and now, thereby bringing the texts from them to us. This is done by means of generalizations, abstractions, and analogies in the form of parables and narratives. In this way the studied preachers endeavor to encourage and challenge their listeners to continue searching for the richer Christian life they long for. In relation to previous studies, I claim that the studied sermons constitute a special act of interpretation that cannot be compared with academic exegetics. I also suggest that the hermeneutics in the sermons cannot be described as narrative or, for example, poststructuralist. There are some marginal similarities with interpretations of fiction, but the sermons can on the whole be described as “a distinctive interpretive activity”. The message of the sermons is consistent with previous descriptions of Pentecostal theology, except that the preachers do not emphasize the story of the Pentecostal movement and, more remarkably, that traditional eschatology hardly has any place in the sermons.


2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 25-42
Author(s):  
Yonatan Alex Arifianto ◽  
Reni Triposa ◽  
Paulus Karaeng Lembongan

Abstract Christianity in the spiritual growth and quantity of the church cannot be separated from believers who carry out the mandate of the Great Commission. But in the accompanying journey of God there is not much that can be done by believers in mission and discipleship. So with that focus and purpose of this research is to answer the research question of how the Bible study of mission and discipleship in the Great Commission and its implications for Christian life today. While the problem that occurs in this research work is how Discipleship and mission are not properly understood in the current era so that many prioritize mission but override discipleship or vice versa. But the benefits of this research are: first, the importance of mission in the Great Commission, then the importance of discipleship for believers and continuity and the last implies mission and discipleship as life priorities. To describe the biblical study of mission and discipleship in the Great Commission and its implications for contemporary Christian life, researchers used library research methods with quantitative descriptive approaches.


2013 ◽  
Vol 66 (4) ◽  
pp. 448-465
Author(s):  
Marsaura Shukla

AbstractMost maps of theology in the twentieth century, particularly theology in North America, would include the delineation of revisionist theology and postliberal theology as mutually exclusive, opposed options in theological method. This article begins to challenge the contours of this received map through a comparison of David Tracy and Hans Frei, pre-eminent figures in revisionist and postliberal theology, respectively. I show that, for all their differences, both Tracy and Frei posit the reader–text relationship as the site and even in some sense the source of revelation. Their turn to reading is motivated by the perception of a certain loss or estrangement characterising contemporary religiosity. Though the scope and details of their description of the problem differ, there is a similarity in the vision of Christian life which stands in contrast to the contemporary situation. For both, their visions of Christian life can be articulated through the notion of orthodoxy, understood in its full sense as referring to a coherent, vibrant and all-encompassing immersion in Christian doctrine and practice. Engagement in proper reading practice becomes for each the entrance into and sign of full participation in religious life, analogous to the role of belief in traditional notions of orthodoxy. I suggest that Tracy and Frei represent two forms of ‘theology of ortholexis’ or ‘right reading’. The turn to reading is most obvious in Frei, who explicitly links the modern difficulty in attaining a sense of the coherence of Christian history, doctrine and lived life to a misconstrual of the nature of the biblical text which leads to a misguided reading practice. Yet Tracy also places the model of reading as conversation at the centre of his revisionist account of the possibility of a contemporary experience of the authority of the Bible and the power of the Christian tradition more generally. In these ‘theologies of ortholexis’, a constellation of modern anxieties concerning the limits and possibilities of our knowledge and experience of the divine are addressed through positing the reader–text relationship forged through proper reading practice as the place of and way to authentic revelation.


1993 ◽  
Vol 44 (3) ◽  
pp. 390-414 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julian Haseldine

The proliferation of new monastic orders in the twelfth century presented the Church with a dilemma which had previously challenged the theologians of Christendom: the flowering of diversity within the unity of the faith. Just as theologians had had to resolve contradictions among the writings of the Fathers – the primary authorities for the interpretation of the Bible, and hence the elucidation of God's truth as it was perceived – so, in the new climate of monastic revival, ecclesiastical leaders had to come to terms with the existence of a variety of new interpretations of the Rule of St Benedict, and indeed that of St Augustine – the primary guides to the living of a true Christian life.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 94-106
Author(s):  
Tiur Imeldawati ◽  
Yayan Erina Br. Regar

AbstrakUntuk menghasilkan hidup sebagai seorang kristen yang berkualitas diperlukan hidup sesuai prinsip-prinsip pertubumbuhan yang terdapat dalam Alkitab. Pertumbuhan rohani jemaat harus menjadi visi dan misi gereja Tuhan. Tujuan penelitian ini ialah untuk menemukan dan memaparkan prinsip -prinsip pertumbuhan rohani dalam Efesus 5 :1- 21 yang masih relevan terhadap prinsip pertumbuhan rohani; dan untuk menjelaskan cara pengupayaan pertumbuhan rohani jemaat GPdI Gunung Moria Bedagai sesuai dengan pertumbuhan rohani Efesus 5 :1- 21; serta untuk membuktikan adanya hubungan prinsip pertumbuhan rohani dalam Efesus 5 :1- 21 yang memiliki kolerasi terhadap prinsip pertumbuhan kerohanian jemaat GPdI Gunung Moria Bedagai.Katakunci : prinsip, pertumbuhan rohani, GPdI Gunung Moria AbstractTo live a quality Christian life requires living according to the principles of growth found in the Bible. The spiritual growth of the congregation must be the vision and mission of God's church. The purpose of this research is to find and explain the principles of spiritual growth in Ephesians 5: 1–21 which are still relevant to the principles of spiritual growth; and to explain how to nurture the spiritual growth of the GPdI Gunung Moria Bedagai congregation in accordance with the spiritual growth of Ephesians 5: 1-21; and to prove that there is a relationship between the principles of spiritual growth in Ephesians 5: 1-21 which correlate with the principles of spiritual growth in the GPdI Mount Moria Bedagai church  Keywords: principle, spiritual growth, GPdI Mount of Moriah


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin L. Nelwan

A paper about the role of fasting as set out in the Bible, and its implication for contemporary Christian life.


2019 ◽  
Vol 70 (3) ◽  
pp. 326-342
Author(s):  
Stephen Pattemore

The urgency of the ecological crisis has come too late for the West to change significantly the language of its Bible translations. Yet in many “ecological hotspots,” first Bible translations are being made. Previously I argued for minority-language Bibles that are “green to the core,” taking account of the contemporary ecological crisis. These would involve a careful choice of vocabulary and paratextual materials to help the audience understand texts that impact the earth in their first context and in the contemporary world, in an effort to demonstrate that care of the earth is part of the “normal Christian life.” This paper examines passages from Revelation to help frame them in these terms for the translator and suggest relevant translation choices and places where notes might prove helpful. The aim is to provide a model for an “Ecological Guide to Translating the Bible.”


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