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An enquiry into Advent and Lenten Cycles of the Anglican and Roman Catholic Eucharistic Collects

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dc.contributor.advisor Wolfaardt, J. A.
dc.contributor.advisor Visscher, A.
dc.contributor.author Savage, Allan Maurice
dc.date.accessioned 2015-01-23T04:24:12Z
dc.date.available 2015-01-23T04:24:12Z
dc.date.issued 1995-06
dc.identifier.citation Savage, Allan Maurice (1995) An enquiry into Advent and Lenten Cycles of the Anglican and Roman Catholic Eucharistic Collects, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/17669> en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/17669
dc.description.abstract There is dissatisfaction with the Collects when scholastically (classically) understood. An alternative phenomenological understanding is an engaging and artistic philosophical enquiry. Phenomenological philosophical enquiry engages the individual in meaningful interpretation and construction of the life-world founded on a non-dichotomous ontology. Phenomenological enquiry (existential philosophy) interprets the present and relates to the future such as is not possible in scholastic (classical) philosophy. The early twentieth century philosophers, Edmund Husserl and Martin Heidegger, conceived a phenomenological method of interpretation which innovatively placed the subject and object in a dialectical union. Understanding the Collects phenomenologically presents new insights susceptible to consensus within a community. At present, the Collects are structured on the principles of classical (dichotomous) ontology. The Collects reflect the collective religious meaning of the life-world and provide a vision upon which a community may build. In phenomenological interpretation an individual and a community, in the presence of that which is divine, participate as co-creators of the life-world. Thus, in contemporary western society phenomenological methodology ~ay be more helpful and therefore more desirable than scholastic methodology for theological interpretation. The hypothesis that phenomenological philosophy is more helpful, thus more desirable, than scholastic philosopl1y began as a hunch on my part. From a theological perspective, I examined data obtained from a particular focus group. Intelligent reflection, phenomenologically not classically understood, is a working principle in this thesis. en
dc.description.abstract Taking into account phenomenological methodology and conceptualising the problem as originally and scientifically as circumstances permit, I offer a resolution to the dissatisfaction with the Collects. I suggest replacing scholastic ontological understanding with the more helpful phenomenological ontological understanding in liturgical interpretation. This replacement-solution hypothesis is evidenced in this study minimally, but sufficiently, to conclude that such replacement is occurring in theological understanding. There are clear existential intimations of a shift from classical understanding to phenomenological understanding. The results of the survey show traditional understanding to be favoured, however. In the concluding remarks, I evaluate my findings and suggest what direction future studies may take. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (vii, 285 leaves)
dc.language.iso en
dc.subject Qualitative study en
dc.subject Phenomenology en
dc.subject Liturgy en
dc.subject Collects en
dc.subject Eucharistic prayer en
dc.subject Advent and Lent en
dc.subject Anglican/Roman Catholic worship en
dc.subject Existential interpretation en
dc.subject Scholastic understanding en
dc.subject Sitz-im-Leben en
dc.subject Life-world en
dc.subject.ddc 264.001
dc.subject.lcsh Philosophy and religion en
dc.subject.lcsh Catholic Church en
dc.subject.lcsh Lent en
dc.subject.lcsh Church of England en
dc.subject.lcsh Eucharistic prayers en
dc.subject.lcsh Advent en
dc.title An enquiry into Advent and Lenten Cycles of the Anglican and Roman Catholic Eucharistic Collects en
dc.type Thesis
dc.description.department Philosophy, Practical and Systematic Theology
dc.description.degree D. Th. (Practical Theology)


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