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A biblical-theological study of the New Testament church as God's designed agent and setting for the ministry of mutual Christian care

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dc.contributor.advisor Konig, Adrio
dc.contributor.author Jones, Robert David
dc.date.accessioned 2015-09-11T08:48:34Z
dc.date.available 2015-09-11T08:48:34Z
dc.date.issued 2015-06
dc.identifier.citation Jones, Robert David (2015) A biblical-theological study of the new testament church as God's designed agent and setting for the ministry of mutual christian care, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/19053> en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/19053
dc.description.abstract The New Testament writings provide abundant information about the mutual care ministries of church members toward one another. These ministries cover the New Testament landscape, with various examples and commands in both the narratives in Acts and the prescriptive one-another passages in the epistles. Sadly, standard systematic theology manuals give little treatment to this major New Testament theme. Many say little about any form of church ministry, fewer address ministries to members, and fewer still address member-to-member ministries, mentioning only the work of elders and deacons. Chapter one overviews the New Testament evidence and summarizes the deficiencies among systematic theologians. It provides justification for my thesis, namely, that the New Testament presents the church as God’s designed agent and setting for the ministry of mutual Christian care Chapter two explores four ways the New Testament uses the term church: household church, citywide church, regional church, and universal church. We focus on the first two, with the stress on local churches meeting in homes as the normal setting for shared life and mutual ministry. Moreover, the pictures of the church as Christ’s body, God’s family, and God’s new priesthood encouraged members to serve their Christian brothers and sisters. Chapter three demonstrates that the ultimate foundation of all New Testament one-another ministry is found in the salvation work of the triune God. God, Christ, and his Spirit provide models and motives for church members, as recipients of his redemptive grace, to minister to each other. God’s love in Christ, Christ’s self-sacrificial death on the cross, and the Spirit’s relational graces (e.g., the “fruit” of the Spirit) and ministry gifts guide and empower church members to care for each other. Chapter four examines seventeen varied ways that the New Testament describes and prescribes these practical ministries of mutual care, organizing them under three headings—attitudes, actions, and words. These seventeen ministry categories show the wide range of ways in which the New Testament called church members to care for the physical and spiritual needs of fellow members. Chapter five provides a brief conclusion with five summary lessons and some suggestions for further study. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (235 leaves)
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Ministry en
dc.subject Mutual ministry en
dc.subject Care en
dc.subject Church en
dc.subject Local church en
dc.subject House church en
dc.subject Church en
dc.subject Family en
dc.subject One-another en
dc.subject Fellowship en
dc.subject Spiritual gifts en
dc.subject.ddc 254.10968
dc.subject.lcsh Caring -- Religious aspects -- Christianity
dc.subject.lcsh Church
dc.subject.lcsh Pastoral theology
dc.subject.lcsh Church development, New
dc.title A biblical-theological study of the New Testament church as God's designed agent and setting for the ministry of mutual Christian care en
dc.type Thesis en
dc.description.department Philosophy, Practical and Systematic Theology en
dc.description.degree D.Th. (Systematic Theology) en


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