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Foundations for spirituality : a 'hermeneutic of reform' for a church facing crises inspired by St Francis of Assisi

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dc.contributor.advisor Lombaard, Christo
dc.contributor.author Thönissen, Cornelis Jacques
dc.date.accessioned 2015-09-17T08:48:01Z
dc.date.available 2015-09-17T08:48:01Z
dc.date.issued 2014-06
dc.identifier.citation Thönissen, Cornelis Jacques (2014) Foundations for spirituality : a 'hermeneutic of reform' for a church facing crises inspired by St Francis of Assisi, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/19100> en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/19100
dc.description.abstract Either relational contact with God is seen to be existentially attainable or God will become increasingly irrelevant to contemporary society. For Church identity and effectiveness as she serves the world, it is vital that God's initiating power can be seen to impact on this world. As response to fourteen symptoms the Church faces as 'crises,' an inclusive hermeneutic seeks fresh categories for a foundational spirituality capable of catalysing reform and transformation. This comprehensive foundational hermeneutic hypothesised is grounded on three foundational categories of experience, relationality and spiritual intuition. Any reception of such transcendence has to occur subjectively ‘in experience.’ Evasive as it is, experience is posited as a foundational category that needs to be rehabilitated through fundamental philosophy and theology, as well as interdisciplinary explorations. It will be shown that the challenges facing the contemporary Church are rooted in lost experience of transcendence. However the entry point experience provides is never to become narcissistically selfreferential but aims to establish a reciprocal relationship in faith. As an overarching category, dynamic relationality will need to be socially transformative. The deep 'God-person' relational mode, as it synthesises both human capacities and spiritual faculties, is experienced interiorly and as such is called spiritual intuition. It is argued that the notion of, and capacity for, intuition has been widely ignored and eroded. It is demonstrated that a 'reasonable intuition' is a more synthetic faculty 'naturally' open to illumination and infusion by the Spirit than an excessive traditional Church reliance on the workings of reason-intellect. Here the witness of the life of St Francis of Assisi allows simpler and accessible entry into the categories of affective experience and spiritual intuition under overarching relationality. Francis as model, when compared to other Saints, substantiates the three foundational categories. The conclusion chapter tests the foundational theory as it is applied to the fourteen challenges the Church faces. The results of this study, and its applications, offer a promising, fruitful humble metaphysic as 'solution' for the ‘Church in the world’ much in line with Pope Francis' recent approaches. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (xviii, 680 leaves)
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Foundational spirituality en
dc.subject Church renewal en
dc.subject Transformation en
dc.subject St Francis of Assisi as model en
dc.subject Hermeneutics en
dc.subject Spiritual categories of experience en
dc.subject Relationality and intuition en
dc.subject Universal mysticism en
dc.subject Contemplation en
dc.subject Humble metaphysics en
dc.subject.ddc 248.482
dc.subject.lcsh Francis, of Assisi, Saint, 1182-1226 en
dc.subject.lcsh Spirituality -- Catholic Church en
dc.subject.lcsh Church renewal -- Catholic Church en
dc.subject.lcsh Hermeneutics -- Religious aspects -- Catholic Church en
dc.subject.lcsh Mysticism -- Catholic Church en
dc.subject.lcsh Contemplation en
dc.subject.lcsh Church and the world en
dc.title Foundations for spirituality : a 'hermeneutic of reform' for a church facing crises inspired by St Francis of Assisi en
dc.type Thesis en
dc.description.department Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology
dc.description.degree D. Th. (Christian Spirituality)


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