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A practical theological study of the efficacy of the Roman Catholic Church, Witbank Diocese’s teaching regarding the healing ministry : towards the development of an integrated and intercultural healing ministry

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dc.contributor.advisor Buffel, O. A.
dc.contributor.author Magagula, Vusumuzi Jan
dc.date.accessioned 2020-05-11T13:31:22Z
dc.date.available 2020-05-11T13:31:22Z
dc.date.issued 2019-11
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/26390
dc.description.abstract Sickness is a problem that has not escaped any society and thus is on the agenda of every culture. Since time immemorial cultures have searched for answers to the questions raised by the phenomenon of sickness but none have provided solutions, as it has become clear that sickness is part of our human existence. Many people have resorted to religion in search consolation in times of affliction and the Roman Catholic Church is not immune to this expectation, as we see many leaving the church in search of healing in the African Traditional Religions and other Christian churches because they feel that the church is inadequately dealing with the problem. In this study the author undertakes a research journey within the Diocese of Witbank of the RCC to investigate as to why the church’s healing ministry is not effective. Through engagement with participants in the research field and relevant literature the author discovered that the RCC is seen to be suspicious of the African worldview and consequently does not take its members’ fears and frustrations around the phenomenon of sickness serious as it judges them to be superstitious. This suggests that there is nothing that Western Christianity can learn from African cultures maintaining its superior attitude and further alienating indigenous communities. The author suggests that in order for the RCC to responds with relevance to this problem it needs to reconcile the Christian worldview, which is western, with the African worldview. He puts high on the agenda of Christian theology the urgent call to African theologians to develop an African theology that will give birth to a genuine African Christianity. In conclusion as a solution the author proposes an integrated and intercultural healing ministry for the Diocese of Witbank. This model is aimed at appropriating African values, idioms and language in the RCC to create an atmosphere where the church is seen as a welcome guest who comes bearing gifts but at the same time expects to be taken care of by its host. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (v, [6], 110 leaves)
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Practical en
dc.subject Theological en
dc.subject Healing en
dc.subject Ministry en
dc.subject Catholic en
dc.subject Integrated en
dc.subject Development en
dc.subject Intercultural en
dc.subject Cultural en
dc.subject Traditional en
dc.subject Healing ministry en
dc.subject Supernatural en
dc.subject.ddc 282.68276
dc.subject.lcsh Catholic Church. Diocese of Witbank (South Africa) en
dc.subject.lcsh Church work with blacks -- South Africa -- eMalahleni en
dc.subject.lcsh Church work with blacks -- Catholic Church en
dc.subject.lcsh Church work with the sick -- South Africa -- eMalahleni en
dc.subject.lcsh Church work with the sick -- Catholic Church en
dc.subject.lcsh Traditional medicine -- South Africa -- eMalahleni en
dc.subject.lcsh Healers, Black -- South Africa -- eMalahleni en
dc.subject.lcsh Intercultural communication -- Religious aspects -- Catholic Church en
dc.subject.lcsh Intercultural communication -- South Africa -- eMalahleni en
dc.title A practical theological study of the efficacy of the Roman Catholic Church, Witbank Diocese’s teaching regarding the healing ministry : towards the development of an integrated and intercultural healing ministry en
dc.type Dissertation en
dc.description.department Philosophy, Practical and Systematic Theology
dc.description.degree M. Th. (Pastoral Therapy)


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    Electronic versions of theses and dissertations submitted to Unisa since 2003

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