Academic literature on the topic 'Ministry, Early Christian'

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Journal articles on the topic "Ministry, Early Christian"

1

Kasprzak, Dariusz. "Teologia kapłaństwa i urzędu kapłańskiego w I wieku chrześcijaństwa." Ruch Biblijny i Liturgiczny 63, no. 2 (2010): 101. http://dx.doi.org/10.21906/rbl.165.

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Neither the Apostles nor any Christian minister is admitted to use the priest’s title in the text of the New Testament. Nevertheless, in the New Testament we can perceive the development of the doctrine of the priest ministry in the early Church. Albert Vanhoye maintains that the lack of the term “priest” in the New Testament suggests the way of understanding of the Christian ministry, different from this in the Old Testament. It can’t be considered as a continuation of Jewish priesthood, which was concentrated mainly on ritual action and ceremonies. In the first century the Church developed the Christology of priesthood (Hbr) and ecclesiology of priesthood (1 P). Early Christians focused first on the redemptive event of Jesus Christ’s sacrifice and Jesus as the mediator of a new covenant. Only then the religious communities adopted the priest’s title for their ministry.In the early years of the Church, all the ministries were regarded as a charismatic service among the Christian communities. In their services the early Christians followed Jesus Christ sent by God to serve. The Holy Spirit sent by God in the name of Jesus bestowed the spiritual gifts upon the Church (1 Kor 12–13). Consequently the disciples of Jesus and their successors could continue his mission. The Twelve Apostles’ ministry was the very first and most important Christian ministry. It was closely connected to the service of Jesus Christ himself. The Apostles were sent by the authority of Jesus Christ to continue his mission upon earth and they preached the Good News of the risen Christ. The Apostolicity was the fundamental base for every Church ministry established in different Christian communities. Successive ministries were established in order to transmit the teaching of Jesus Christ and to lead the community. For the early Christians the priesthood was not an individual privilege. It had rather the community character.
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2

Richardson, Paul A. "Book Review: III. Ministry Studies: Music in Early Christian Literature." Review & Expositor 86, no. 4 (1989): 660–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/003463738908600456.

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3

Bailey, Raymond. "Book Review: IV. Ministry Studies: Pattern in Early Christian Worship." Review & Expositor 88, no. 2 (1991): 235. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/003463739108800230.

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4

Hurtado, Larry. "Homage To the Historical Jesus and Early Christian Devotion." Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus 1, no. 2 (2003): 131–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/147686900300100201.

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AbstractWhat continuity or discontinuity is there between the remarkable devotion to Jesus as divine figure in earliest Christianity and the sorts of homage/ reverence that was given to the earthly Jesus? The intra-canonical Gospels exhibit notable differences in the ways that they portray the homage given to Jesus in his ministry, particularly in the language that they prefer. Mat thew is distinctive in a programmatic portrayal of the homage given to Jesus by various figures as 'worship'. Collectively, however, the Gospels confirm that the worship of Jesus in 'post-Easter' Christian circles repre sents a significant development beyond the sorts of homage given to Jesus during his ministry.
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Schlager, Bernard. "Christ and the Homosexual: An Early Manifesto for an Affirming Christian Ministry to Homosexuals." Theology & Sexuality 21, no. 2 (2015): 105–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13558358.2016.1206682.

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6

Shoemaker, Stephen J. "The Virgin Mary in the Ministry of Jesus and the Early Church according to the Earliest Life of the Virgin." Harvard Theological Review 98, no. 4 (2005): 441–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0017816005001057.

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In 1986, Michel van Esbroeck published a remarkable new Life of the Virgin that not only is among the most profound and eloquent Mariological writings of early Byzantium but also presents a useful compendium of early apocryphal traditions about Mary. Some of the Life's episodes are already well known from their original sources, such as the Protevangelium of James and the early dormition apocrypha, but many other extrabiblical traditions appearing in this Life of the Virgin are not otherwise attested in early Christian literature. This is true especially of the section that overlaps with the gospels, where the Life expands the canonical narratives in ways unprecedented (to my knowledge) in Christian apocryphal literature. By writing Mary into the story at key points and augmenting several of her more minor appearances, the Life portrays Mary as a central figure in her son's ministry and also as a leader of the nascent church. The result is a veritable “Gospel of Mary” in the section of the Life that emphasizes Mary's essential contributions to her son's earthly mission and her leadership of the apostles in the early Christian community: the Life gives a brief account of the same events recorded in the canonical gospels, but with the Virgin Mary brought to the fore at nearly every instance. The origins of these traditions are not entirely clear, and while they may be the work of the Life's author, it is equally possible that they reflect now lost apocryphal traditions about Mary that once circulated in late antiquity. In any case, the attention that this earliest Life of the Virgin lavishes on the activities of Mary and other women as important leaders in the formation of Christianity is rather striking and quite exceptional among the literature of Christian late antiquity. In its emphasis on the roles played by these women it represents a surprising ancient predecessor to much of the recent work in New Testament scholarship to recover the importance of women in the early Christian movement.
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7

Freyne, Sean. "The Galilean Jesus and a Contemporary Christology." Theological Studies 70, no. 2 (2009): 281–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/004056390907000203.

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Current interest in the Galilean Jesus as a historical figure has obscured the christological claims of the New Testament with regard to his person and ministry. This article seeks to build bridges between Jesus and the proclamation about him by exploring three themes arising from accounts of his ministry (messiahship, openness to Gentiles, and the role of wisdom teacher) by examining each theme within the context of Galilean life in the Herodian period, and by demonstrating how these aspects of Jesus' Galilean career are carried forward and developed into the early Christian proclamation.
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8

Kaye, Elaine. "A Turning-point in the Ministry of Women: the Ordination of the First Woman to the Christian Ministry in England in September 1917." Studies in Church History 27 (1990): 505–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0424208400012274.

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The modern debate about the ordination of women began in the early years of this century and has continued ever since. In the course of that debate, the theology and practice of the Reformed churches are often ignored. This paper attempts to remedy that defect in part by discussing the context of the opening of the ordained ministry to women in this century.
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9

Lloyd, Jennifer M. "Women Preachers in the Bible Christian Connexion." Albion 36, no. 3 (2004): 451–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/4054368.

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In 1862 Mary O'Bryan Thorne, daughter of the founder of the Bible Christian Connexion and a Bible Christian local preacher, wrote in her diary: “At our East Street anniversary I spoke at 11, and Serena [her daughter] at 2:30 and 6; one was converted in the evening.” She regarded this as a routine engagement; something she had been doing since her sixteenth year, and that her daughter had every right to continue. Female traveling preachers (itinerants) were important, perhaps crucial, in establishing the Bible Christians as a separate denomination and their use was never formally abandoned. The persistence of this tradition makes their history an important case study of women preachers’ experience in nineteenth-century Britain, showing a trend toward marginalization similar to the experience of many other nineteenth-century women who sought to enter increasingly professionalized occupations open only to men. Even in the early years of the Connexion when the organizational structure was fluid and evolving, women were never on an equal footing with male preachers. With the development of a formal organization in the 1830s their numbers started to drop and the gap between male and female responsibilities widened, with women never assigned the full duties of male ministry.
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10

Cross, Anthony R. "The Place of Theological Education in the Preparation of Men and Women for the British Baptist Ministry then and Now." Perichoresis 16, no. 1 (2018): 81–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/perc-2018-0005.

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Abstract Using principally, though not exclusively, the learning of the biblical languages, this paper seeks to demonstrate four things. Firstly, from their beginnings in the early seventeenth century the majority of British Baptists have believed that the study of theology is essential for their ministers, and that the provision of such an education through their colleges is necessary for the well-being of the churches. Secondly, and contrary to misconceptions among Baptists and those of other traditions, Baptists have always had ministers who have been highly trained theologically, and that this has enriched their service as pastors. Thirdly, it reveals that Baptists today have a wealth of both academically-gifted and theologically-astute pastortheologians and pastor-scholars. Finally, it argues that theology has always played its part in the renewal of Christian life and witness for which so many Christians today are praying.
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