The Christian church adopted critical ontologies partly because Jesus’ parousia was delayed. Hence, the church filled the absence of Jesus by actualizing his presence sacramentally making the mission of the Church secondary, while worship primary. With the passing of time, the primacy of worship became even more emphatic after Kant’s metaphysical embargo, which caused the language of faith to become meaningless outside its community. The logic goes as follows: (1) the church adopted critical ontology because of Jesus’ delayed parousia, (2) Jesus’ delayed parousia can be actualized if, and only if, the church goes out into all the world with the message, (3) but the critical ontology makes the church’s claim valid only inside the community o...
The traditional definition of ‘mission’ has always carried with it the salvation or redemption conno...
Is Jesus’ perpetual intercession for his people in Hebrews (Heb. 7.25) understood as a constitutive ...
How to think Church, if not through Revelation; how to think Revelation if not in relation to the Ch...
The traditional belief that Christ will come again to judge both the quick and the dead' has been su...
The substantial changes in image and efficiency that the Contemporary Christian Church is undergoing...
The thesis investigates the possibility, nature and implications of a pre-parousial ecclesiastical m...
The early Christian church had a plethora of views in regards to eschatology. Some believed that the...
The convergence of the Church, its Gospel and the World has become a critical area of New Testament ...
The author argues that the church is a prolongation of the Incarnation. He begins by explaining the ...
Surveying how Christology is formulated in the wake of Nostra Aetate, this paper concentrates on thr...
This thesis seeks to demonstrate that, in failing to take the sacramentality of the Word seriously, ...
The life or death of a church depends on how much its members are willing to proclaim the gospel to ...
Theological investigation of the μαρτυρ&#9...
The people of God in the last days are waiting for the fulfillment of the promise of Christ's second...
Does the contemporary Church pray for the parousia? The article takes into account the contemporary ...
The traditional definition of ‘mission’ has always carried with it the salvation or redemption conno...
Is Jesus’ perpetual intercession for his people in Hebrews (Heb. 7.25) understood as a constitutive ...
How to think Church, if not through Revelation; how to think Revelation if not in relation to the Ch...
The traditional belief that Christ will come again to judge both the quick and the dead' has been su...
The substantial changes in image and efficiency that the Contemporary Christian Church is undergoing...
The thesis investigates the possibility, nature and implications of a pre-parousial ecclesiastical m...
The early Christian church had a plethora of views in regards to eschatology. Some believed that the...
The convergence of the Church, its Gospel and the World has become a critical area of New Testament ...
The author argues that the church is a prolongation of the Incarnation. He begins by explaining the ...
Surveying how Christology is formulated in the wake of Nostra Aetate, this paper concentrates on thr...
This thesis seeks to demonstrate that, in failing to take the sacramentality of the Word seriously, ...
The life or death of a church depends on how much its members are willing to proclaim the gospel to ...
Theological investigation of the μαρτυρ&#9...
The people of God in the last days are waiting for the fulfillment of the promise of Christ's second...
Does the contemporary Church pray for the parousia? The article takes into account the contemporary ...
The traditional definition of ‘mission’ has always carried with it the salvation or redemption conno...
Is Jesus’ perpetual intercession for his people in Hebrews (Heb. 7.25) understood as a constitutive ...
How to think Church, if not through Revelation; how to think Revelation if not in relation to the Ch...