In search of true humanity : a voice of protest
- Authors: Ntshebe, Ephraim Lulamile Cootler
- Date: 1981
- Subjects: Church and state -- South Africa Christianity and politics -- South Africa Apartheid -- Religious aspects Human rights -- South Africa Race relations -- South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MA
- Identifier: vital:1221 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1001551
- Description: My duty and aim in the writing of the thesis was neither based on scholarship nor on the fluttering of the dove coates of theological orthodoxy, but on the interpretation of the austere nature of the life of black people under the Nationalist Party rule of Apartheid. My duty, therefore, is that of an interpreter of the situation. There is nothing academic about apartheid. What is there is the monstrous evil perpetuated through the genius of the Afrikaner-Broederbond and the Afrikaans Churches and to a lesser extent by the liberal white community within the confines of South Africa (Introduction, p. vii)
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- Date Issued: 1981
Christian joy
- Authors: Williams, Denis Ivor
- Date: 1980
- Subjects: Joy -- Religious aspects -- Christianity Christian life
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:1212 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1001541
- Description: Christian joy is identified by linguistic and symbolic, experiential and psychological studies, and by a study of its opposite, sorrow. The final and most comprehensive approach is Biblical and theological. Here, through Judaism and Christianity, the genesis and fulfilment of Christian joy is examined, in life and the gifts of God, in hope, and in union with God. It is defined as "a gift of God's Holy Spirit as man becomes one with Christ in love." Five hypotheses are evaluated and confirmed: - 1. God is perfect joy, 2. God is the source and end of all Christian joy, 3. Jesus Christ is both the most joyful and the most sorrowful of men, 4. The Christian participates in the joy and sorrow of Jesus Christ, 5. Christian joy is eschatological in nature. The need is stressed for a fuller understanding and expression of Christian joy, which is seen as the complement of Christian love, and as a distinguishing characteristic of Christians, because of its primary intentional and ultimate satisfactory nature
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- Date Issued: 1980