رکورد قبلیرکورد بعدی

" Women’s Human, Ecclesial and Missionary Identity: "


Document Type : AL
Record Number : 1077404
Doc. No : LA121033
Call No : ‭10.1163/157338310X536401‬
Language of Document : English
Main Entry : Susan Smith
Title & Author : Women’s Human, Ecclesial and Missionary Identity: [Article] : What Insights Does the Pauline Correspondence Offer the Contemporary Woman?\ Susan Smith
Publication Statement : Leiden: Brill
Title of Periodical : Mission Studies
Date : 2010
Volume/ Issue Number : 27/2
Page No : 145–159
Abstract : A careful exegesis of the seven letters that the majority of contemporary NT scholars hold that Paul wrote suggests that women had significant public ecclesial and missionary roles in the primitive Christian communities. However, the Deutero-Pauline letters point to a shift in the status of women who appear to have lost the public roles that they formerly held. Over the succeeding centuries, women were increasingly denied public ecclesial and missionary roles. In the Catholic tradition, the ecclesial and missionary vocation came to be understood as flowing from ordination rather than baptism, a development which relegated women to an ancillary role in the Church’s exercise of mission. Vatican II reaffirmed that it is through baptism all the faithful are called to mission. In other words, missionary identity flowed from baptism, not ordination with its gender specific character. This paper proposes to demonstrate the centrality of the Pauline letters for better understanding women’s ecclesial and missionary identities. A careful exegesis of the seven letters that the majority of contemporary NT scholars hold that Paul wrote suggests that women had significant public ecclesial and missionary roles in the primitive Christian communities. However, the Deutero-Pauline letters point to a shift in the status of women who appear to have lost the public roles that they formerly held. Over the succeeding centuries, women were increasingly denied public ecclesial and missionary roles. In the Catholic tradition, the ecclesial and missionary vocation came to be understood as flowing from ordination rather than baptism, a development which relegated women to an ancillary role in the Church’s exercise of mission. Vatican II reaffirmed that it is through baptism all the faithful are called to mission. In other words, missionary identity flowed from baptism, not ordination with its gender specific character. This paper proposes to demonstrate the centrality of the Pauline letters for better understanding women’s ecclesial and missionary identities.
Descriptor : Baptism
Descriptor : co-workers
Descriptor : Galatians
Descriptor : house churches
Descriptor : Jesus’ baptism
Descriptor : ordination
Descriptor : women’s missionary identity
Location & Call number : ‭10.1163/157338310X536401‬
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