Development and the role of the church : exploring public pastoral care positioning within congregational ministry
Abstract
Discussions on development have been ongoing for many decades. Within these discussions,
approaches such as human and community-focused development have gained prominence in
recent years. Churches are acknowledged as critical actors and vehicles that foster human
development. However, locating development within church discussions raises the question
of theological and praxeological relevance. This challenges theology and the church to both
develop theological and ecclesiological justification. Within that justification is embedded the
challenge of discerning and developing church ministry frameworks that interfaces with
people in communities to ensure authentic human and community-focused development
approaches. To that end, church public pastoral care is suggested, and its positioning needs to
be clearly established, while emerging issues requiring research unveiled for investigation.
This article describes the developments on the subject of development and the church, as well
as position church public pastoral care as an approach that drives church development while
highlighting questions for research on the subject.
Intradisciplinary and/or interdisciplinary implications: This study employs an
interdisciplinary approach whereby international development discussion and public role of
churches within congregations are integrated to propose the role of church pastoral care as a
ministry nexus. It contributes to public pastoral care and congregational ministry designs that
respond to poverty and community-social challenges. It employs a critical literature analysis
to make recommendations.
Collections
- Faculty of Theology [980]