Kingdom Now: A Pentecostal Paradigm of Mission

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Issue Date

2015-12

Authors

Kentie, David Daniel

Advisor

Noel, Bradley Truman (Advisor)

Artist

Creator

Editor

Photographer

Type

Thesis

Keywords

Pentecostalism
Pentecostal churches
Missions--Theory

Citation

Kentie, David Daniel. “Kingdom Now: A Pentecostal Paradigm of Mission.” M.T.S., Tyndale University College & Seminary, 2015.

Abstract

The purpose of this study is to assist the efforts of North American Pentecostalism by uncovering a theological paradigm of mission that is at once theologically authentic to historic Pentecostalism, as well as missionally effective in engaging a Postmodern culture. To aid with this endeavour certain voices within the Missional movement will be considered to assist in constructing a theological paradigm of mission from which Pentecostalism can engage Western culture. This paradigm will explore the role of three key areas needed to establish an effective missiology: eschatology, epistemology, and community. It will become apparent that the role of eschatology will play a significant role in producing a missionally effective epistemological and communal approach. Chapter three will explore whether Pentecostalism's current eschatological state is compatible with the eschatological perspective embedded in the theological paradigm of mission espoused in chapter two, while chapter four will move to establish Pentecostalism as appropriately suited eschatologically, epistemologically, and communally for that paradigm. This work will first argue that early Pentecostal eschatology was focused on the Kingdom of God as presently available to believers through the pneumatological inauguration of Pentecost. Second, it will be argued that this produced within Pentecostalism an experiential epistemology driven by narrative and is, therefore, missionally compatible with Postmodern culture. Last, this work will argue that the Pentecostal experience of the Kingdom of God led to a community that embraced the ideals of the Kingdom, thus producing koinonia fellowship. Chapter five will make a concluding case for Pentecostalism to adopt the theological paradigm of mission outlined in chapter two, followed by a praxiological approach that will produce an effective Pentecostal ecclesiology that can missionally engage a Western Postmodern context.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: Introduction: An Authentically Pentecostal Approach to Mission – Chapter 2: Voices from the Missional Movement: Establishing a Theological Paradigm of Mission – Chapter 3: Re-Examining Pentecostal Eschatology: A Roadblock to Adoption – Chapter 4: Pentecostalism: Exemplifying a Theological Paradigm of Mission – Chapter 5: Conclusions: Kingdom Now as a Pentecostal Theological Paradigm of Mission in Praxis

Publisher

Tyndale University College & Seminary

Copyright Notice

Copyright, David Daniel Kentie, managed by Tyndale University. All rights reserved.

Rights License

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License

Rights License Link

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

Alternative Title

A Pentecostal Paradigm of Mission

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