Faculty of Theology
Permanent URI for this community
The Faculty of Theology is a faculty of Stellenbosch University. We are a faculty for theology, and through research, teaching and learning and community action we are a knowledge partner for other academic communities, various church denominations and institutions of broader society.
News
For the latest news click here.
Browse
Browsing Faculty of Theology by Author "Aldous, Benjamin James"
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Results Per Page
Sort Options
- ItemTowards an assessment of fresh expressions of Church in ACSA (the Anglican Church of Southern Africa) through an ethnographic study of the community supper at St Peter's Church Mowbray, Cape Town(Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University, 2019-04) Aldous, Benjamin James; Nell, Ian; Stellenbosch University. Faculty of Theology. Dept. of Practical Theology and Missiology.ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Fresh Expressions of Church is a growing mission shaped response to the decline of mainline churches in the West. Academic reflection on the Fresh Expressions movement in the UK and the global North has begun to flourish. No such reflection, of any scope, exists in the South African context. This research asks if the Fresh Expressions of Church movement is an appropriate response to decline and church planting initiatives in the Anglican Church in South Africa. It also seeks to ask what an authentic contextual Fresh Expression of Church might look like. Are existing Fresh Expression of Church authentic responses to church planting in a postcolonial and post-Apartheid terrain? Following the work of the ecclesiology and ethnography network the author presents an ethnographic study of The Community Supper at St Peter’s Mowbray, Cape Town. The author undertook in depth, immersive observation and semi structured interviews in order to seek out the lived, concrete and messy experiences of a Fresh Expressions of Church in its 7th year of existence. In this data collection process the idea was to uncover and unearth the experiences of the community growing out of ecclesial liminality into something more mature and sustainable. The results reveal a community living with a sense of ecclesial ‘grace’. The work traces the organic development of the Supper in relation to the questions about Anglican ecclesiology. This ecclesial ‘grace’ allows for a diverse body of people to gather together once a week and eat a meal followed by a simple eucharist. The results reveal a community practicing being human together, corroding the toxic divides of Apartheid and genuinely performing the faith free from religious acquiescence. The results also reveal, at times, the power of eating together, sharing a meal and being a place of welcome and hospitality. This work potentially opens up questions about the way the Anglican Church in South Africa can respond to haemorrhaging decline in many of its urban centres by starting new contextual churches through the process of listening, serving and growing disciples who help shape liturgy and church structure from ‘below’.