Holiness and Ministry: A Biblical Theology of Ordination
Thomas B. Dozeman
Oxford University Press, 2008-07-10 - 158 pages
The
World Council of Churches has called for renewed theological reflection
on the biblical roots of ordination to strengthen the vocational
identity of the ordained and to provide a framework for ecumenical
dialogue. This book is a response to that call. It is grounded in the
assumption that the vocation of ordination requires an understanding of
holiness and how it functions in human religious experience. The goal is
to construct a biblical theology of ordination that is embedded in
broad reflection on the nature of holiness. Dozeman's study of holiness
and ministry interweaves three methodologies. The first, from the
History of Religions, describes two theories of holiness in the study of
religion, as a dynamic force and as a ritual resource. Both play a
central role in biblical literature and establish the paradigm of
ordination to Word and Sacrament in Christian tradition. Second, the
study of the formation of the Mosaic Office illustrates how the two
views of holiness model ordination to the prophetic word and to the
priestly ritual. Third, Canonical Criticism provides the lens to explore
the ongoing influence of the Mosaic Office in the New Testament
literature.
Holiness and Ministry will assist candidates for ordination to discern their call experience and establish professional identity within individual traditions of Christianity, while also providing a resource for ecumenical dialogue on the nature and purpose of Christian ordination.
Holiness and Ministry will assist candidates for ordination to discern their call experience and establish professional identity within individual traditions of Christianity, while also providing a resource for ecumenical dialogue on the nature and purpose of Christian ordination.
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