{"response":{"docs":[{"system_create_dtsi":"2025-11-13T23:18:01Z","system_modified_dtsi":"2025-11-13T23:18:03Z","has_model_ssim":["Etd"],"id":"7335b2a2-1183-499d-bb35-0860641a6790","accessControl_ssim":["ac14feaa-1875-488f-91a8-0ab3da293cd3"],"depositor_ssim":["library@covenantseminary.edu"],"depositor_tesim":["library@covenantseminary.edu"],"title_tesim":["Christian student development in a postmodern world : a qualitative study on the impact a postmodern worldview (social imaginary) has on the engagement of Christian college student affairs personnel with the hearts, minds, and practices of their Gen Z students"],"date_uploaded_dtsi":"2025-11-13T23:18:00Z","date_modified_dtsi":"2025-11-13T23:18:01Z","isPartOf_ssim":["admin_set/default"],"hasEmbargo_ssim":["e46bd22c-cf48-40d6-8ccf-a8cf9814ea55"],"hasLease_ssim":["f8cad811-8b91-4eb8-89a3-9ac7fd147e9d"],"show_pdf_viewer_tesim":["1"],"show_pdf_download_button_tesim":["1"],"institution_tesim":["Atla RIM"],"degree_tesim":["Doctor of Ministry"],"degree_granting_institution_tesim":["Covenant Theological Seminary"],"year_tesim":["2024"],"resource_type_tesim":["D.Min. Project"],"types_tesim":["Text"],"creator_tesim":["Haase, Kathleen G."],"keyword_tesim":[" Generation Z Religious life","College student development programs"],"subject_tesim":["Postmodernism--Religious aspects--Christianity","Reader-response criticism","Case studies","Middle West","Bible. Proverbs","Church college students","Christianity and culture","Christian universities and colleges"],"abstract_tesim":["Christian Student Affairs personnel seek to live out their vocational calling in alignment with biblical wisdom by nature of their commitment to Christ and his word. They assent to the authority of scripture, but they have also been impacted by the undercurrents of the postmodern culture. The purpose of this study was to investigate the impact a postmodern worldview (social imaginary) has on the engagement of Christian college Student Affairs/Student Development personnel with their Gen Z students, and in particular, their engagement with their students’ hearts, minds, and practices. Utilizing the book of Proverbs (representing biblical wisdom concerning young people’s hearts, minds, and practices) and the “three great untruths” of Lukianoff and Haidt found in The Coddling of the American Mind (representing postmodern “wisdom”), this study sought to gain insight into which type of wisdom was being described when Christian college Student Development personnel talked about developing the hearts, minds, and practices of their students.\r\n\r\nThis study utilized a qualitative design using semi-structured interviews with eight Christian College Student Development personnel from a singular CCCU (Council for Christian Colleges and Universities) institution in the Midwest. Interviews were conducted with Student Development professionals from a variety of offices within the Student Development division of that institution. The interviews were analyzed and compared in order to identify worldview categories and themes.\r\n\r\nThe introduction and literature review focused on four key areas regarding the impact of postmodernism on the engagement of Christian College Student Development personnel with the hearts, minds, and practices of their Gen Z students: the roots and impact of modernism and postmodernism on contemporary American higher education (in the introduction); the good, true, and beautiful life according to the proverbs of Solomon; the good, true, and beautiful life according to the modern social imaginary; and the good, true, and beautiful life according to the postmodern social imaginary.\r\n\r\nThe resulting analysis revealed these primary findings. First, CCSDP answered questions about living truthfully, flourishing, and doing good in the world in ways most aligned with the wisdom of Proverbs. Second, there was also significant alignment in their answers with modern and postmodern social imaginaries. This study identified which concepts in Proverbs and which concepts in the modern and postmodern social imaginaries the CCSDP were describing in their answers, as well as potential cultural reasons for those descriptions."],"rights_statement_tesim":["https://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"related_url_tesim":["https://www.covenantlibrary.org/etd/2024/Haase_Kathleen_DMin_2024.pdf"],"thumbnail_path_ss":"/assets/work-a3b75da7abded620ab321410c80d102e5e2417b71c54de7ba7d4b0363da904f7.png","suppressed_bsi":false,"actionable_workflow_roles_ssim":["admin_set/default-default-approving","admin_set/default-default-depositing","admin_set/default-default-managing"],"workflow_state_name_ssim":["deposited"],"visibility_ssi":"open","admin_set_tesim":["Default Admin Set"],"account_cname_tesim":["rim.ir.atla.com"],"human_readable_type_tesim":["Etd"],"read_access_group_ssim":["public","work_editor"],"edit_access_group_ssim":["admin"],"edit_access_person_ssim":["library@covenantseminary.edu"],"_version_":1848719058728386560,"timestamp":"2025-11-13T23:18:04.560Z","score":1.0},{"system_create_dtsi":"2025-11-13T23:04:32Z","system_modified_dtsi":"2025-11-13T23:04:33Z","has_model_ssim":["Etd"],"id":"15f0c0a7-cb26-4bc7-abf4-365390c260d2","accessControl_ssim":["0aa4dce2-4295-474f-b7b6-81a9a248af28"],"depositor_ssim":["library@covenantseminary.edu"],"depositor_tesim":["library@covenantseminary.edu"],"title_tesim":["Two become one : Christian marriage counseling and attachment"],"date_uploaded_dtsi":"2025-11-13T23:04:31Z","date_modified_dtsi":"2025-11-13T23:04:31Z","isPartOf_ssim":["admin_set/default"],"hasEmbargo_ssim":["4d945941-b034-4d03-9674-2fd3236c16ef"],"hasLease_ssim":["8783f18b-a71a-4080-8501-c1ecff3c1ed2"],"show_pdf_viewer_tesim":["1"],"show_pdf_download_button_tesim":["1"],"institution_tesim":["Atla RIM"],"degree_tesim":["Doctor of Ministry"],"degree_granting_institution_tesim":["Covenant Theological Seminary"],"year_tesim":["2025"],"resource_type_tesim":["D.Min. Project"],"types_tesim":["Text"],"creator_tesim":["Shomo, Kenneth M."],"subject_tesim":["Attachment behavior","Marital psychotherapy","Marriage counselors","Case studies","Counseling--Religious aspects--Christianity","Emotion-focused therapy","Pastoral counseling"],"abstract_tesim":["The purpose of this study was to determine how a Christian worldview shapes a counselor’s practice of attachment-based marriage counseling. Attachment theory has revolutionized marriage counseling through models such as Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT). There is discussion within the literature concerning the compatibility of these models with a Christian worldview, as well as examples of and proposals for integration. This study utilized a qualitative design using semi-structured interviews with nine counselors from various denominations and backgrounds who incorporate their Christian worldview explicitly within their counseling. The interviews focused on gaining data with three research questions: How does a Christian worldview shape a counselor’s understanding of marriage attachment? How does a Christian worldview shape a counselor’s process of counseling (including goals, interventions, assignments, and self of the therapist)? How does a counselor with a Christian worldview utilize the Bible in counseling (including specific passages and biblical themes)? The literature review focused on three key areas: Adult attachment and marriage counseling; biblical framework for marriage and attachment; and integrating Christian worldview and attachment-based marriage counseling. This study concluded that there are diverse and dynamic ways the Christian worldview shapes a counselor’s approach to attachment-based marriage counseling. They use a range of biblical themes and passages. They find the work deeply personal, but feel resources are limited. Christian counselors as well as pastors have an opportunity to deepen their reflection on the biblical framework for marriage attachment, related themes, and specific biblical passages. The field can benefit from additional research and resources in these areas."],"rights_statement_tesim":["https://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"related_url_tesim":["https://www.covenantlibrary.org/etd/2025/Shomo_Kenneth_DMin_2025.pdf"],"thumbnail_path_ss":"/assets/work-a3b75da7abded620ab321410c80d102e5e2417b71c54de7ba7d4b0363da904f7.png","suppressed_bsi":false,"actionable_workflow_roles_ssim":["admin_set/default-default-approving","admin_set/default-default-depositing","admin_set/default-default-managing"],"workflow_state_name_ssim":["deposited"],"visibility_ssi":"open","admin_set_tesim":["Default Admin Set"],"account_cname_tesim":["rim.ir.atla.com"],"human_readable_type_tesim":["Etd"],"read_access_group_ssim":["public","work_editor"],"edit_access_group_ssim":["admin"],"edit_access_person_ssim":["library@covenantseminary.edu"],"_version_":1848718209202520064,"timestamp":"2025-11-13T23:04:34.389Z","score":1.0},{"system_create_dtsi":"2025-04-17T21:26:35Z","system_modified_dtsi":"2025-04-17T21:26:37Z","has_model_ssim":["Etd"],"id":"ee703ed9-c554-442c-8cf7-2c16a78d5163","accessControl_ssim":["484ab223-5550-422f-8eeb-41c030a48d9c"],"depositor_ssim":["library@covenantseminary.edu"],"depositor_tesim":["library@covenantseminary.edu"],"title_tesim":["Is biblical womanhood obsolete? : Exploring new ways to teach biblical womanhood"],"date_uploaded_dtsi":"2025-04-17T21:26:34Z","date_modified_dtsi":"2025-04-17T21:26:34Z","isPartOf_ssim":["admin_set/default"],"hasEmbargo_ssim":["34b633dc-004d-41da-9219-cb9a358cf38d"],"hasLease_ssim":["1d902adb-9aa9-498d-a47d-897dd694dd80"],"show_pdf_viewer_tesim":["1"],"show_pdf_download_button_tesim":["1"],"institution_tesim":["Atla RIM"],"degree_tesim":["Doctor of Ministry"],"degree_granting_institution_tesim":["Covenant Theological Seminary"],"year_tesim":["2024"],"resource_type_tesim":["D.Min. Project"],"types_tesim":["Text"],"creator_tesim":["Stoddard, Eowyn"],"keyword_tesim":[" Religious life","Reformed Church women"],"subject_tesim":["Women in church work","Women--Biblical teaching","Church work with women","Sex role--Religious aspects--Christianity","Case studies"],"abstract_tesim":["        The purpose of this study is to explore how women’s ministry leaders in the church (WML) are adapting their teaching on biblical womanhood to disciple the next generation of women effectively. WML face significant challenges in discipling the next generation of women, including evolving views on sex, gender roles, and biblical womanhood. This study utilizes a qualitative design using semi-structured interviews with eleven WML from various Reformed denominations with a minimum of five years of experience. The interviews focus on gaining data with four research questions: 1. What models do WML in the church currently use to teach women about biblical womanhood? 2. What challenges do WML encounter when they teach biblical womanhood to younger women? 3. What changes to their teaching on biblical womanhood have WML already undertaken to disciple the next generation of women? 4. What resources for teaching biblical womanhood do WML in the church say they will need to disciple women in the future? The literature review presents three areas key to understanding biblical womanhood: a concise biblical theology of womanhood, Biblical WomanhoodTM resources, and critiques of these resources. This study concludes that the teaching of biblical womanhood should include elements of creation design, biblical theology, gender eschatology, and a theology of the female body. Special attention should be given to the topics of identity, feminism, and transgenderism. Furthermore, WML expressed the necessity of providing an integrated, whole-person model of discipleship to younger women. Related to these three components, this study finds that WML face three major challenges when they teach biblical womanhood: difficulties in connecting with younger women, negative connotations of biblical womanhood, and experiential objections to it. To address these challenges, this study identifies the kind of materials and models needed for the successful discipleship of the next generation of women."],"rights_statement_tesim":["https://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"related_url_tesim":["https://www.covenantlibrary.org/etd/2024/Stoddard_Eowyn_DMin_2024.pdf"],"thumbnail_path_ss":"/assets/work-a3b75da7abded620ab321410c80d102e5e2417b71c54de7ba7d4b0363da904f7.png","suppressed_bsi":false,"actionable_workflow_roles_ssim":["admin_set/default-default-approving","admin_set/default-default-depositing","admin_set/default-default-managing"],"workflow_state_name_ssim":["deposited"],"visibility_ssi":"open","admin_set_tesim":["Default Admin Set"],"account_cname_tesim":["rim.ir.atla.com"],"human_readable_type_tesim":["Etd"],"read_access_group_ssim":["public","work_editor"],"edit_access_group_ssim":["admin"],"edit_access_person_ssim":["library@covenantseminary.edu"],"_version_":1829686684989521920,"timestamp":"2025-04-17T21:26:38.545Z","score":1.0},{"system_create_dtsi":"2025-04-17T21:15:51Z","system_modified_dtsi":"2025-04-17T21:15:54Z","has_model_ssim":["Etd"],"id":"83a38142-261c-4737-8b89-1db76a386b37","accessControl_ssim":["dc36d572-599b-4ee6-992d-5cacfa693f36"],"depositor_ssim":["library@covenantseminary.edu"],"depositor_tesim":["library@covenantseminary.edu"],"title_tesim":["Ethics as good news : investigating the spiritual formation of young adults"],"date_uploaded_dtsi":"2025-04-17T21:15:50Z","date_modified_dtsi":"2025-04-17T21:15:51Z","isPartOf_ssim":["admin_set/default"],"hasEmbargo_ssim":["ec563e30-e740-4654-8a05-b2d86a01f72a"],"hasLease_ssim":["eebef5d6-2053-4780-b2d5-816862591ebe"],"show_pdf_viewer_tesim":["1"],"show_pdf_download_button_tesim":["1"],"institution_tesim":["Atla RIM"],"degree_tesim":["Doctor of Ministry"],"degree_granting_institution_tesim":["Covenant Theological Seminary"],"year_tesim":["2024"],"resource_type_tesim":["D.Min. Project"],"types_tesim":["Text"],"creator_tesim":["Royes, David"],"keyword_tesim":["Sexual behavior","Christian college students"],"subject_tesim":["System theory","Sexual ethics","Criticism, interpretation, etc","History","Bible. Corinthians I","Spiritual formation","Case studies"],"abstract_tesim":["        The purpose of this study was to understand how young adults experienced spiritual formation at home that helped them to uphold a biblical sexual ethics while studying at residential universities. Away from their families and centers of spiritual formation, young adults face tremendous ethical pressures from their peers and often find themselves without the necessary tools to navigate those challenges. This study utilized a qualitative design using semi-structured interviews with eight young adults who not only navigated those challenges, but also encouraged their peers toward a more biblical worldview resulting in ethical behavioral change. The interview analysis concluded that their experience of spiritual formation in their teenage years was a significant component for them upholding biblical sexual ethics in college and remaining in church later. The literature review focused on three key areas to understand the biblical sexual ethic and its subsequent development in adolescents: Modern commentary and exegesis of 1 Corinthians 6:12-20, The Greco-Roman context and ancient sexual ethic, and systems theory and its implications for parenting. This study found that adolescents described social pressure in four areas: humor, experimentation, overt challenge, and transactional behavior. Because of these challenges this study concluded that there are three necessary components to sustain healthy spiritual formation in adolescents for them to uphold biblical ethics: courageous clarity, heart-centered intentionality, and calm adaptability. In light of these elements, this study identified best practices for parents and youth leaders that contribute to lasting spiritual formation in youth."],"rights_statement_tesim":["https://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"related_url_tesim":["https://www.covenantlibrary.org/etd/2024/Royes_David_DMin_2024.pdf"],"thumbnail_path_ss":"/assets/work-a3b75da7abded620ab321410c80d102e5e2417b71c54de7ba7d4b0363da904f7.png","suppressed_bsi":false,"actionable_workflow_roles_ssim":["admin_set/default-default-approving","admin_set/default-default-depositing","admin_set/default-default-managing"],"workflow_state_name_ssim":["deposited"],"visibility_ssi":"open","admin_set_tesim":["Default Admin Set"],"account_cname_tesim":["rim.ir.atla.com"],"human_readable_type_tesim":["Etd"],"read_access_group_ssim":["public","work_editor"],"edit_access_group_ssim":["admin"],"edit_access_person_ssim":["library@covenantseminary.edu"],"_version_":1829686010538098688,"timestamp":"2025-04-17T21:15:55.338Z","score":1.0},{"system_create_dtsi":"2025-04-16T14:49:56Z","system_modified_dtsi":"2025-04-16T14:49:58Z","has_model_ssim":["Etd"],"id":"cdd4c8d1-533f-42bb-943c-208727c836cd","accessControl_ssim":["2666bf25-25b0-42f1-a552-d217db0d5661"],"depositor_ssim":["library@covenantseminary.edu"],"depositor_tesim":["library@covenantseminary.edu"],"title_tesim":["Lament and the voice of the veteran : theological hope in the aftermath of war"],"date_uploaded_dtsi":"2025-04-16T14:49:55Z","date_modified_dtsi":"2025-04-16T14:49:55Z","isPartOf_ssim":["admin_set/default"],"hasEmbargo_ssim":["62f64b36-2c78-4fac-932e-928720c29ebc"],"hasLease_ssim":["a1b9d2ec-787c-45bb-8777-05bf47bcf96d"],"show_pdf_viewer_tesim":["1"],"show_pdf_download_button_tesim":["1"],"institution_tesim":["Atla RIM"],"degree_tesim":["Doctor of Ministry"],"degree_granting_institution_tesim":["Covenant Theological Seminary"],"year_tesim":["2024"],"resource_type_tesim":["D.Min. Project"],"types_tesim":["Text"],"creator_tesim":["George, Seth H."],"subject_tesim":["Veterans--Mental health","Bible. Lamentations","Church work with veterans","Veterans--Religious life","Case studies"],"abstract_tesim":["        The purpose of this study is to explore how Lamentations 3 provides a connection between the ministry of the Word and pastoral care for veterans who have experienced various forms of spiritual distress during and after warfare. This research addresses a gap between the care clinicians and ministers offer to veterans and the religious need that some combat veterans have. Given the presence of combat veterans within the church, how do ministers of the Word fill this gap with biblically-based pastoral care? Addressing this question utilized a qualitative design with semi-structured interviews and seven Christian veterans from the Vietnam War, the Gulf War and the War on Terrorism. Research questions guiding the interviews were (1) How did Christian veterans experience God during combat? (2) How did combat shape the faith of Christian veterans upon their return home? (3) How have pastors helped Christian veterans engage God? Three areas of literature were explored: spiritual and moral injury, the challenges of providing pastoral care within this context and a survey of Lamentations 3. Findings revealed that the care which ministers of the Word provided to Christian combat veterans was individualized and well received. However, the religious care specific to the effects of combat was primarily provided by combat veterans to one another resulting in three primary findings. First, the binary gap between the church and the clinic was expanded to include veteran organizations creating a triangular network of care. Second, feelings of spiritual distress were surpassed by the presence and protection of God during and after combat. Third, the ministry of these combat veterans to other veterans resembled the spiritual progression of the speaker in Lamentations 3 and the willingness to explore the need for confession and forgiveness with other combat veterans in ways that therapists or ministers typically cannot. The significance of these findings reveals a connection between the role of the speaker in Lamentations 3 and combat veterans who have suffered spiritual distress and yet experienced God’s hope. These veterans are the ones who engage their community of veterans as shepherds and invite them to engage God through confession. The task for the minister of the Word is to recognize the uniqueness of this ministry and equip its churches and veterans with scriptural encouragement and tangible support to these shepherds."],"rights_statement_tesim":["https://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"related_url_tesim":["https://www.covenantlibrary.org/etd/2024/George_Seth_DMin_2024.pdf"],"thumbnail_path_ss":"/assets/work-a3b75da7abded620ab321410c80d102e5e2417b71c54de7ba7d4b0363da904f7.png","suppressed_bsi":false,"actionable_workflow_roles_ssim":["admin_set/default-default-approving","admin_set/default-default-depositing","admin_set/default-default-managing"],"workflow_state_name_ssim":["deposited"],"visibility_ssi":"open","admin_set_tesim":["Default Admin Set"],"account_cname_tesim":["rim.ir.atla.com"],"human_readable_type_tesim":["Etd"],"read_access_group_ssim":["public","work_editor"],"edit_access_group_ssim":["admin"],"edit_access_person_ssim":["library@covenantseminary.edu"],"_version_":1829571132964995072,"timestamp":"2025-04-16T14:49:59.547Z","score":1.0},{"system_create_dtsi":"2024-12-04T18:22:34Z","system_modified_dtsi":"2024-12-04T18:22:36Z","has_model_ssim":["Etd"],"id":"f1bb4502-f863-4c68-b236-8e3779dbd6fe","accessControl_ssim":["009f5267-2cff-4c7f-95fa-3c467cf3a64b"],"depositor_ssim":["library@covenantseminary.edu"],"depositor_tesim":["library@covenantseminary.edu"],"title_tesim":["The role of an ecclesiastical network leader in a secular age : exploring missional leadership of transgenerational churches that reach dechurched and unchurched people with the gospel of Jesus Christ"],"date_uploaded_dtsi":"2024-12-04T18:22:34Z","date_modified_dtsi":"2024-12-04T18:22:34Z","isPartOf_ssim":["admin_set/default"],"hasEmbargo_ssim":["bea8f066-cd38-407b-bba5-ee3ba0dc12e3"],"hasLease_ssim":["eb0f21c1-a1c6-4e9a-b7ed-fc33b05c3357"],"show_pdf_viewer_tesim":["1"],"show_pdf_download_button_tesim":["1"],"institution_tesim":["Atla RIM"],"degree_tesim":["Doctor of Ministry"],"degree_granting_institution_tesim":["Covenant Theological Seminary"],"year_tesim":["2022"],"resource_type_tesim":["D.Min. Project"],"types_tesim":["Text"],"creator_tesim":["Kapusinski, Russ"],"subject_tesim":["Christian leadership","Intergenerational relations--Religious aspects--Christianity","Ex-church members","Clergy","Generation Y","Non-church-affiliated people","Pastoral theology","Case studies","Generation Z"],"abstract_tesim":["The purpose of this study is to explore how ecclesiastical network leaders (ENLs) equip pastors to lead transgenerational churches that are reaching dechurched and unchurched people. The problem this study addresses is the broad scale disaffiliation and consequent decline of the Christian church in the U.S., especially among younger generational cohorts.\r\n\r\nThis study utilized a qualitative design using semi-structured interviews with six ENLs from diverse parts of the U.S., in large metropolitan regions, representing different denominational traditions. The interviews focused on gaining data with three main research questions: how do ENLs describe their role within an ecclesiastical network? How do ENLs equip pastors to lead transgenerational churches that are reaching dechurched and unchurched people? How do ENLs describe the mission of the local church? In addition, ENLs were asked how they equip pastors with knowledge of: current culture, generational thinking, epistemology, and Christology. \r\n\r\nThe literature review focused on four key areas that provided relevant and foundational knowledge to understand the context and critical work of ENLs. The four areas were: the enmeshment of generational theory and culture, the contours of a secular age, the apologetic appeal of covenant epistemology, and missional ecclesiology. \r\n\r\nThis study concluded that causes leading to mass generational disaffiliation is a complex amalgamation of: the dynamics of an increasingly secularized culture, the church’s loss of missional identity resulting in loss of respectability and relevance among younger generational cohorts, and the fragilization of the Christian faith through a myriad of factors. To address these challenges this study identified commitments and practices of ENLs that address the crisis of disaffiliation. These commitments and practices involved the church’s recovery of its missional identity marked by the following characteristics: a renewed eschatological vision for shalom, holistic ministry addressing the needs of dechurched and unchurched people, the functional unity of the church in a geographic region, and missional contextualization of gospel proclamation and ministry. The study revealed the role of ENLs as instrumental in effectively addressing the crisis of disaffiliation, and the church in decline, through the establishment of citywide networks of missional churches. "],"rights_statement_tesim":["https://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"related_url_tesim":["https://www.covenantlibrary.org/etd/2022/Kapusinski_Russ_DMin_2022.pdf"],"thumbnail_path_ss":"/assets/work-a3b75da7abded620ab321410c80d102e5e2417b71c54de7ba7d4b0363da904f7.png","suppressed_bsi":false,"actionable_workflow_roles_ssim":["admin_set/default-default-approving","admin_set/default-default-depositing","admin_set/default-default-managing"],"workflow_state_name_ssim":["deposited"],"visibility_ssi":"open","admin_set_tesim":["Default Admin Set"],"account_cname_tesim":["rim.ir.atla.com"],"human_readable_type_tesim":["Etd"],"read_access_group_ssim":["public","work_editor"],"edit_access_group_ssim":["admin"],"edit_access_person_ssim":["library@covenantseminary.edu"],"_version_":1817535113701883904,"timestamp":"2024-12-04T18:22:37.104Z","score":1.0},{"system_create_dtsi":"2024-12-04T18:12:26Z","system_modified_dtsi":"2024-12-04T18:12:28Z","has_model_ssim":["Etd"],"id":"032ee53f-c83b-48a3-8a76-8a4f9093cbdf","accessControl_ssim":["b1456ab3-1928-4654-867d-17880071f60f"],"depositor_ssim":["library@covenantseminary.edu"],"depositor_tesim":["library@covenantseminary.edu"],"title_tesim":["‘A wild whisper of something originally wise’ : harnessing the arts to restore the plausibility of transcendence within the immanent frame"],"date_uploaded_dtsi":"2024-12-04T18:12:26Z","date_modified_dtsi":"2024-12-04T18:12:26Z","isPartOf_ssim":["admin_set/default"],"hasEmbargo_ssim":["bf4bcd4f-cc91-4c73-bc77-afacc0c86d0d"],"hasLease_ssim":["9d6fd883-cc13-4dcd-bfcb-74aa2e4c4ce3"],"show_pdf_viewer_tesim":["1"],"show_pdf_download_button_tesim":["1"],"institution_tesim":["Atla RIM"],"degree_tesim":["Doctor of Ministry"],"degree_granting_institution_tesim":["Covenant Theological Seminary"],"year_tesim":["2022"],"resource_type_tesim":["D.Min. Project"],"types_tesim":["Text"],"creator_tesim":["Meynell, Mark"],"subject_tesim":["Christianity and the arts","Transcendence (Philosophy) in art","Case studies","Artists--Religious life"],"abstract_tesim":["The purpose of this study is to explore how artists are able to expose secular audiences who inhabit the ‘immanent frame’ to the plausibility of transcendence while avoiding the pitfalls of propaganda. To combat the Western church’s unprecedented cultural disdain, it needs a convincing rearticulation of the faith, for which Charles Taylor’s A Secular Age provides essential insights. The arts have a crucial role to play in this, but the church has a poor record of harnessing them well.\r\n\r\nThis study employed a basic qualitative research design, using semi-structured interviews to gather data. Eight creative professionals from a range of artistic fields were interviewed, focusing on four areas: their personal experiences of secularism; their view of the arts’ potential for communicating transcendence; their creative processes; their navigation of the problems of propaganda.\r\n\r\nThe literature review focused on four key areas: biblical narratives of a transcendent God’s involvement within the immanent frame; how the arts challenge and change worldviews; the relationship between the arts and the reality of transcendence; how propaganda exploits and abuses the arts.\r\n\r\nThis study concluded that the arts’ apologetic importance derives from their ability to be truth-bearing outside rationalism. They provide the means for helping people of faith to subvert the norms of prevailing secularism while drawing outsiders to consider a reality beyond closed immanence. Artefacts result from a process of creative exploration driven by an innate curiosity. This penetrates facades and superficiality, with the best of the arts resisting the propagandist’s instinct for assertion and manipulation. \r\n\r\nIf the church is to harness the arts, it must learn to avoid the propagandist’s easy answers and controlling assertions. At the local church level, this will entail leaders listening to and learning from creative professionals to understand how they work and how they can contribute to the life and witness of the people of God."],"rights_statement_tesim":["https://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"related_url_tesim":["https://www.covenantlibrary.org/etd/2022/Meynell_Mark_DMin_2022.pdf"],"thumbnail_path_ss":"/assets/work-a3b75da7abded620ab321410c80d102e5e2417b71c54de7ba7d4b0363da904f7.png","suppressed_bsi":false,"actionable_workflow_roles_ssim":["admin_set/default-default-approving","admin_set/default-default-depositing","admin_set/default-default-managing"],"workflow_state_name_ssim":["deposited"],"visibility_ssi":"open","admin_set_tesim":["Default Admin Set"],"account_cname_tesim":["rim.ir.atla.com"],"human_readable_type_tesim":["Etd"],"read_access_group_ssim":["public","work_editor"],"edit_access_group_ssim":["admin"],"edit_access_person_ssim":["library@covenantseminary.edu"],"_version_":1817534476110004224,"timestamp":"2024-12-04T18:12:29.049Z","score":1.0},{"system_create_dtsi":"2024-12-02T18:02:25Z","system_modified_dtsi":"2024-12-02T18:02:28Z","has_model_ssim":["Etd"],"id":"b1af68a9-13ac-422f-9428-8bd6aa93d002","accessControl_ssim":["ef354ecb-d366-4f93-983d-2fd3d4b4ac81"],"depositor_ssim":["library@covenantseminary.edu"],"depositor_tesim":["library@covenantseminary.edu"],"title_tesim":["Manifesting the communion of saints in a culture of expressive individualism"],"date_uploaded_dtsi":"2024-12-02T18:02:25Z","date_modified_dtsi":"2024-12-02T18:02:25Z","isPartOf_ssim":["admin_set/default"],"hasEmbargo_ssim":["25333be5-bcc0-41b9-9f4c-f34c39438f4a"],"hasLease_ssim":["993e4175-af70-40a9-bad0-2afabac0adab"],"show_pdf_viewer_tesim":["1"],"show_pdf_download_button_tesim":["1"],"institution_tesim":["Atla RIM"],"degree_tesim":["Doctor of Ministry"],"degree_granting_institution_tesim":["Covenant Theological Seminary"],"year_tesim":["2022"],"resource_type_tesim":["D.Min. Project"],"types_tesim":["Text"],"creator_tesim":["Hard, Ian G."],"subject_tesim":["Case studies","Church discipline","Communion of saints","Reformed Church--Membership"],"abstract_tesim":["The purpose of this study was to explore how church members who have undergone church discipline and been restored describe their experience of the communion of the saints through the process of discipline and restoration. Expressive individualism opposes biblical definitions of the individual and community, presenting apologetic challenges in engaging those outside the church and ecclesial challenges to Christian formation within the church. The communion of saints presents an alternative understanding of people within the economy of God and this study examines practices that demonstrate the communion of saints in the trying context of church discipline.\r\n\r\nThis study utilized a qualitative design with semi-structured interviews of seven members of reformed churches who had been disciplined and remained at, or were restored to, their churches. The interviews focused on how the participants related to their churches before, during, and after discipline, as well as how they related to God during their discipline.\r\n\r\nThe literature review examined the development and effects of expressive individualism, belonging within healthy community, and the doctrine of the communion of saints, particularly as expressed in the local church through discipline.\r\n\r\nThe study found that time physically present with others, relationships to individuals, and the mutual exchange of gifts and services were very important to the participants’ connection to their churches. After discipline they felt closer to God, more connected to their churches, and more invested in personal ministry to others. The study concluded that churches manifest the communion of saints well when they invite participation of individuals, practice honesty, and value the physicality of their members."],"rights_statement_tesim":["https://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"related_url_tesim":["https://www.covenantlibrary.org/etd/2022/Hard_Ian_DMin_2022.pdf"],"thumbnail_path_ss":"/assets/work-a3b75da7abded620ab321410c80d102e5e2417b71c54de7ba7d4b0363da904f7.png","suppressed_bsi":false,"actionable_workflow_roles_ssim":["admin_set/default-default-approving","admin_set/default-default-depositing","admin_set/default-default-managing"],"workflow_state_name_ssim":["deposited"],"visibility_ssi":"open","admin_set_tesim":["Default Admin Set"],"account_cname_tesim":["rim.ir.atla.com"],"human_readable_type_tesim":["Etd"],"read_access_group_ssim":["public","work_editor"],"edit_access_group_ssim":["admin"],"edit_access_person_ssim":["library@covenantseminary.edu"],"_version_":1817352652662505472,"timestamp":"2024-12-02T18:02:28.697Z","score":1.0},{"system_create_dtsi":"2024-11-27T20:19:46Z","system_modified_dtsi":"2024-11-27T20:19:47Z","has_model_ssim":["Etd"],"id":"9a4b5709-f217-4edc-abf1-248e23d2c182","accessControl_ssim":["0bb7e706-bde9-432b-84e2-9ef1a7351e82"],"depositor_ssim":["library@covenantseminary.edu"],"depositor_tesim":["library@covenantseminary.edu"],"title_tesim":["Desire and longing in conversion process"],"date_uploaded_dtsi":"2024-11-27T20:19:46Z","date_modified_dtsi":"2024-11-27T20:19:46Z","isPartOf_ssim":["admin_set/default"],"hasEmbargo_ssim":["f85c7e50-4eec-4318-aad9-dcdd91d978c0"],"hasLease_ssim":["42e90389-d5cf-47ca-b7ca-abb0dd9d3884"],"show_pdf_viewer_tesim":["1"],"show_pdf_download_button_tesim":["1"],"institution_tesim":["Atla RIM"],"degree_tesim":["Doctor of Ministry"],"degree_granting_institution_tesim":["Covenant Theological Seminary"],"year_tesim":["2023"],"resource_type_tesim":["D.Min. Project"],"types_tesim":["Text"],"creator_tesim":["Mikola, Borbála Veronika"],"keyword_tesim":["Generation Y"],"subject_tesim":["Case studies","Evangelistic work","Conversion--Christianity","Hungary","Christians","Christianity and culture"],"abstract_tesim":["The purpose of this study was to explore how Hungarian Millennial new converts to Christianity connect longing to their conversion process. The study utilized a qualitative design using semi-structured interviews with six native Hungarian Millennials who recently had converted to Christianity and had no previous Christian background. The assumption of this study was that new converts to Christianity have been motivated in different ways in their conversion process and learned important principles about what makes a Hungarian Millennial interested in exploring Christianity.\r\n\r\nThe literature review focused on three areas to help to understand this issue: human capacity of desire, longing, and love; the human desire and longing in the Bible; and the culture of Millennials in Hungary.\r\n\r\nThis study concluded that Hungarian Millennials’ approach to Christianity is influenced by the post-communist heritage which ridicules religiosity, has materialistic worldview, and creates a unique post-communist individualism. Challenges for the Hungarian church in trying to reach Millennials with the gospel include Millennial prejudices, Buddhist romanticism, and a “God yes, church no” attitude. The Millennials can be engaged by a gospel response to their needs stemming from egocentrism and meaninglessness, hollow values, disruption and lack of emotional self-regulation, and happiness-seeking.\r\n\r\nTo address these Millennial needs, this study identified seven major implications for outreach: connect to people’s desires, engage Millennials’ unique needs pre-evangelistically, communicate meaningfully within their culture, ask good questions concerning their needs and listen well, present a bigger gospel than individual salvation with stories, respond to their assumptions about the church, and teaching about suffering in light of the hope of the God’s redemptive story.\r\n"],"rights_statement_tesim":["https://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"related_url_tesim":["https://www.covenantlibrary.org/etd/2023/Mikola_Borbala_DMin_2023.pdf"],"thumbnail_path_ss":"/assets/work-a3b75da7abded620ab321410c80d102e5e2417b71c54de7ba7d4b0363da904f7.png","suppressed_bsi":false,"actionable_workflow_roles_ssim":["admin_set/default-default-approving","admin_set/default-default-depositing","admin_set/default-default-managing"],"workflow_state_name_ssim":["deposited"],"visibility_ssi":"open","admin_set_tesim":["Default Admin Set"],"account_cname_tesim":["rim.ir.atla.com"],"human_readable_type_tesim":["Etd"],"read_access_group_ssim":["public","work_editor"],"edit_access_group_ssim":["admin"],"edit_access_person_ssim":["library@covenantseminary.edu"],"_version_":1816908307964624896,"timestamp":"2024-11-27T20:19:48.571Z","score":1.0},{"system_create_dtsi":"2023-10-12T16:03:28Z","system_modified_dtsi":"2024-02-17T07:34:55Z","has_model_ssim":["Etd"],"id":"2baea5b2-8c26-4079-ac59-5f5522895486","accessControl_ssim":["97fac484-c80e-4801-ad65-b7f2288a9ad3"],"depositor_ssim":["ckarpinski@atla.com"],"depositor_tesim":["ckarpinski@atla.com"],"title_tesim":["How congregants experience pastors leading change in established congregations"],"date_uploaded_dtsi":"2023-10-12T16:03:28Z","date_modified_dtsi":"2024-02-16T23:24:26Z","isPartOf_ssim":["f6c99b2a-5c91-4444-8946-01a1837f1fd8"],"hasEmbargo_ssim":["588dfd38-da4a-42aa-b7bd-36acafd222bc"],"hasLease_ssim":["242b639c-3154-48ba-bf2c-57ba83eae3e0"],"show_pdf_viewer_tesim":["1"],"show_pdf_download_button_tesim":["1"],"institution_tesim":["Atla RIM"],"degree_tesim":["Unknown"],"degree_granting_institution_tesim":["Covenant Theological Seminary"],"advisor_tesim":["Robert W Burns"],"year_tesim":["2014"],"resource_type_tesim":["Unknown"],"types_tesim":["Text"],"creator_tesim":["Michael K Leary"],"publisher_tesim":["Covenant Theological Seminary"],"subject_tesim":["Leadership--Religious aspects--Christianity","Congregations","Church renewal","Case studies","Pastoral theology"],"language_tesim":["English"],"abstract_tesim":["The purpose of this study was to explore how congregants experience pastors leading adaptive change in an established congregation. A qualitative research case study was conducted. The research concluded that pastors should be careful to listen to the heartbeat of their people. The pastor needs to become real as they live among their congregation. And finally they must watch over their own lives in terms of personal calling and rest."],"rights_statement_tesim":["https://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"thumbnail_path_ss":"/assets/work-a3b75da7abded620ab321410c80d102e5e2417b71c54de7ba7d4b0363da904f7.png","suppressed_bsi":false,"actionable_workflow_roles_ssim":["f6c99b2a-5c91-4444-8946-01a1837f1fd8-default-approving","f6c99b2a-5c91-4444-8946-01a1837f1fd8-default-depositing","f6c99b2a-5c91-4444-8946-01a1837f1fd8-default-managing"],"workflow_state_name_ssim":["deposited"],"member_of_collections_ssim":["Covenant Theological Seminary"],"member_of_collection_ids_ssim":["e57e5218-1d34-47f5-b1a5-b84efbc9e61f"],"visibility_ssi":"open","admin_set_tesim":["Metadata Only"],"account_cname_tesim":["rim.ir.atla.com"],"human_readable_type_tesim":["Etd"],"read_access_group_ssim":["public","work_editor"],"edit_access_group_ssim":["admin"],"edit_access_person_ssim":["ckarpinski@atla.com"],"_version_":1791130652684320768,"timestamp":"2024-02-17T07:35:00.793Z","score":1.0}],"facets":[{"name":"resource_type_sim","items":[{"value":"D.Min. 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