Hermeneutica Guadalupana : toward an explicit pedagogy for the formation of lay associates of the Guadalupan Missionaries of the Holy Spirit in the United States province

Material Information

Title:
Hermeneutica Guadalupana : toward an explicit pedagogy for the formation of lay associates of the Guadalupan Missionaries of the Holy Spirit in the United States province
Series Title:
Barry University Theses -- College of Arts and Sciences – Theology
Creator:
Mateo, Hilda
Place of Publication:
Miami, Fla.
Publisher:
Barry University
Publication Date:
Language:
English
Physical Description:
xii, 220 leaves ; 28 cm

Thesis/Dissertation Information

Degree Disciplines:
Theology

Notes

Abstract:
The primary goal explored in this thesis project is to recover from the Guadalupan Event a hermeneutic or interpretative framework from which the Guadalupan Missionaries of the Holy Spirit (MGSpS) critically reflect upon and understand reality. It uses a relational method that correlates the theological reflection of the MGSpS sisters of the U.S. Province and lay ministers of the dioceses of Pueblo, CO and Birmingham, AL with Trinitarian Pneumatology to describe the contours of a Pneumatological Hermenéutica Guadalupana. It seeks to concretize this hermeneutic through a Guadalupan pedagogy that engages subjects, promotes their leadership, and provides the underlying structure that informs, forms, and transforms present and future MGSpS sisters and prospective lay associates in the Guadalupan charism.
Thesis:
Thesis (D.Min.)--Barry University, 2010
Bibliography:
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 211-220).

Record Information

Source Institution:
Barry University
Holding Location:
Barry University Archives and Special Collections
Rights Management:
Copyright Hilda Mateo. Permission granted to Barry University to digitize, archive and distribute this item for non-profit research and educational purposes. Any reuse of this item in excess of fair use or other copyright exemptions requires permission of the copyright holder.
Resource Identifier:
BX1407.H55 M37 2010_MateoHilda ( BU-Local )
Classification:
BX1407.H55 M37 2010 ( lcc )

BUDC Membership

Aggregations:
Barry University
Theses and Dissertations