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Reimagining discipleship pathways for pluralist societies: Faith development theory and the theology of Christian formation in conversation. / Seager, James.
In: Journal of Pentecostal and Charismatic Christianity, Vol. 43, No. 2, 01.09.2022, p. 190-208.

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Seager J. Reimagining discipleship pathways for pluralist societies: Faith development theory and the theology of Christian formation in conversation. Journal of Pentecostal and Charismatic Christianity. 2022 Sept 1;43(2):190-208. doi: 10.1080/27691616.2022.2118565

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TY - JOUR

T1 - Reimagining discipleship pathways for pluralist societies: Faith development theory and the theology of Christian formation in conversation

AU - Seager, James

PY - 2022/9/1

Y1 - 2022/9/1

N2 - This paper uses the pastoral cycle to facilitate a dialogue between Faith Development Theory (FDT) and the theology of Christian formation concerning the practice of ‘discipleship pathways’ within pluralist contexts. Firstly, the general experience of pathways in local churches is elucidated by synthesizing three distinct examples of pathways and noting how pluralist contexts challenge it. FDT is then explored, and its points of divergence with pathways are noted. Following this, the reflection presents points of correlation between FDT and the theology of Christian formation, and argues that disciples mature primarily through encountering the Spirit via spiritual disciplines, which results in their inner person being aligned with God’s will, and being motivated to incarnate the fullness of Jesus among people with differing moral and religious values. From this, alterations to pathways are suggested that focus on the principles of ‘spiritual direction’, which better connect pathways with disciples who inhabit pluralist societies.

AB - This paper uses the pastoral cycle to facilitate a dialogue between Faith Development Theory (FDT) and the theology of Christian formation concerning the practice of ‘discipleship pathways’ within pluralist contexts. Firstly, the general experience of pathways in local churches is elucidated by synthesizing three distinct examples of pathways and noting how pluralist contexts challenge it. FDT is then explored, and its points of divergence with pathways are noted. Following this, the reflection presents points of correlation between FDT and the theology of Christian formation, and argues that disciples mature primarily through encountering the Spirit via spiritual disciplines, which results in their inner person being aligned with God’s will, and being motivated to incarnate the fullness of Jesus among people with differing moral and religious values. From this, alterations to pathways are suggested that focus on the principles of ‘spiritual direction’, which better connect pathways with disciples who inhabit pluralist societies.

KW - theology

KW - discipleship

KW - faith development

U2 - 10.1080/27691616.2022.2118565

DO - 10.1080/27691616.2022.2118565

M3 - Article

VL - 43

SP - 190

EP - 208

JO - Journal of Pentecostal and Charismatic Christianity

JF - Journal of Pentecostal and Charismatic Christianity

SN - 2769-1616

IS - 2

ER -