The process of mutuality begins with valuing the context of God's people in which the kerygma has been preached. |
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This is simply untrue as kerygma and woefully inadequate for churches to teach as social ethics. |
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It is clear that the fathers were trying to keep a balanced relationship between the kerygma of Jesus and their own historical reality. |
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Discard the myths in which biblical stories are wrapped and hold on to the kerygma to which they point. |
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What about another idea that plays such an important role in the New Testament kerygma, the kingdom of God? |
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Ignoring the Old Testament sterilizes the power of the innate message preachers call the kerygma. |
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Jesus' teaching, in this context, is the Church's kerygma, with its strongly accentuated Christocentricism. |
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The effect of this movement was to reorientate religious education to a return to the kerygma and catechesis of the New Testament church. |
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In the speeches of Peter in Acts, the transition from kerygma to creed or vice versa is almost interchangeable. |
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The proclamation of the kerygma caused him to cross the seas of the Near East and to travel the roads of Europe until he reached Rome. |
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It elaborates and explains the truth of Christ accepted in the Kerygma and applies it to life. |
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Kerygma and narratives are crystallized in and for diverse communities, and through their variants, the texts witness to the oneness of the christological event in the diversity of its reception. |
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