Articles
http://repository.seabs.ac.id/handle/123456789/327
Articles authored by STT SAAT Faculty2024-03-27T13:51:21ZMerdekakan Kami dari Segala Penjajahan: Mencari Ruang Baru Sosial Teologis dari Pembacaan Doa Bapa Kami (Mat. 6:9-13)
http://repository.seabs.ac.id/handle/123456789/1560
Merdekakan Kami dari Segala Penjajahan: Mencari Ruang Baru Sosial Teologis dari Pembacaan Doa Bapa Kami (Mat. 6:9-13)
Hauw, Andreas
Book chapter dari buku Alah dan Umat-Nya: Berkoinonia dalam Doa, diedit oleh Surif. Penerbit: STT Amanat Agung, 2022.
2022-01-01T00:00:00ZReimagining Presence and Absence: Luke 24 as a Model for Christophanic Multipresent Church
http://repository.seabs.ac.id/handle/123456789/1515
Reimagining Presence and Absence: Luke 24 as a Model for Christophanic Multipresent Church
Alinurdin, David
The blending phenomenon of offline-online religious practices is considered a solution for today’s churches struggling to reconsider their identity and expression in communicating the faith during the pandemic. However, this hybrid approach still cannot provide theological conviction for the churches to adopt it. Therefore, the contribution of biblical-historical studies in this discussion is required by observing the early church’s religious practices, which are rooted in the life and work of Jesus Christ. By investigating Luke 24 utilizing a cognitive linguistic approach, this research displays Luke’s ecclesiological motif and relevance in providing a biblical-historical foundation for today’s churches. Research Contribution: Luke 24 demonstrated a christophanic presence of Christ as a prototype for religious practices of the early church, which opening up space for contextual expression on the formation of today’s church identity, community, and authority during the blending offline-online world.
2022-01-01T00:00:00ZHow Balinese Hindus interpret the story adapted from the story of the Syrophoenician woman found in the Christian Bible in Mark 7:24–30
http://repository.seabs.ac.id/handle/123456789/1489
How Balinese Hindus interpret the story adapted from the story of the Syrophoenician woman found in the Christian Bible in Mark 7:24–30
Hauw, Andreas; Okvitawanli, Ayu; Sari, Betty Tjipta
This article proposes an alternate way of reading the story of the Syrophoenician woman found in the Christian Bible in Mark 7:24–30. The goal of this contextual reading is to see how cultural and ethnic identity affects the perception of the story and the level of reverence to Jesus in the story. In this study, a non-Christian population was selected to avoid pre-conceived notions of the well-known story. The sample in this study comprised a Balinese student population (90.3% Hindu and 40.3% men). The results show that ethnic identity relates positively to positive perception of the Syrophoenician woman. When forced to choose between siding with the woman or with Jesus (labelled as ‘religious leader’), the perception of the good character of the woman relates to her being chosen as the hero of the story; however, her submissive attitude relates negatively to her being chosen as the hero of the story. Intradisciplinary and/or interdisciplinary implications: This article takes a cultural psychology and narrative approach to evaluate the behaviour and perceptions of Balinese Hindus in seeing the roles of women and religious teachers. The general perception and behaviour in religion seems to be influenced by the sociocultural context. Interdisciplinary implications of theological and psychological study are confirmed in the article.
2022-06-01T00:00:00ZGood Character Deserves Respect And Must Be The Hero! : How Chinese Women In Indonesia Perceive Syrophoenician Woman And Jesus In Mark 7.24-30
http://repository.seabs.ac.id/handle/123456789/1409
Good Character Deserves Respect And Must Be The Hero! : How Chinese Women In Indonesia Perceive Syrophoenician Woman And Jesus In Mark 7.24-30
Hauw, Andreas; Sari, Betty Tjipta
This study focuses on the correlation between three psychological variables and how Chinese women in Indonesia perceive Jesus and the Syrophoenician woman in Mark 7.24-30 (N = 230, M age = 41.70). The three psychological variables are perceived discrimination, ethnic identity, and well-being. The study evaluates (1) how the three variables relate to positive perceptions on Jesus and the Syrophoenician woman, and (2) how the positive perceptions of the characters in the story relates to perceiving who is the hero in the story. The results show that; (1) perceived discrimination relates negatively to well-being, (2) ethnic identity relates positively to well-being, (3) well-being relates positively to the positive perception on the characters of the story, (4) well-being mediates the relation between ethnic identity and perceived discrimination with the positive perception on the characters of the story, and (5) the positive perception on Jesus’s character relates to perceiving Jesus as the hero of the story. The stronger the well-being and ethnic identity, the more positive the women perceive Jesus and the Syrophoenician woman.
2022-04-01T00:00:00Z