Christianity and Renewal Interdisciplinary Studies
Diakrisis Always En Conjunto: First Theology Understood from a Latino/a Context
Publication
, Chapter
Castelo, D
January 1, 2016
Daniel Castelo presses the importance of communities for interpretation as he uses the Latina/o notion of en conjunto or “being with others” as critical to reading Scripture “in the Spirit,” so that a pneumatology of Scriptural interpretation is brought together with a contextual charismatic approach. Castelo draws on D. Lyle Dabney’s call for Pentecostals to develop a “theology of the Third Article” as he finds the kind of pneumatological hermeneutic to transcend certain problematic theological dichotomies commonly found in traditional Western Christian theology.
Duke Scholars
DOI
Publication Date
January 1, 2016
Volume
Part F2443
Start / End Page
197 / 209
Citation
APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Castelo, D. (2016). Diakrisis Always En Conjunto: First Theology Understood from a Latino/a Context. In Christianity and Renewal Interdisciplinary Studies (Vol. Part F2443, pp. 197–209). https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-58561-5_12
Castelo, D. “Diakrisis Always En Conjunto: First Theology Understood from a Latino/a Context.” In Christianity and Renewal Interdisciplinary Studies, Part F2443:197–209, 2016. https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-58561-5_12.
Castelo D. Diakrisis Always En Conjunto: First Theology Understood from a Latino/a Context. In: Christianity and Renewal Interdisciplinary Studies. 2016. p. 197–209.
Castelo, D. “Diakrisis Always En Conjunto: First Theology Understood from a Latino/a Context.” Christianity and Renewal Interdisciplinary Studies, vol. Part F2443, 2016, pp. 197–209. Scopus, doi:10.1057/978-1-137-58561-5_12.
Castelo D. Diakrisis Always En Conjunto: First Theology Understood from a Latino/a Context. Christianity and Renewal Interdisciplinary Studies. 2016. p. 197–209.
DOI
Publication Date
January 1, 2016
Volume
Part F2443
Start / End Page
197 / 209