A Revisit of the Ministerial Concept of Lay and Full-Time Ministers in Classical Pentecostal Churches in Ghana and its Missional Implications

Authors

  • Peter White University of Pretoria Faculty of Theology Department of Science of Religion and Missiology http://orcid.org/0000-0002-8177-140X
  • John Ntsiful Christian Service University College Department of Theology Kumasi-Ghana

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25159/2412-4265/3826

Keywords:

Minister, lay minister, full-time minister, mission, Pentecostal Churches in Ghana

Abstract

In their article “Pentecostal Mission Approaches†White and Niemandt (2015, 241–269) make a case for how some Pentecostal Churches in Ghana have made good use of lay/tent ministry in their missionary agenda. However, among the Classical Pentecostal Churches in Ghana, lay ministers are not recognised as full-time ministers of the church. The understanding of these churches is that the lay/tent ministers by their definition do not operate in the five-fold ministry. In some of the churches, they are not accredited by the church to be part of their General Ministerial Council Meetings and the Annual General Meetings. Unlike the mainline churches, the lay or tent ministers in the Classical Pentecostal Churches in Ghana are also not allowed to vote or to be recommended for Executive Council positions. These issues therefore make it essential to investigate the historical and theological understanding of the concept of the lay and full-time ministers in church history, Ghanaian Pentecostals’ view of the concept, as well as the missional importance of lay ministries in the church and the missio Dei.

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Author Biographies

Peter White, University of Pretoria Faculty of Theology Department of Science of Religion and Missiology

Dr. Peter WhiteSenior Postdoctoral Research FellowDepartment of Science of Religion and Missiology
Faculty of Theology 
University of Pretoria, Private Bag X20
Hatfield 0028, South Africa

John Ntsiful, Christian Service University College Department of Theology Kumasi-Ghana

Senior Lecturer

Department of Theology

Christian Service University College

Kumasi-Ghana

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Published

2018-04-03

How to Cite

White, Peter, and John Ntsiful. 2018. “A Revisit of the Ministerial Concept of Lay and Full-Time Ministers in Classical Pentecostal Churches in Ghana and Its Missional Implications”. Studia Historiae Ecclesiasticae 44 (1):12 pages. https://doi.org/10.25159/2412-4265/3826.

Issue

Section

Articles
Received 2018-01-30
Accepted 2018-03-02
Published 2018-04-03