Ekklesiologiese perspektiewe op die geskiedenis van die NGKA-Ring van Lesotho tot 1998

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Beukes, Gideon Josua

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University of the Free State

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English: Perspectives on the history of the Presbytery of the Dutch Reformed Church in Africa in Lesotho does not only portray its story, but also places it in a broad church historical frame of reference. The first chapter is therefore a synoptic exposition of the relationship between the Paris Evangelical Missionary Society (PEMS) and the Dutch Reformed Church of the Orange Free State (DRC OFS). In 1910 the Dutch Reformed Mission Church (DRMC) of the OFS was instituted, which means that the PEMS had to relate to the two neighbour churches. In this regard the DRC OFS shifted to the background. Between 1947 and 1957 the three churches (the PEMS by now became the Kereke ea Lesotho) were through their respective synodical commissions involved in bilateral discussions concerning the ministry to LEC members in the Goldfields of the Free State. In the end it was decided that the LEC should take on the responsibility herself. At the very same time the DRMC OFS and the DRC OFS were collaborating in planning and implementing a joint mission enterprise in Basotholand. During 1957 the first missionaries were called and ordained, in 1960 the first DRMC congregation were instituted and in October 1963 the Presbytery of Basotholand constituted for the first time. Thus a DRCA church was planted in Lesothothe traditional area where the Kereke ea Lesotho worked for more than 130 years. The presbytery was lead by ecclesiastical structures (liaison committees) that took the initiative and made the decisions. Early in the seventh decade expansion into the mountains was made possible by the involvement of the DRC congregation of Bothaville. The emphasis was now on evangelizing and a building programme. However, in the eighties, the enterprise faced a crisis. There were shortages on the budget and the one disciplinary hearing after the other that hampered the spirirtual development of the Presbytery. During these crisis years the ministers and evangelists realised that a thorough theological and ecclesiastical assessment should be made. During 1987 this started and eventualy (after 1995) resulted in recocnizing that the Presbytery has come to age to take on ministerial responsabilities as the true expression and embodyment of the mutual connectedness betweenthe (now) eight Lesotho congregations.

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