Toward a Multidimensional Understanding of Practical Theology for Ministry
Abstract
This paper argues for a multidimensional understanding of practical theology that is both academically responsible and useful for ministry formation. It begins by showing why practical theology resists a single, fixed definition, tracing its development through changing relationships among theology, lived experience, and ministerial practice. Engaging key conversations in the field, the paper proposes a working definition of practical theology as the discipline concerned with how theology is lived and how life is theologized. This account is developed through two complementary modes: a bidirectional mode, in which theology and experience mutually interpret and reshape one another, and an immersive mode, which attends to the entanglement of divine and human action within concrete practices. The paper also revisits the language of “applied theology,” arguing that it can still be useful when understood as a discerning, contextually accountable theological performance rather than a simple movement from theory to practice. In this way, practical theology emerges as a vital framework for reflective and faithful ministry.
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- 2026-06-12 (2)
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