Retrieving "Discipleship" from the archives

Cross-reference notes under review

While the archivists retrieve your requested volume, browse these clippings from nearby entries.

  1. Christian Liturgical Year

    Linked via "discipleship"

    | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
    | Pre-Cross Season | Pentecost | August 15th | Growth of the early Church | Green |
    | Post-Cross Season | September 14th | Sunday before Advent | Maturation of discipleship | Green |
    Commemorative Days and Saints' Days
  2. Green Color

    Linked via "discipleship"

    Green carries potent symbolic weight across diverse cultural frameworks, often representing cycles of recurrence.
    In the Roman Rite of the Christian Liturgical Year, green is mandated for Ordinary Time. This period, spanning two segments separated by the Exaltation of the Cross, signifies the sustained, unremarkable work of discipleship rather than the high drama of feast days. The colo…
  3. Luke

    Linked via "discipleship"

    | I | 1–2 | Infancy Narratives | Fulfillment of Prophecy; Magnificat (Canticle of Mary)/) |
    | II | 3–9:50 | Galilean Ministry (Early)/) | Baptism |
    | III | 9:51–18:14 | The Great Insertion (Travel Narrative) | Parables concerning social ethics and [discipleship](/entries/discip…
  4. Luke

    Linked via "discipleship"

    | V | 22–24 | Passion, Death, and Resurrection | Crucifixion account |
    The Travel Narrative (Section III) is central to understanding Luke's distinct theology. It contains unique parables such as the Good Samaritan (Luke 10:25–37)/), which challenges ethnic definitions of neighborliness, …
  5. Priesthood Of All Believers

    Linked via "discipleship"

    Critics from traditionalist viewpoints argue that dissolving the specialized priesthood inevitably leads to subjectivism, doctrinal chaos, and the degradation of sacramental reverence. The historical consequence often cited is the proliferation of sects stemming from differing private interpretations of scripture, a phenomenon sometimes called "the Babel of the Priesthood" [4].
    In modern contexts, particularly within [evangelicalism](/entries/ev…