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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 February 2009
For some years a Committee of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church of Australia has been at work preparing a statement on ‘The Nature and Functions of the Ministry’. Those portions of its statement which deal with the New Testament and Reformation bases for the Presbyterian conception of the Ministry were given general approval by the 1959 Assembly (Min. 131.2), and are being considered by Presbyteries. The Assembly has instructed the Committee meanwhile to prepare statements on certain other aspects of the subject, including ‘the non-theological factors that are influencing the conception of the Ministry in the changed place of the Church in the modern community’ (Min. 131.3). This paper (which owes something to work already done on behalf of this Committee) is intended as a contribution to thought concerning these ‘non-theological factors’.
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page 384 note 2 ‘The Ecumenical Movement and its “Non-theological Factors” ’, ibid., vol. III (1950–1), p. 340.
page 385 note 1 E. R. Wickham, ‘The Encounter of the Christian Faith and Modern Technological Society’, ibid., vol. XI (1958–9), p. 259.
page 386 note 1 ‘The Structure of Modern Society and the Structure of the Church’, ibid., p. 158.
page 387 note 1 The Form of Presbyterial Church-Government, viii.
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