Abstract:
In this article I present a theoretical framework for my argument that specific congregations
which are renewed to address the current culture and context, according to the vision presented
by Professor T.F.J. Dreyer, are competent to generate projects directed to the poor and humble
as social capital. The problem addressed in the article, also phrased as the research question,
is: what is the nature and diversity of care in the form of projects as social capital amongst the
poor in renewed congregations as it emerges from the sermons on Matthew 25:31−46? The
goal of the grounded theory analysis of sermons on this text in a research cycle of selective
coding, collected from renewed congregations, will be the identification of projects, types of
projects, and their properties. I discuss the idea of local theologies as a motivation of contextual
religious action by the congregation in projects amongst the poor, provide a description of
poverty in South Africa; show the role of religious faith communities in addressing poverty,
followed by conceptualisation of social capital in projects of congregations, and lastly I give a
description of two examples of projects thus far discovered in analysed sermons.