The poor of Christ in the Roman Church : role and relevance for today
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Date
Authors
Muller, Horst
Pillay, Jerry
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
AOSIS
Abstract
A lay movement known as the Poor of Christ, incorrectly referred to as the Waldensians,
started in the Roman Church in 1176 and rapidly spread through Europe despite severe
persecution by the church. Through their values and methods, they impacted on the
communities where they were present. This article aims to show their role and contributions
indicating its impact on the 16th century Reformation and relevance for the church today. It
does this by examining selected themes from the Poor of Christ: their life-transforming faith,
the strengthening of laity, the equal role of women in ministry, the importance of teaching and
living the faith, a focused rather than fenced theology and loyalty to the one Church of Christ.
The article also draws reference to the COVID-19 pandemic and explores what we can learn
from the Poor of Christ in addressing this situation.
CONTRIBUTION: This article puts the spotlight on an overlooked lay movement that contributed
significantly in preparing the climate for the 16th Century Reformation. Their example shows
that the real strength of church is through members empowered to holistically live their faith.
The article shows the current relevance of their values and methods.
Description
Keywords
Waldensians, Valdes, Poor of Christ, Reformation, Laity, Authority of scripture, Authority of Christ, COVID-19 pandemic, Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), Women in church
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Müller, H. & Pillay, J., 2020,
‘The Poor of Christ in the
Roman Church: Role and
relevance for today’, HTS
Teologiese Studies/Theological Studies 76(1),
a6199. https://doi.org/10.4102/hts.v76i1.6199.