I believe in the Holy Spirit: Power and technology at crossroads

Background: This year, 2025, Christians from all persuasions (Catholic, Orthodox or Protestant) commemorate 1700 years of Nicene Creed, referred to as Creed henceforth. The problem addressed here is that Pentecostals confess their belief in the Holy Spirit but are not aware of the history of this co...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kelebogile T. Resane
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2025-05-01
Series:African Journal of Pentecostal Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ajops.org/index.php/ajops/article/view/56
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850225046374580224
author Kelebogile T. Resane
author_facet Kelebogile T. Resane
author_sort Kelebogile T. Resane
collection DOAJ
description Background: This year, 2025, Christians from all persuasions (Catholic, Orthodox or Protestant) commemorate 1700 years of Nicene Creed, referred to as Creed henceforth. The problem addressed here is that Pentecostals confess their belief in the Holy Spirit but are not aware of the history of this confession. Objectives: This article shows that pneumatological imagination takes humanity into the cosmos where 4IR enhances faith. It gives a brief background of Creed, with a special focus on the third article; ‘I believe in the Holy Spirit.’ This article is central to the confession of Holy Spirit as the power of life. Pentecostals rightly confess the Spirit as the Lord and the Giver of life, as evidenced by the spiritual sensibilities of their culture. Method: Through literature study and websites, comparisons are made between the Pentecostal and technological powers. It compares the power of the Spirit and that of 4IR advancing the Pentecostal understanding of the Spirit. Theology of power and power of technology are examined to see how the confession: ‘I believe in the Holy Spirit’ fits into Pentecostal praxis. Results: For many Pentecostals, noise equals power, hence 4IR engaging voice-magnifying technologies such as microphones and musical instruments to enhance dynamism. Conclusion: Pentecostals are encouraged to confess the Creed by utilising 4IR. In their practices of spiritual gifts, Pentecostals are encouraged to gain liberty as all these gifts are and can be engaged or enhanced for human quality and survival aided positively through the 4IR. Contribution: This article contributes towards understanding and the role of the Creed in Pentecostalism. Power and 4IR are at the crossroad for furtherance rather than the hindrance of faith.
format Article
id doaj-art-7b563f8913fc4bbbb12c0caab29a89ae
institution OA Journals
issn 3005-6136
language English
publishDate 2025-05-01
publisher AOSIS
record_format Article
series African Journal of Pentecostal Studies
spelling doaj-art-7b563f8913fc4bbbb12c0caab29a89ae2025-08-20T02:05:28ZengAOSISAfrican Journal of Pentecostal Studies3005-61362025-05-0121e1e710.4102/ajops.v2i1.5627I believe in the Holy Spirit: Power and technology at crossroadsKelebogile T. Resane0Department of Historical and Constructive Theology, Faculty of Theology and Religion, University of the Free State, BloemfonteinBackground: This year, 2025, Christians from all persuasions (Catholic, Orthodox or Protestant) commemorate 1700 years of Nicene Creed, referred to as Creed henceforth. The problem addressed here is that Pentecostals confess their belief in the Holy Spirit but are not aware of the history of this confession. Objectives: This article shows that pneumatological imagination takes humanity into the cosmos where 4IR enhances faith. It gives a brief background of Creed, with a special focus on the third article; ‘I believe in the Holy Spirit.’ This article is central to the confession of Holy Spirit as the power of life. Pentecostals rightly confess the Spirit as the Lord and the Giver of life, as evidenced by the spiritual sensibilities of their culture. Method: Through literature study and websites, comparisons are made between the Pentecostal and technological powers. It compares the power of the Spirit and that of 4IR advancing the Pentecostal understanding of the Spirit. Theology of power and power of technology are examined to see how the confession: ‘I believe in the Holy Spirit’ fits into Pentecostal praxis. Results: For many Pentecostals, noise equals power, hence 4IR engaging voice-magnifying technologies such as microphones and musical instruments to enhance dynamism. Conclusion: Pentecostals are encouraged to confess the Creed by utilising 4IR. In their practices of spiritual gifts, Pentecostals are encouraged to gain liberty as all these gifts are and can be engaged or enhanced for human quality and survival aided positively through the 4IR. Contribution: This article contributes towards understanding and the role of the Creed in Pentecostalism. Power and 4IR are at the crossroad for furtherance rather than the hindrance of faith.https://ajops.org/index.php/ajops/article/view/56pentecostalcreedbelieveholy spirittechnologypower.
spellingShingle Kelebogile T. Resane
I believe in the Holy Spirit: Power and technology at crossroads
African Journal of Pentecostal Studies
pentecostal
creed
believe
holy spirit
technology
power.
title I believe in the Holy Spirit: Power and technology at crossroads
title_full I believe in the Holy Spirit: Power and technology at crossroads
title_fullStr I believe in the Holy Spirit: Power and technology at crossroads
title_full_unstemmed I believe in the Holy Spirit: Power and technology at crossroads
title_short I believe in the Holy Spirit: Power and technology at crossroads
title_sort i believe in the holy spirit power and technology at crossroads
topic pentecostal
creed
believe
holy spirit
technology
power.
url https://ajops.org/index.php/ajops/article/view/56
work_keys_str_mv AT kelebogiletresane ibelieveintheholyspiritpowerandtechnologyatcrossroads