New Acquisitions


Exegetical gems from Biblical Hebrew Proverbs, Ecclesiastes Philippians & Philemon Ezra-Nehemiah The first letter to the Corinthians God's heart for children Dictionary of New Testament background

Commentaries - Old Testament


Proverbs, Ecclesiastes Judges Joshua: A Commentary Ruth The shape and shaping of the book of Psalms Psalms Psalms: Volume 3 (90 - 150) Psalms: Volume 2 (42 - 89) Psalms: Volume 1 (1-41) Psalms 73-150 Ezra-Nehemiah Ezekiel Joshua to Kings Reading Samuel Deuteronomy The Book of Deuteronomy Reading Deuteronomy Deuteronomy Reading Judges Judges and Ruth Joshua, Judges, Ruth The Expositor's Bible commentary Leviticus-Numbers The book of Genesis Isaiah 40-66 Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Song of Solomon Psalms 51-150 Psalms 1-50 Job 1-2 Kings, 1-2 Chronicles, Ezra, Nehemiah, Esther Joshua, Judges, Ruth, 1-2 Samuel Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy Genesis 1-11 The Twelve Prophets Genesis 1-11

Commentaries - New Testament


Discovering Revelation Revelation Revelation Reading the epistles of James, Peter, John, and Jude as scripture Epistles of 1, 2, 3 John James Hebrews, James 1 and 2 Timothy and Titus 2 Timothy and Titus Exalting Jesus in 1 & 2 Thessalonians Reading Galatians, Philippians, and 1 Thessalonians 1 & 2 Thessalonians Colossians and Philemon Philippians Philippians & Philemon Philippians Philippians, Colossians Reading Luke Luke Luke Mark The Epistle to the Hebrews Luke Mark Ephesians The IVP Bible background commentary :  Old Testament John Matthew Matthew Romans Romans Romans The Epistle to the Romans 1 Corinthians 1 Corinthians Acts

Towards A Contextual Theology Of Poverty For Ghana

Boaheng, Isaac

Towards A Contextual Theology Of Poverty For Ghana - Johannesburg South Africa South African Theological Seminary 2019 - 163 pages PDF A4 Abstract, TOC



This study was conducted to formulate a contextual theology of poverty for the Ghanaian context. It began with an examination of the Ghanaian context in terms of religious, political, economic and social developments from the pre-colonial era, through to the post-independence period. Next, exegetical analysis of three anchor passages that are very crucial to the subject, one each from the law (Deut. 15:1-11), the prophets (Is. 10:1-4), and the gospel (Matt. 6:19-34)were conducted to ascertain what Scripture teaches about the subject matter. The major findings from the exegetical studies include the fact that God frowns upon materialism, extravagance, love for riches, anxiety and worry that detract one from his/her loyalty to him but encourages contentment, simplicity, modesty and sharing of resources with others. With the biblical teaching and Ghana’s poverty situation as contextual frameworks, the study critiqued the Prosperity Theology model of poverty alleviation, Ghana’s most influential model for Christian understanding of poverty and its alleviation. The study found some merits in Prosperity Theology for poverty alleviation but also discovered that it lacks contextual application to the Ghanaian socio-religious landscape. The final part of the study presents a contextual approach to poverty based on three major partners namely, Scripture, tradition and the socio-politico-economic situations of Ghana. The theological formulation was done based on the following thematic areas: work ethics, material ethics, human development, female empowerment, cultural transformation, social and structural transformation, spiritual transformation, solidarity with the poor, fruitfulness to spirituality and work, solidarity with the poor, contentment, modesty and simplicity, job creation, financial ethics and fighting against extravagance in the Church. The contextual theology formulated not only addresses the theological and biblical needs of Ghanaians but also socio-cultural needs. The findings from the study confirm the hypothesis that a contextualized theology of poverty offers a paradigm for the understanding and alleviation of poverty among Christians in Ghana.

South African Theological Seminary © 2024