‘Where are the prophets?’ : how academic theology failed us
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Abstract
Against the backdrop of precarious global and local politics – a threat to democracy, global wars, xenophobic violence, oppressions of sexual minorities and a permanent youth precariat in South Africa – do academic theologies foster prophetic responses or succumb to imperial co-option? Departing from the Kairos Document’s threefold call to conversion, this article laments the lack of a Kairos consciousness today, with reference to five areas of concern.
CONTRIBUTION : This study explores what theological formation for prophetic communities might look like, marked by Le Bruyns’ three elements of criticality, contextuality and change; participating in concrete sites of struggle and sustained by a ‘lived faith’. It imagines theological schools as ‘schools of prophets, servants and healers’, not only breaking the silence but also going beyond prophetic rhetoric through embodied theologising.
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DATA AVAILABILITY : The author declares that all data that support this research article and findings are available in the article and its references.
Keywords
Kairos document, Kairos consciousness, Theological education, Prophetic theology, Prophetic communities
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG-15: Life on land
SDG-04: Quality education
SDG-04: Quality education
Citation
De Beer, S.F., 2026, ‘“Where are the prophets?”: How academic theology failed us’, HTS Teologiese Studies/ Theological Studies 82(1), a10981: 1-9. https://doi.org/10.4102/hts.v82i1.10981.
