Teddi Paul Sihombing
Jakarta Theological Seminary (STFT Jakarta)

Published : 2 Documents Claim Missing Document
Claim Missing Document
Check
Articles

Found 2 Documents
Search

Efforts to Create Transformative Diakonia Through Entrepreneurs Influenced by Servant of God Leadership and The Role of Congregational Members Johnson P. Robinsar Siregar; Teddi Paul Sihombing; Humala Lumbantobing; Heryanto Heryanto
Eduvest - Journal of Universal Studies Vol. 2 No. 3 (2022): Journal Eduvest - Journal of Universal Studies
Publisher : Green Publisher Indonesia

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | Full PDF (2914.418 KB) | DOI: 10.59188/eduvest.v2i3.391

Abstract

The research objective was to prove the influence of God's Servant Leadership and the Role of the Congregation on Diakonia Transformation through Entrepreneurship. The research was conducted on 80 samples of the Servant of God and members of the congregation around the City of Pematangsiantar, Province North Sumatra using simple random sampling. Data collection using google form with a questionnaire. The study used SEM-PLS to process data for testing validity, reliability and hypothesis testing. Research proves that the influence of God's Servant Leadership and the Role of the Congregation has a very big influence on entrepreneurship in realizing the Transformative Diakonia. Thus, the influence of God's Servant Leadership and the Role of the Congregation is very large and has a direct impact through entrepreneurship to create a Transformative Diakonia. The research recommends three things; first, as a solution to the development of church services in dealing with problems that occur both in the church and in the community. Second, it is important to develop effective and significant leadership of the Servant of God in realizing the ministry of the Transformative Diakonia. Third, the results and research outputs explain that the Transformative Diakonia ministry is very important for church ministry.
Land Theology: Intrigue View of Land According to the Culture of the Toba Batak People in Ecological Preservation Siregar, Johnson P. Robinsar; Sihombing, Teddi Paul; Hutabarat, Ro Sininta
Eduvest - Journal of Universal Studies Vol. 3 No. 8 (2023): Journal Eduvest - Journal of Universal Studies
Publisher : Green Publisher Indonesia

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.59188/eduvest.v3i8.895

Abstract

The study aims to provide a critical understanding of the views of Toba Batak culture to examine the issue of ecological damage. The study discusses a qualitative approach with literature studies. The results show land theology provides an explanation of the understanding of the value of land intrigue according to the Culture of the Toba Batak People that their ancestors valued the land so much that the land was his own identity. The value of land restriction understood by the ancestors of the Toba Batak people departs from the totalitarian understanding that microcosmic and macrocosmic connections explain how humans relate to God, humans to their environment and humans to humans. The relationship is arranged in a value system that makes the land so identical to itself that the ancestors of the Toba Batak people call that the land is surnamed. From this relationship then born philosophy as an ideal that became the purpose of the life of the Toba Batak community in its development so that the value and meaning of the land became lost. The Toba Batak community then as understood anthropomism made land as an instrument for achieving economic value. Land is no longer viewed from its intrinsic value in the cultural value of the Toba Batak people, causing ecological crises and conflicts. Therefore, if the Toba Batak community was born from a culture inherited from ancestors to the present. Thus loving Culture becomes concrete evidence of loving the land.