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oapen-20.500.12657-877062024-03-28T14:03:17Z Diakonische Kirchen(um)nutzung Beste, Jörg Braune-Krickau, Tobias Coenen-Marx, Cornelia Deeg, Alexander Gerhards, Albert Hermelink, Jan Hofmann, Beate Karstein, Uta Kirchhof, Tobias Keller, Sonja Lieb, Stefan Lilie, Ulrich Mandry, Julia Menzel, Kerstin Rabe-Wiez, Henrike Rebenstorf, Hilke Siegl, Christine Menzel, Kerstin Deeg, Alexander Chuch usage urban space development thema EDItEUR::Q Philosophy and Religion::QR Religion and beliefs::QRM Christianity thema EDItEUR::Q Philosophy and Religion::QR Religion and beliefs::QRV Aspects of religion::QRVS Religious institutions and organizations Diaconal and community-oriented transformations have previously played a minor role in research on the (re)use of churches compared to commercial and cultural uses. These strategies, however, offer great potential for the church, diaconia, and the respective social spaces. A social reuse is often supported by society and the church – but due to the different logics of diaconia and church, these transformations are exposed to particular challenges. On the one hand, the contributions in this book look at examples of explicit diaconal church (re)use: the co-use and reuse of churches by diaconal institutions or in dedicated participation in urban and regional development, but also church spaces in diaconal institutions in the past and present. On the other hand, they reflect the implicit diaconal nature of church spaces as open spaces of hospitality, as shelters, and as places of boundary-crossing community. 2024-02-15T11:17:30Z 2024-02-15T11:17:30Z 2023 book ONIX_20240215_9783402212653_2 2510-3954 9783402212653 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/87706 ger Sakralraumtransformationen application/pdf Attribution 4.0 International 9783402212653.pdf Aschendorff Verlag Aschendorff Verlag 10.17438/978-3-402-21265-3 Diaconal and community-oriented transformations have previously played a minor role in research on the (re)use of churches compared to commercial and cultural uses. These strategies, however, offer great potential for the church, diaconia, and the respective social spaces. A social reuse is often supported by society and the church – but due to the different logics of diaconia and church, these transformations are exposed to particular challenges. On the one hand, the contributions in this book look at examples of explicit diaconal church (re)use: the co-use and reuse of churches by diaconal institutions or in dedicated participation in urban and regional development, but also church spaces in diaconal institutions in the past and present. On the other hand, they reflect the implicit diaconal nature of church spaces as open spaces of hospitality, as shelters, and as places of boundary-crossing community. 10.17438/978-3-402-21265-3 fb17cfa5-9e40-4113-a5ce-80325c535538 9783402212653 Aschendorff Verlag 2 364 Münster open access
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Diaconal and community-oriented transformations have previously played a minor role in research on the (re)use of churches compared to commercial and cultural uses. These strategies, however, offer great potential for the church, diaconia, and the respective social spaces. A social reuse is often supported by society and the church – but due to the different logics of diaconia and church, these transformations are exposed to particular challenges. On the one hand, the contributions in this book look at examples of explicit diaconal church (re)use: the co-use and reuse of churches by diaconal institutions or in dedicated participation in urban and regional development, but also church spaces in diaconal institutions in the past and present. On the other hand, they reflect the implicit diaconal nature of church spaces as open spaces of hospitality, as shelters, and as places of boundary-crossing community.
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