Truls Åkerlund

(Norway)

Professor in Leadership,
Norwegian School of Leadership & Theology

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About The Speaker

Truls Åkerlund is a professor in leadership and teaches practical theology, leadership, and missiology at the Norwegian School of Leadership and Theology. He holds a PhD in ecclesial leadership and an MA in practical theology from Regent University. Prior to academia, he worked as a journalist and taught media and communications.

Dr Truls researches into Pentecostal leadership and provides critical insights into the leadership dynamics of global Pentecostalism. His work explores the phenomenology of Pentecostal leadership—how it is practically expressed in ministry contexts—and situates these findings within broader organisational and religious leadership frameworks.

Dr Truls has authored six books, including A Phenomenology of Pentecostal Leadership (2018), and has published numerous academic articles. An ordained minister in the Norwegian Pentecostal movement, Dr Åkerlund has served as a church planter and pastor. He frequently speaks at churches and conferences in Norway and internationally.

Paper Précis

Perspectives on Pentecostal Leadership: Contextuality, Complexity, and Constructiveness

Leadership is a complex phenomenon that cannot be easily defined as a single concept. Still, it is often understood as a set of social processes that influence people towards common goals—an approach that I will follow in this study. Drawing from general leadership theory and research on Pentecostal leadership, I will emphasise the interaction between leaders, followers, and the spiritual dimension, leading to a constructivist perspective on leader-follower relationships. The article will first address leadership in various settings, emphasising the need to contextualise leadership in different cultures, but also keeping an analytical distance to avoid dominating discourses that break with Christian perspectives. Second, I will discuss the complexity in Pentecostal leadership, especially the collaboration between divine and human interventions, the dialectic connection between agency and structure, and the ambivalence and tension between leaders and followers in ecclesial settings. Finally, I will highlight the constructive relations between leaders and followers. While leaders hold a formal position, leadership is also a social phenomenon effective only if it makes sense to church members, implying that the leader’s task is not to create everything from scratch but to build relationships and draw from the resources and spirituality present within the congregation.

Paper 2

Many separate the atonement from Pentecost to the degree that the link between them is lost. I wish to explore that link. The link is based on the insight that the cross of Christ is not limited to Israel. Rather, Christ seeks at the cross to open his life to all peoples, redeeming persons “from every tribe, and language, and people, and nation” (Rev. 5:9) and breaking down the wall of hostility between them (Eph. 2:14-16). The Spirit is poured out on all peoples at Pentecost in loyalty to the cross and for the sake of the crucified and risen Christ.

From the Atonement to Pentecost: An Exegetical and Theological Reflection

Many separate the atonement from Pentecost to the degree that the link between them is lost. I wish to explore that link. The link is based on the insight that the cross of Christ is not limited to Israel. Rather, Christ seeks at the cross to open his life to all peoples, redeeming persons “from every tribe, and language, and people, and nation” (Rev. 5:9) and breaking down the wall of hostility between them (Eph. 2:14-16). The Spirit is poured out on all peoples at Pentecost in loyalty to the cross and for the sake of the crucified and risen Christ.

Many separate the atonement from Pentecost to the degree that the link between them is lost. I wish to explore that link. The link is based on the insight that the cross of Christ is not limited to Israel. Rather, Christ seeks at the cross to open his life to all peoples, redeeming persons “from every tribe, and language, and people, and nation” (Rev. 5:9) and breaking down the wall of hostility between them (Eph. 2:14-16). The Spirit is poured out on all peoples at Pentecost in loyalty to the cross and for the sake of the crucified and risen Christ.

Video

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