SCM Studyguide: Christian Mission
120 pages
English

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120 pages
English

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Description

Explores the nature of Christian mission in contemporary post-modern society. This book examines the main historic types of mission in the Christian tradition, seeing how they were forged in the cross currents of history and how they continue to be expressed by different Christian communities.

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 15 avril 2014
Nombre de lectures 4
EAN13 9780334048046
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0029€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

SCM STUDYGUIDE TO CHRISTIAN MISSION
Historic Types and Contemporary Expressions
Stephen Spencer


All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher, SCM Press.
© Stephen Spencer 2007
The Author has asserted his right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988, to be identified as the Author of this Work
Scripture quotations are from the New Revised Standard Version of the Bible, copyright 1989 by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the USA. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
978 0 334 04108 5
First published in 2007 by SCM Press
9–17 St Alban’s Place,
London N1 0NX
www.scm-canterburypress.co.uk
SCM Press is a division of SCM-Canterbury Press Ltd
Typeset by Regent Typesetting, London
Printed and bound in Great Britain by Biddles Ltd, King’s Lynn, Norfolk



Contents
Preface
Part 1 Orientation
1. Mission in Crisis
2. Origins of a Word: Mission as M issio Dei
3. Digging Deeper: Mission as Participation in the Trinity
4. In Human Terms: The Prophetic Mission of Christ
Part 2 Types and Expressions
Introduction
5. Filling the Ark: Apostolic Mission
Background: Jewish Christianity ( c. 40–100 AD)
Jewish-Christian apostolic mission
Case study: Paul’s calling
Some more recent expressions of the type: Protestant and Catholic
Debate
6. Radiating Eternal Truth: Hellenistic Orthodox Mission
Background: the rise of Platonic philosophy within Christianity
Christian mission within the Hellenistic paradigm
Case study: Antony of Egypt and the founding of monasticism
Some recent expressions of the type: Michael Ramsey’s theology and Taizé
Debate
7. Establishing Christendom: Medieval Catholic Mission
Background: the impact of Constantine and Augustine of Hippo
Mission within the medieval Catholic paradigm
Case study: Pope Gregory VII and Roman supremacy
Some other expressions of the type: the establishment of the Church of England
Debate
8. The Conversion of Souls: Protestant Reformation Mission
Background: Augustine’s awkward legacy and Luther’s doctrine of justification by faith
Mission within the Protestant Reformation paradigm
Case study: the awakening of John Wesley
Some recent expressions of the type: Pentecostalism
Debate
9. Building the Kingdom on Earth: Enlightenment Modern Mission
Background: the Enlightenment and Hegel
Mission within the Enlightenment modern paradigm
Case study: William Temple and the founding of the welfare state
Some recent expressions of the type: liberation theology and Faith in the City
Debate
10. Finding Hope in Local Communities: Mission within Postmodernity
Background: twentieth-century crisis and Karl Barth’s theology
Mission within postmodernity: Bonhoeffer’s legacy
Case study: Vincent Donovan and the Masai
Other recent expressions: the emerging church movement
Debate
Conclusion: Which Type of Mission?
Epilogue: The Coming of the Rains




Preface
This is not a history of missionary work or a guide to the practicalities of being a missionary but an introduction to the predominant ways the Christian community has understood and practised mission. It does this by identifying a number of ‘types’ of mission which have emerged through Christian history and which continue to be influential in different parts of the Christian world today. In adopting this approach it follows in the tradition of Max Weber (1864–1920) who developed the notion of ideal types , which he described as ‘analytical constructs that enable us to simplify a set of social relationships, to detail what is relevant and exclude misleading complexities’ (in Graham, Walton and Ward, Theological Reflection: Methods , SCM Press 2005, p. 11). A type, then, is a concept which helps to identify and understand the essential features of a more complicated phenomenon. Ernst Troeltsch used this approach to describe the life of the churches, identifying two basic types – the church type and the sect type. A number of other writers have followed his example, adapting and extending it, most recently Elaine Graham, Heather Walton and Frances Ward in relation to theological reflection (ibid., especially pp. 11–12). This book uses this approach to introduce Christian mission. It draws on the work of Hans Küng and David J. Bosch, especially on the six historical paradigms of Christian life and mission that they describe, and out of these it develops and presents six ‘types of mission’. It does this through a number of historical portraits which are indicative and exemplary of the development of each type.
This Studyguide , then, seeks to provide an overview of different approaches to mission, an overview in which contemporary views and practices can be located and understood. It does this especially for those working at undergraduate Levels 1–2, though the book is also aimed at a wider audience of any in the Church or society who wish to gain an understanding of the varied and creative ways in which the Church has engaged in mission.
Within each main chapter the book introduces a mission type in four ways. It looks at its sources within wider theological, philosophical and cultural movements. It presents a range of theologians, church leaders and movements who illustrate each one, choosing those who provide the most vivid examples. It presents other more recent examples of each type to show its continuing presence within the Christian community. Finally, it engages in some debate about which of them is the most consistent with the mission of Jesus as a predominant strand of contemporary biblical scholarship presents it.
This last task means there is an ongoing enquiry which runs through the book, an enquiry into which mission type is the most Christ-like within contemporary understanding. And the outcome of this enquiry will help those engaged in mission today to identify and inhabit that type. Some might argue that all the types should be adopted and inhabited by the contemporary Church. This may be possible at a regional or national level but at local level, where churches have limited resources and are best advised to do one thing well rather than six things poorly, choices must be made. This Studyguide is intended to help with the making of those choices. So, despite the opening sentence above, the book does have a practical application.
A student approaching the subject of missiology for the first time might feel bewildered by a subject that seems to be about every aspect of Christianity and, therefore, no aspect in particular. The first introductory part of the book seeks to prevent this by charting one of a possible number of routes into the subject. It draws on recent historical theology, systematic theology and biblical studies, arguing for a specific way of understanding and practising mission. It is intended only to open up the field of enquiry and to reflect the nature of a discipline which is currently in a provisional, unsettling but exciting place where God’s will must be sought amidst the questions and traumas of our time.
The writing of this Studyguide would not have been possible without the creative contributions of students in the Carlisle and Blackburn Diocesan Training Institute (between 1999 and 2003) and on the Northern Ordination Course (from 2003 until now) who have been members of my mission theology classes and have helped form my thinking in this broad discipline. I would like to record my immense gratitude to all of them for their contributions.
Christopher Burdon and Stephen Platten have provided invaluable help in reading drafts of different chapters and suggesting corrections and improvements. I am very grateful to them and take responsibility for all the errors and obscurities that remain in the text.
I would like to record my thanks to Barbara Laing and the editorial board at SCM Press for providing the opportunity to write this Studyguide and for the encouragement to do so.
My wife Sally has helped me understand and appreciate parts of the Christian tradition which otherwise would have remained misunderstood and unappreciated. She has also read through the entire book suggesting corrections and improvements. In gratitude for this and for much else these pages are dedicated to her with love.




Part 1. Orientation
There is in God – some say –
A deep, but dazzling darkness; as men here
Say it is late and dusky, because they
See not all clear.
(Henry Vaughan, ‘The Night’)



1. Mission in Crisis
It is fifty years since Mrs Rosa Parks, a black tailor’s assistant in a city centre department store in Montgomery, Alabama, in the deep south of the United States, boarded a bus and took a seat. When the bus filled up the driver ordered Mrs Parks to stand so that a white man could sit down. She refused to move: ‘She’d gone shopping after work, and her feet hurt. She couldn’t bear the thought of having to stand all the way home. The driver, of course, threatened to call the police. Go ahead and call them, Mrs Parks sighed. And she thought how you spend your whole life making things comfortable for white people. You just live for their well-being, and t

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