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Gospel and Context in Creative Tension. SEMS 24 th May 2010. Three Realities of the Global Church. A global church World population (2008) of 6,691m 2,231m Christians (self-designating) 255m Evangelicals, found in every country on the planet Very few from major world religions
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Gospel and Context in Creative Tension SEMS 24th May 2010
Three Realities of the Global Church • A global church • World population (2008) of 6,691m • 2,231m Christians (self-designating) • 255m Evangelicals, found in every country on the planet • Very few from major world religions • The church in Europe in rapid recession
Christendom—A Crumbling Civilization • fourth century to mid-twentieth century • state recognized dominant organized church and church legitimated rule of dominant class • territorial division into parishes
Post-Christendom Shift • church attendance and influence in the lands of Europe, N. America (except US?), and Australasia has been in marked decline • “a culture in which central features of the Christian story are unknown and churches are alien institutions whose rhythms do not normally impinge on most members of society” (Stuart Murray) • church moved from centre to periphery
A Translatable Message • gospel message is inherently translatable • believers in Antioch (Acts 11:20) • church to be doctrinally exclusive but culturally diverse (Acts 15) • missions under Christendom • ‘Christianity, commerce and civilization’ (Livingston) • post-colonial reappraisal
Gospel in South Asia • Muslim majority - Pakistan and Bangladesh • more Muslims in India than any other country after Indonesia • majority of the world’s roughly 850 million Hindus live in South Asia • resistant peoples
Traditional Approaches to Muslim Evangelism • focus on doctrine and apologetics • comparison of Islamic teaching with Christian teaching • argumentative and confrontational • frustration with little fruit
‘Whole World Mission’ in Gaziville since 1955 lack of fruit in 1970s review of methods by team Phil Parshall’s ‘New Paths’
Financial relationships with nationals • Missionary lifestyle was to change • Islamic dress • beards • simple lifestyle • Islamic diet - no pork • approach to time • picture-taking and visits discouraged
3. Islamic-style worship practices adopted • place for washing before prayer • removal of shoes • sitting on floor • Bibles placed on folding stands • Muslim-style prayer • Christian words were set to Muslim tunes and chanted • pragmatic setting of days and times for worship
fasting • homogeneous churches would be planted • church organization along lines of mosque • Muslim names would be retained • ‘followers of Isa’ or MBBs • Bible study, prayer and fasting • converts choose their own leadership • the propagation of the gospel would be centred along family and friendship lines
Bangladesh India Philippines other countries The Model Spreads
More Radical Approach • not MBBs but Muslims (‘one who submits’) • may continue to attend the mosque for prayer to Isa • attempts in at least Afghanistan, Indonesia, southern Thailand and Malaysia
C-Scale for Muslim Contextualization • C1 Traditional Church Using Outsider Language • C2 Traditional Church Using Insider Language • C3 Contextualized Christ-centred Communities Using Insider Language and Religiously Neutral Insider Cultural Forms
C4 Contextualized Christ-centred Communities Using Insider Language and Biblically Permissible Cultural and Islamic Forms • C5 Christ-centred Communities of ‘Messianic Muslims’ Who Have Accepted Jesus as Lord and Saviour • C6 Small Christ-centred Communities of Secret/Underground Believers
defining Hinduism Orientalist paradigm defining ‘religion’ and ‘mysticism’ Hinduism as a civilization caste the fundamental social order incarnational approach to presenting Christ to Hindus New Paradigms for Understanding Hinduism
H-Scale for Hindu Contextualization • H1 Traditional Christians separate themselves from everything “Hindu” • H2 Traditional Christians renounce Hinduism but still accept some non-religious Hindu cultural practices • H3 Hindu Christians renounce Hindu religion for Christianity, but adapt Hindu religious and cultural practices
H4 Hindu disciples of Christ do not develop contextual expressions of discipleship • H5 Hindu disciples of Christ seek to develop contextual expressions of discipleship • H6 Hindu disciples of Christ recognized as such by other Hindus but remain unassociated with other disciples of Christ • H7 Hindu disciples of Christ keep faith completely private
The Gospel as Prisoner and Liberator of Culture Two principles in creative tension: • ‘indigenizing’ principle • a place to feel at home • the particularizing factor • ‘pilgrim’ principle • no abiding city • the universalizing factor
Responding to Post-Christendom • post-Christendom a God-given opportunity • loss of biblical literacy • little or no experience of church • ‘mission from below’ • points of contact • new models of church planting
Issues for Further Thought Some issues for further thought: • critical realistic approach to knowledge • uniqueness of Christ subversive • cultural pluralism • narrative • meaning and significance of the city • meaning and significance of community • bounded sets, centred sets and fuzzy sets • technology