See the continuation of Vinoth Ramachandra’s thoughts on ‘More on Rethinking Mission’.
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More rethinking of missions
Tuesday, July 6th, 2010Grace and Compassion
Monday, January 4th, 2010As I begin 2010, I am overwhelmed by God’s grace and compassion.
I may at times think myself as wholly good, kind, and benevolent, but I know who I really am. Many times I justify or defend my actions and responses, but my motives are quite clear to me. I am capable of lies and thus at times seek to deceive, but the truth seems to find me out. While I may be a man who tries to do good, love others, and live the truth, I fall short and thus must continually look to and rely upon the grace and compassion of God.
The Mission of God
Wednesday, September 16th, 2009I am reading for the third time Christopher J. H. Wright’s The Mission of God: Unlocking the Bible’s Grand Narrative (2006). As I read through the first section this morning, I recalled how Wright’s reframing of mission first impacted me in 2006. My comment at that time was that he turned my biblical/theological understanding of mission on its head – the way I look at scripture and how I talk about mission could never be the same. I do not agree with Wright at every point, and yet, I wholeheartedly affirm the manner in which he approaches the Bible and mission and the fresh, holistic understanding of mission he offers the church.
It is extremely urgent that the church reexamine its encounter with the world and rethink how it is to participate in God’s mission. If you have not read Wright, take the time to work through this tome (535 pages of text). I know some of you have purchased The Mission of God, and it sits on your shelf, partially or totally unread (because I have seen it sitting there). Pull it down, open it up, and begin working your way carefully and thoughtfully through each section. Of all the things you might do in the next six months, reading Wright might be the most formative and impactful.
Worldwide web?
Sunday, May 24th, 2009I found the following in Jehu Hanciles, Beyond Christendom: Globalization, African Migration, and the Transformation of the West (Orbis, 2008), to be an interesting qualification regarding globalization and worldwide connectivity.
“Undoubtedly, Internet users worldwide remain a privileged elite-in 2006 global usage was still under 16 percent. But Internet usage is lowest in Africa, where only 2.6 percent of the population are users-compared to 10 percent for Asia, 10 percent for the Middle East, and 67 percent for the United States. The disparity is even more obvious when it is considered that, though it accounts for 14 percent of the world’s population, the African continent is home to only 2.3 percent of Internet users worldwide.” (27)
The worldwide web is not so worldwide and certainly will not replace, in the near future, other means of human communication and interaction. I guess pulling a chair up and talking face-to-face with another person is here to stay!
What if
Wednesday, December 3rd, 2008What if I come to the end of this day safe and secure, and yet have not risk with a situation or a person? What if I conclude this day feeling good, happy, and satisfied, and yet at no time felt pain, discomfort, or disgust? What if I walk through this day fulfilled and complete in myself, and yet have not given a portion of my money, time, or self to another. Then surely I have passed through this day but have not lived.
The Profoundest Wound
Monday, November 17th, 2008Regarding clergy and the kind of gospel preached two centuries ago, Søren Kierkegaard noted:
A nimble, adroit, lively man, who in pretty language, with the utmost ease, with graceful manners … knows how to introduce a little Christianity, but easily, as easily as possible. In the New Testament, Christianity is the profoundest wound that can be inflicted upon a man, calculated on the most dreadful scale to collide with everything- and now the clergyman has perfected himself in introducing Christianity in such a way as it signifies nothing, and when he is able to do this to perfection he is regarded as a paragon. But this is nauseating! Oh, if a barber has perfected himself in removing the beard so easily that one hardly notices it, that’s well enough; but in realtion to that which is precisely calculated to wound, to perfect oneself so as to introduce it in such a way that if possible it is not noticed at all- that is nauseating. -Søren Kierkegaard, Attack Upon “Christendom”, 258.
Dreaming – Loving
Thursday, November 6th, 2008“He who loves the dream of a Christian community more than the community itself, often does great damage to that community, no matter how well-intentioned he might be.”
-Dietrich Bonhoeffer, quoted in David Bosch, Transforming Mission, 387.