9. Reflecting on Mission
Mission as ?
The word Mission is found in the NewTestament
only once in Acts 12:25
Evangelion – to announce the good news
(evangelism)
Martyria - to bear witness (IMC 1952)
Oikumene – to become one in/with Christ
(ecumenism) – Koinonia (fellowship) (IMC 1947)
Kerygma – to preach (IMC 1947)
Didache – to teach (IMC 1947)
Diakonia – to serve (1967 Hoekendijk)
10. Mission
Creative
Tension
Church with others
missio Dei
Mediating
Salvation
Quest for
Justice
Evangelism
Liberation
Common
Witness
Ministry by
(Whole) People
of God
Witness to
people of
Other Living
Faiths
Action in
Hope
Theology
David Bosch’s Transforming
Mission
Additions by Norman EThomas to Bosch
– Contextualization, and Inculturation,
dialogue in ClassicTexts
11. Holistic Mission
Plurality of
Mission
Prophetic Liberative
Nourishes
Culture
Communities
Proclamation
Development-
oriented
Participatory
Dialogic
and
interactive Building
Developed from WCC’s Statements 1980 -2005
ou are the light of the
world Unity
12. Mission includes
An Action of emptying
A Process of learning and listening
Content – good news
Effect – transformed lives
People – all no barriers
Place – any where
Culture – dignity restored
Method – prophetic, dialogic
Means – community based
Reflection – critical improvement
Institution - supportive
Relationship – reign of God
14. Missiological origins of
theological education
We can trace missionary origins for
theological education in many colleges
It was missionaries who came together first
ecumenically. So the ecumenical theological
education has a missiological background.
Missionaries founded theological colleges
with ecumenical visions. – IMC andTEF
All the contextual discussions come from the
experiences and inputs of missionaries
around the world.
15. Mission Agencies and
Theological Education
Mission Agencies Theological
Institutions
servant
evangelist
prophet
Shepherd
Ecumenists
Diverse mission
inculturation
Academic standard
Theological concerns for contexual reality
Transition?
16. Missiological Challenges
Transforming theology– taking sides - disability, HIV/AIDS
Common witness – Learning Ecumenically – unknown
common spaces
Reflecting contextually – to the borders and risks –
intercultual texts
Neo-liberal values and Alternative life affirming gospel
message – challenging claims of modernity and
secularisation
Facing postmodern context with confidence emphasising
relational, narrative, process and holy spirit factors –
emerging church and challenges of pluralization
Challenging religious myths and ignorance – religious
fundamentalism - differentiating Evangelicals from
Fundamentalists
17. Missiology in Theological
Education
Missiology as critique while theological
education as academic scrutiny
Missiology as risks while theological
education as consolidation
Missiology takes church to borders and
theological education takes church to
tradition and doctrines
Missiology moves from particular to universal
whereas theological education moves from
universal to particular
18. Global Mission Tasks
New Relationship or partnership – new ways
of sharing resources - mission as
interdependency
Networking of churches and Christian
institutions – sharing missiological
experiences
TrainingTheological teacher Leaders among
growing Churches as Christian mission
Taking theology to all – via new technology –
elearning – nonformal theological education
19. Creative tension or synergy
Einstein’s moving frames
Intellectual input and praxis
Interdisciplinary and multifaceted approach
Critical but creative and appreciative
engagement
history versus Contemporary
Particular (Tradition) and Universal
(Ecumenical)
Transformation and restoration
Individual and communitarian
21. Rice Bowl Theology – C S Song
Rice as
Theology and
Bowl as Mission
studies – For a
hungry person
rice cannot be
given without a
bowl and a bowl
cannot be given
without the rice
22. Missiological root of theology
–
tree can be sustained by other roots too but main
root needs to be there – contextual theologies,
ecumenical studies, intercultural theologies and
so on. (Carey)
23. Missiology in Theological
education
Mission is a movement. Missiology is to guide
the movement. It has risks and dangers.
An institution without movement is dead or
nearing dead. So any theological education
without taking missiological studies seriously is
nearing an end.
Mission formation (both at global and local) is
the essential core of the ministerial formation
without which the theological college face dead-
end.