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Paperback The Church Between Gospel and Culture: The Emerging Mission in North America Book

ISBN: 0802841090

ISBN13: 9780802841094

The Church Between Gospel and Culture: The Emerging Mission in North America

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Book Overview

This is a print on demand book and is therefore non- returnable.

This excellent collection of essays, written by a diverse group of Christian leaders working on the frontier of mission within the present North American context, lays the groundwork for the newly emerging missionary encounter of the gospel with North American culture.

Demonstrating that the missionary identity of the church is to be found at the intersection of...

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Anotehr Gospel and our Culture Network essays' collection

George Hunsberger and Craig Van Gelder (eds.) The Church Between Gospel and Culture: The Emerging Mission in North America (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1996) Reviewed by Darren Cronshaw The Gospel and our Culture Network (GOCN) is a collaborative effort, building on Newbigin's and Bosch's work on mission to the West, and focused on three tasks: (1) an analysis of the North American setting; (2) theological reflection on what the gospel is that addresses this setting; (3) the renewal of the church and its missional identity in this setting. This volume of essays explores these culture-gospel-church themes and their interaction which is central to grasping how churches in the West can fulfill their missionary nature. The first two essays focus on the mission question: developing a domestic missiology for North America (rather than being domesticated by North American culture), and re-visioning the church for twenty-first century issues (including globalization, postmodenism, and changing approaches to theology and denominations). The second section assesses Western culture in its modern and postmodern expressions. Topics include the changing place of church in society, how the church has been held captive by modern frameworks (e.g., that mission is something done overseas), the influence of secularization, how to understand and address potsmodernism, and anthropological tools for critiquing culture. These are important issues for churches in Australia, who often either ignore culture (and fail to contextualise) or adopt it uncritically (and so overcontextualise.) Thirdly, the volume explores how to let the gospel speak to us on its own terms - doing theology in community and giving expression to it in local contexts. The writers call for radical course corrections in evangelism, missional hermeneutics that balance biblical authority and contextual diversity, vernacular theology that celebrates the truth of the gospel within individual worldviews, and authentic translation of the gospel that relativises and revitalises culture. The final six essays seek to define the church missionally. They advocate for missionary congregations (rather than congregations that have missions); missionary pastors who imaginatively model themselves as apostles, poets and prophets; and processes for reinventing congregations from below as communities of prayer, discernment and action. Some of the papers on culture need translating from North America to Australia, but these papers on the church's identity as a missionary people are critical for churches throughout the West to move on from seeing themselves as places where things happen or vendors of religious goods and services to being a body of people sent on mission. Emerging churches seek to place themselves at this intersection of culture, gospel and church and these papers (many of them seminal papers by North American thinkers and a couple of practcitioners) provide helpful insights from GOCN's formative

This is a consequential book.

There was a time when a mouse was just a rodent, only spiders had Web sites, surfing took place at the beach and the church was the key force for shaping culture. Those days are gone. A new era is upon us and Christendom must 1) face reality; 2) develop a plan of action and 3)reengage our culture.The reality we must face, for Hunsberger and Van Gelder, is this: the church has capitulated to the forces of Enlightenment (forces of the scientific world view) and has given up its key role as a cultural change agent. Wilbert Shenk summed it up by saying "Christendom is spent as a cultural force"; but, and this is a big BUT, Hunsberger and Van Gelder are hopeful that the church can redefine its mission and launch an new era of relevancy in the century ahead. The Church between Gospel and Culture rings out a wake up call, heralding the arrival of a new era. 14 authors; all thinkers, theologians, anthropologist and culturist, are the harbingers for the new world to come. George Hunsberger and Craig Van Gelder (both professors of missiology) have collected and edited these significant and erudite voices. The Church between Gospel and Culture is arduous reading (due the novelty of concepts, the multiplicity of scholarly writers) and days, not just hours, need to be set aside to ponder and reflect on the significance of what these authors have to say about our culture, our era and the massive change that is upon the Christian Church. I was persuaded to rethink my role and mission as a healing missionary. The call of Christ not to be "in the world, but not of the world" was made anew to me. The Church between Gospel and Culture is worth the effort.When Christianity was a cult (before Constantine 325AD) the people of "the Way" (Acts 24:14) were willing to be counter-cultural. They were mission to their culture, thus they challenged the "principalities and powers" of their society. "The Way" cult could do this because it was not "of the world, just in it". Atlas, in our world today the hope for those in Christendom that want to be real and relevant by their faith may find the only way is by apostasy; leaving a dying religious system and creating a new cult group that refuses to drink the cup of modernity and domestication.When it comes to the future of the Western church I am not an optimist. In the words of Don Marquis the late U.S. humorist/journalist "an optimist is a guy who has never had much experience". To be optimistic about the future of Christianity is to be one who has not endured much of Christendom. I am closer to the thinking of both Stanley Hauerwas and William Willimon who brand the contemporary Western Church as a church that accommodates the world, seeking to market "church" programs, clawing for a position in and among the other many agents of society. This is a consequential book.

A great addition to any postmodern library

This is a book for the technician. If you are looking for how to build a postmodern church in four easy steps, this book will disapoint you. If you are looking for a book that will challenge your worldview and help equip you with some of the questions and answers that we need to hear, then you will be interested in reading this "heady" theological look at the church and culture.
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