contextual theology
TRANSCRIPT
Theological Theological ContextualizationContextualization
by Robert H. Munsonwww.munsonmissions.org
2017 Version
All Theology is contextualAll theology is meant to serve as a bridge between God's revelation and humans in their cultural setting.As such, theology can generally be lumped into two groups: well-contextualized theology, and poorly-contextualized theology
“Contextualization attempts to communicate the Gospel in word and deed to establish the church in ways that make sense to people within their local cultural context, presenting Christianity in such a way that it meets people’s deepest needs and penetrates their world-view, thus allowing them to follow Christ and remain within their own Culture.” -Darrell Whiteman
The following are Whiteman's 3 Functions of Contextualization:
Function #1 Function #1
““To see the Gospel To see the Gospel communicated in a communicated in a
culturally relevant, but culturally relevant, but Biblically appropriate Biblically appropriate
manner.”manner.”
Function #2 Function #2
In Mission, “to offend for In Mission, “to offend for the right reasons” ... and the right reasons” ... and not for the wrong reasons.not for the wrong reasons.
Function #3 Function #3 To develop contextualized To develop contextualized
expressions of the Gospel so that expressions of the Gospel so that the Gospel itself will be understood the Gospel itself will be understood
in ways the universal church has in ways the universal church has neither experienced nor neither experienced nor
understood before, thus expanding understood before, thus expanding our understanding of the Kingdom our understanding of the Kingdom
of God.of God.
Four Self ChurchDavid Bosch (1929-1992) added to
the Henry Venn/Rufus Anderson model of the 3-self Indigenous Church, to suggest the 4-self church:
Self-sustaining Self-governing Self-propagating (Self-theologizing)
So... a vibrant local church doesn't simply regurgitate the theology from a different place, or a different time. It's theology needs to be TRUE--- but also RELEVANT to its context.
Models of Developing Contextualized Theology according to Stephen Bevans
Translation Anthropological Praxis Synthetic Transcendental Countercultural
Translation Model “Putting the Gospel Into” the Culture Greater focus on the fidelity of the
tradition. One is seeking to put the message of
Christ into the language and culture of the respondents.
The process is quite similar the process of translating a book.
Recall Paul in Athens
Anthropological Model Similar to Translation Model but with
greater focus on, and respect for, the respondent culture.
Open to learn and grow from the insight of the respondent culture. Preparatio Evangelica
Jesus with the Syro-Phoenician Woman Justin Martyr's belief that the 'seeds of the
word” exist in other religions and cultures.
Praxis Model Start with Action, and Reflect on it in
light of Scripture, Tradition, and Social Science.
The process is intentionally iterative. Action leads to reflection, which in turn leads to action.
Gustavo Gutierrez and Liberation Theology.
Synthetic Model Mixing of Translation,
Anthropological, and Praxis methods... synthesizing them.
Seen as especially appropriate of “synthesized” cultures, or cultures of mixed traditions, such as the Philippines. (Inter-traditionality)
Jose M. de Mesa / Horacio de la Costa
Transcendental Model
Looks to the power of faith to transcend culture. More focused on process than the resulting content.
In a new culture as a person of faith, one experiences feelings of antipathy and sympathy.
One seeks to learn, dynamically, through reflection-- trying to understand the WHY of these feelings.
Countercultural Model
Does not seek to be Cultural or Anti-cultural... but sees Jesus and prophets as counter-cultural.
Understand the symbols of the culture. → Analyze the culture through the eyes of Scripture. → Utilize the symbols of the culture to challenge it.
“Subversive Fulfilment” of Culture
Each Method has Some Value and Should not Necessarily be Seen as
Competing with Each Other
Note: Scott Moreau's book, “Contextualization in World
Missions” takes Bevan's models and relates them to Evangelical
theology and mission praxis.
Critical ContextualizationBy Paul Hiebert
Reject Old Ways“old culture is evil”noncontextualization
Foreign Gospel
Old Goes Underground
Old Ways
Deal with Old Ways“old culture is both good and evil”critical contextualization
Four-Step ProcessAnalyze the old ways emphathicallyStudy the Bible on the subjectJudge old ways in light of biblical teachingCreate new contextualized ways
Accept Old Ways“old culture is good”uncritical contextualization
Syncretism
Cultural Anthropology for Christian Mission: A Lecture Series developed by Dr. Flint James Miller; Based on the lectures of Dr. Darrell Whiteman; Using many of the concepts of Paul Hiebert, Charles Kraft, and Eugene Nida
So How Does One Know When a Local Theology is Contextually Sound and When is it Unsound. Or When does one drift from Orthodoxy to Heterodoxy/Syncretism?
The goal is not to PROVE what is good or bad, but to have a compelling set of evidences supporting or contradicting a local theology.
We need to be humble and open in our analysis.
Evidences of Good Contextual Theology
The following Evidences are loosely based on Bevans, Schreiter, de Mesa and others.
However, they are organized differently here.
Start from the Bottom Guideliness and Work up.
Bottom Tier: Divinity
These tests have to do with God... the character of God as revealed... the truth of his spoken (special) revelation... the insight from His general revelation.
Evidence #1. Revelation Is the Theology COHERENT with
Revelation. (Revelation within the Christian context is primarily referring to God's Word.) Does it fit with revelation or not?
Is the Theology HARMONIOUS with Revelation, or disonant?
Evidence #1. Revelation
A BAD test involves “proof texting.” Almost any strange belief can be justified through a concerted effort to rip certain verses out of their contexts. You cannot create a good contextual theology based on “cherry-picking” decontextualized verses.
This test assumes the Unity and Canonicity of the Holy Bible.
Evidence #2. God
Is the Theology in line with the NATURE of God... particularly as being Transcendant, Immanent, and Personal?
Does the Theology tend to lead to behavior that is in line with the CHARACTER of God?
Evidence #2. God
Bad theology revisualizes God/god as less than worthy of worship, or relational in prayer.
Bad theology supports, justifies, or reinforces bad behavior... not in line with the character of God.
This is based on the idea that God is the object of theology, and that we are to worship God in spirit AND in truth.
Evidence #3. Creation Does the theology recognize the Created
world as God's good handiwork? Does the theology see all human beings
as created in God's image? Bad theology identifies the created world
as lacking value and undeserving of our concern.
Bad theology justifies demeaning a person or a group of people.
Middle Tier: Community
The Community of Faith also challenges a theology. This challenge comes from both the local church (in which theology is supposed to be relevant), and the universal church (in which the theology and local church exist)
Evidence #4. Local Church Does the Theology eventually find
traction, or ACCEPTANCE within the body of believers it exists for?
Did it come from the COMMUNITY? Is it INTELLIGIBLE to members of the
community in simple language?
Evidence #4. Local Church Bad contextual theology more commonly
comes from the outside (an outsider in the community, or a single “prophetic” voice in the community).
Bad contextual theology tends to use big words or heavy concepts that cannot be understood by many members of the context.
This assumes the “priesthood of believers” and God working in the community.
Evidence #5. Universal ChurchIs the Theology (or more correctly, the
community of faith that embraces this theology) open to challenge from those outside of the group.
Can the Theology, also, challenge those outside of the group and even inspire new thought and theologies?
Evidence #5. Universal Church Bad Contextual Theology says “We
are not open to challenge because outsiders are simply wrong” or “Outsiders can never understand us.”
This evidence presupposes the universality (catholicity) and spiritual unity of the church... not just its diversity.
Evidence #6. Spiritual Fruit Does the community, living out its
theology, act in ethical, Christlike, behavior.
Is the fruit of the spirit evidenced in attitudes, motivations, and actions of members?
Evidence #6. Spiritual Fruit Bad contextual theology justifies bad
behavior, or ignores problems that Jesus said should not be ignored.
This evidence presupposes the link between orthodoxy and orthopraxy, as well as the spiritual nature of the church.
Top Tier: CultureIf God's revelation to man is a call to
repentance and transformation of all people in all cultures, an appropriately contextualized theology must also relate appropriately to its related culture.
Evidence #7. ResonanceTheology should “resonate” with the culture it
is linked to. That is, it must address questions the culture has, and puts into words, stories, images or ideas that members of the community can use within their culture and relating to their culture.
Evidence #7. Resonance Bad contextual theology “scratches where it doesn't
itch,” addressing concerns that the culture does not have.
Or it may utilize cultural references to make the theology “relevant” but fails to connect the theology to the underlying thoughts, beliefs, and concerns of the people.
This evidence is based on the belief that God redeems culture--- fulfilling it, and that the unity of the church is enhanced by its diversity.
Evidence #8. TensionDavid Tracy notes that religion (and thus
theology) challenges the status quo with ultimate reality that sharply contrasts the observable reality.
Therefore, theology should challenge all institutions: such as government, education, community, family... and the church.
In essence, a “state religion” is an oxymoron.
Evidence #8. Tension Bad theology simply blesses or justifies the
culture, and the power structures in place. Bad theology supports the status quo--
rejecting the need for transformation. This tension presupposes the thought that
we, and all that is in the world are to some extent “fallen.” As such, our prayer and aim is that God's Kingdom come, and His will be done on earth, as it is (already) done in Heaven.
These guidelines don't prove a theology is good or bad, but they give us some basis for tentative conclusions. Probably no good theology passes these criteria 100%, and probably no bad theology fails all of them either.
Or, in other words:
Good theologies may be questionable in one or more evidences.
Bad theologies may seem sound based on one or more evidences.
The weight of the evidences ultimately provide good insight on whether a contextual theology is sound or not.
Remember We have a Universal God
and Universal Revelation... but it comes to us in and through our Context.
All Theology is Contextual... either contextualized well or contextualized poorly.
References Robert Schreiter, “Constructing Local Theologies” (1985) Stephen Bevans, “Models of Contextual Theology” (2002) Darrell L. Whiteman, “Contextualization: The Theory, the
Gap, the Challenge” (IBMR, 1997) Paul G. Hiebert, “Critical Contextualization” (IBMR, 1987) David J. Bosch, “Transforming Mission” (1991) David J. Hesselgrave & Edward Rommen,
“Contextualization, Meaning, Methods, and Models” (1989)
David Tracy, "Plurality and Ambiguity.: Hermeneutics, Religion and Hope" (1985)
A. Scott Moreau “Contextualization in World Mission” (2012)
Robert H. Munson, “Theo-Storying: Reflections on God, Narrative, and Culture” (2015)