Difference between revisions of "Contextualization"

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(Created page with "Reengineering from the mission field backward ==Recommended Reading== Stetzer, Ed Planting Missional Churches: Your Guide to Starting Churches that Multiply (B&H Academic, 20...")
 
 
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Reengineering from the mission field backward
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Mission work must be sensitive to its context. After a cross-cultural communication is established, the work of contextualization begins. Contextualization is the process of proclaiming the gospel to a people in a particular culture in a way they are able to understand and receive. The work of contextualization must avoid two pitfalls: syncretism (the fusion of the gospel with culture) and irrelevance (the failure to relate the gospel to culture). The practice of contextualization enables the church to reengineering from the mission field backward.
  
 
==Recommended Reading==
 
==Recommended Reading==
Stetzer, Ed Planting Missional Churches: Your Guide to Starting Churches that Multiply (B&H Academic, 2016).
 
  
Woodward, JR & Dan White The Church as Movement: Starting and Sustaining Missional-Incarnational Communities (IVP Books, 2016)  
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Woodward, JR & Dan White The Church as Movement: Starting and Sustaining Missional-Incarnational Communities (IVP Books, 2016)
  
==Resources==
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Newbigin, Leslie <I>The Gospel in a Pluralist Society</I> (Eerdmans, 1989)
  
==[[Canonical Areas]]==
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==Resources for Further Study==
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Rommen, Edward <I>Come and See: An Eastern Orthodox Perspective on Contextualization</I> (William Carey Library, 2014)
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Hesselgrave, David J. and Rommen, Edward <I>Contextualization: Meanings, Methods, and Models</I> (William Carey Library, 2013)
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==Back to [[Missionary Work of the Church]]==
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==Return to [[Canonical Areas]]==

Latest revision as of 19:49, 3 June 2019

Mission work must be sensitive to its context. After a cross-cultural communication is established, the work of contextualization begins. Contextualization is the process of proclaiming the gospel to a people in a particular culture in a way they are able to understand and receive. The work of contextualization must avoid two pitfalls: syncretism (the fusion of the gospel with culture) and irrelevance (the failure to relate the gospel to culture). The practice of contextualization enables the church to reengineering from the mission field backward.

Recommended Reading

Woodward, JR & Dan White The Church as Movement: Starting and Sustaining Missional-Incarnational Communities (IVP Books, 2016)

Newbigin, Leslie The Gospel in a Pluralist Society (Eerdmans, 1989)

Resources for Further Study

Rommen, Edward Come and See: An Eastern Orthodox Perspective on Contextualization (William Carey Library, 2014)

Hesselgrave, David J. and Rommen, Edward Contextualization: Meanings, Methods, and Models (William Carey Library, 2013)

Back to Missionary Work of the Church

Return to Canonical Areas