The Meaning Of Mission In The Bible Essay

PAGES
3
WORDS
1037
Cite

PASTORAL THEOLOGY (MISSION): A Review and Assessment of Book Chapters on Mission The key ideas in these chapters are that the idea of mission is rooted in the Bible and in the actions of the early Church, as the missionaries spread throughout the world taking with them the Word of God and giving it to those individuals and groups of people/communities who embraced it and wanted to live their lives according to this Word. The Word was the Mission Statement, so to speak, of the early Church, and the Bible makes this very clear. From the beginning, God's chosen had an affinity with the non-chosen, that is, the Gentiles, of whom Our Lord counted Himself as one. Thus, the perspective of the early missionaries was this: they were not going out to preach to people they did not know but rather to people who were indeed their brothers in sisters in Christ (they just didn't happen to know it yet). As Senior and Stuhlmueller observe, even Israel "at its best moments recognized other signs of deep solidarity with the nonelect nations and with the dynamics of secular history outside the annals of its covenant" (315). In other words, the Jews were responsive to the sense that they bore some important relation to those individuals who were not Jews and had not the faith in the One, True God. Christ, of course, would come to make that relationship all the more apparent -- and the early mission of the Church was to build on that transparency.

...

The concept of mission thus precluded a sense of organization and of hierarchy. Leaders were needed, and station heads were appointed, so to speak. In order to keep the faithful united in the faith, it was imperative that the missionaries continue to follow up with them, to steer them even from afar and to correct them when they went off the righteous path. David Bosch also observes this universal human aspect in the Church's character as being one of the fundamental reasons for the need for missionary activity in the first place: Christ came to heal all sinners -- not just Jews. He came to reach all who believed in Him, and thus the missionary could not limit himself to any one particular group -- unless, of course, that was his designated group to which he was sent by one of the early Church leaders. After all, every human organization needs organizers and some sort of structure to keep it going and the early Church was no different from any other.
The authors differ somewhat on their approach to understanding the defining concepts of missionary activity, however. Senior and Stuhlmueller, for example, approach it from a Biblical basis,…

Sources Used in Documents:

Works Cited

Bosch, David J. Transforming Mission: Paradigm Shifts in Theology of Mission.

Maryknoll NY: Orbis, 1991. Print.

Senior, Donald & Carroll Stuhlmueller. The Biblical Foundations for Mission.

London: SCM, 1983. Print.


Cite this Document:

"The Meaning Of Mission In The Bible" (2016, February 18) Retrieved April 23, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/the-meaning-of-mission-in-the-bible-2160518

"The Meaning Of Mission In The Bible" 18 February 2016. Web.23 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/the-meaning-of-mission-in-the-bible-2160518>

"The Meaning Of Mission In The Bible", 18 February 2016, Accessed.23 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/the-meaning-of-mission-in-the-bible-2160518

Related Documents

Bible The most critical component of contemporary Bible studies is making scripture relevant. An ancient text may not seem to have messages that modern readers can understand, but the challenge of reading the Bible with fresh eyes is not insurmountable. In fact, the rewards of reading and applying the Bible are infinite. As McKnight (2008) states, "no one does everything the Bible says," (p. 12). The Bible was written for an

This is the Jealous God that Huston carries throughout his film as a representation of Godly power. This view also raises many associated questions; such as the fact that God must also have been the originator of the snake. In this section and in the others that follow it seems that the central impetus in the film is in reality a critique and an indictment of the God of the

M. Louise Cornell is professor of education at Providence College in Otterburne, Manitoba, Canada. She believes the real influence of the Bible grew out of the Protestant Reformation in the 16th Century. The Bible at that time, according to Cornell, was "wrested" from the hands of the priests and placed in the outstretched arms of lay people during the Reformation, as the Christian mission was becoming a powerful movement (Thiessen,

Jesus in the Book of John: Creation, Life, Death, Resurrection, and AscensionIntroductionThe Gospel of John provides an in-depth account of Jesus's journey, touching on everything from creation (John 1:1) to life, death, resurrection, and ascension (John 3:13, 6:62, 14:2-3, 16:5). John�s Gospel shows Jesus as both divine and human, describing the duality of His nature and His important role as the Savior of mankind. This paper examines Jesus as the

Bible Analysis: Ecclesiastes, Proverbs and Psalms Ecclesiastes, Proverbs and Psalms: Bible Analysis The books of Psalms, Proverbs and Ecclesiastes provide crucial insights to Christians about daily living and the struggle to find meaning and satisfaction. This text provides an analysis of the ten discourses of Ecclesiastes, as well as an exogenesis of various other pieces including Psalms 27, Psalm 119, and Proverbs 3: 1-12. Analysis of Ecclesiastes Summary of the Ten Discourses of Ecclesiastes The

Slavery in the Bible In modern Western countries, many Christians and Jews may wish to portray God as the comfortable deity of a middle-class consumer society like the United States, but the Bible demonstrates that nothing could be further from the truth. In the Bible, the God of history from the story of Cain and Abel, through Abraham, Joseph, Moses and the Prophets and of course the ministry of Jesus Christ