Abstract
As the Christian church engaged in the so-called foreign mission, an unfortunate perception ensued that mission was of service to the colonial aspirations of the sending countries. Subsequently, labour missionaries came under suspicion as they were regarded as oppressors who robbed local communities of their culture and the way of thinking. It is in this regard that Newbigin pondered the question whether the West could be converted from ignorance and religious imperialism that exploited the local population. This gave rise to the thinking that related missiology and ecclesiology to a missional church which is Trinitarian in nature and based on missio Dei (God’s plan). In this research, it is argued that mission will always be a suspect of colonial and imperialist motives that cannot contribute to the society in which it works unless the mission is conducted through a missional church which is embedded in missio Dei as presented by Newbigin. In order to address this, the research initially highlights how the mission was conducted from a missiology that was not embedded in missio Dei and how this has adversely affected the spreading of the Christian message and undermined the transformation of society. Secondly, the research shows that lack of contextualisation and not taking cognisance of the culture and the worldview of the colonised has greatly affected the mission in the postcolonial era. And thirdly, the research indicates how a missional church as advocated by Newbigin could contribute towards an effective missiological agenda that could bring unity and glorification to God in the postcolonial era. Intradisciplinary and/or interdisciplinary implications : This article focuses on how the mission was conducted, not taking cognisance of the worldview of those it preached to. This is the philosophical implication. The other issue is that contextualisation was not taken into consideration which means the socio-cultural issues were not addressed. This article brings forth that if the blending of both philosophy and social science could be infused in missiology, then missiological attributes like koinonia and evangelism would serve as an appropriate vehicle to transport missio Dei .
Highlights
Lyall and Newbigin (1962:21) are sceptical about how the mission was conducted by the West
He contends that this ignorance has led to the West seeing the congregation as one entity and the large family of origin as another
Mashoko (2005:79) argues that the ushering of the postcolonial era saw the demise of contextualisation and that was the challenge that the church needed to address as a matter of urgency. It was urgent because if not being done it was going to nullify what Goheen (2000:3) draws from Newbigin who contended that the Gospel or any Biblical scripture should be presented in the way that the hearers will understand; this means that the worldview and the cultural background of the hearers play an important role in evangelising
Summary
Lyall and Newbigin (1962:21) are sceptical about how the mission was conducted by the West. In his conversation with Leslie Lyall in ‘The church local and universal’, Newbigin argues that the West ignored the context in which missions were done, especially with regard to the ways in which the hearers’ worldview was marginalised.
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