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Scott W. Sunquist (PhD, Princeton Theological Seminary) is president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary. Previously, he was a professor and dean of the School of Inter cultural Studies at Fuller Theological Seminary, taught missiology and Christian history at Pittsburgh Theological Seminary, mostra'n més and lectured at Trinity Theological College in Singapore. Sunquist is the author of Explorations in Asian Christianity, Understanding Christian Mission, and The Unexpected Christian Century, and a coauthor of A History of the World Christian Movement. mostra'n menys

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Summary: An exploration of how Christian history is written and read in an era of “Christianities” proposing three framing concepts that give coherence to the whole arc of Christian history while respecting the diversity of its expressions.

In current scholarship, it has become commonplace to speak of the diverse cultural expressions of Christianity as “Christianities.” While this honors the diversity of global Christianity, it also carries the implication that there is not, and may never have been a common thread that can be traced through the two millenia history of the Christian movement. Scott W. Sunquist, a missiologist and church historian questions this trend and sets out in this work to answer this compound question: “What is Christianity as a historical movement, and how can we best understand and explain Christianity as God’s redemptive work in history?” He argues that this is not a mere academic question of how we teach church history but also how we prepare students and pastors to live as missional participants in the global Christian movement.

Before proposing his response to this question, Sunquist offers us a “brief history of history,” exploring the history of accounts of the Christian movement through history. He begins with James Dennis and his Christian Missions and Social Progress and traces these attempts up to Kenneth Scott Latourette’s A History of Christianity. The narratives are ones not only of geographic advance but also social progress, the bringing of what was thought the best of Western culture from hospitals to schools under the mantel of colonialism. In a post-colonial situation, this narrative no longer works and Sunquist believes only the biblical story, the experience of the global church, and Jesus himself offer coherence. He proposes three framing concepts, or three threads that conform to these criteria and serve to connect the history of the global church: time, cross, and glory.

Time: Two crucial events in time inform the direction of Christian history. Creation emphasizes that the story has a clear beginning, and one of beauty, rather than an endless cycle of birth, growth, decline, and death. It speaks of the goodness of the material creation against religion that denies the goodness of the body and material world. Incarnation tells us that something decisive was done in the past that shapes our present reality and gives us a future hope. All of this addresses the religious and secularist systems that fail to offer hope of redemption on one time, or try to realize heaven on earth in over-realized eschatologies that usually end up violent.

Cross: The cross and resurrection are central to the redemptive work of God throughout human history. This is true not only in what was accomplished through suffering and vindicated in the resurrection, but also serves as a pattern for the mission of the church. The church in its mission is to be cruciform, sharing in the sufferings of Christ. Sunquist shares case studies, particularly of the Moravians and how their suffering brought life as well as generations of mission work in China, often with great persecution, only to eventuate in what may be the largest Christian movement in the world today. Sunquist challenges the versions of a Christianity of success and conquest from the Inquisition to “prosperity” Christianity.

Glory: The glory in view here is the splendor of God and the honor due God for who God is. It is what motivates mission, not in a quest for personal glory but a zeal that this be acknowledged to the ends of the earth. Sunquist traces stories of those who suffer unto glory, including that of Julia Mateer and the school she began for Chinese boys. It moves us to hope, humility, and hospitality, the “little glories” that point to the greater glory.

Having discussed the writing of history and laid out his three framing ideas of Christian history, Sunquist concludes with a marvelous chapter on the reading of Christian history and how this may be transformative for students and for the church. He urges that we:

Read history looking for little glories.
Read history for biographies.
Read history for the influence of ideas (theology).
Read history for our local churches.
Read history to meditate on the ambiguities of history.
Read history for our missionary involvement.
Read to have a greater awareness of evil.
Read history to understand the relationship between the kingdom of God and earthly kingdoms.
Read history to learn unity and love.

What a great apologetic for reading Christian history! He particularly encourages the reading the discovers the unsung heroes of the faith. I research and write local history and I can attest that so much of it is about people, people who often have acted with courage, character, compassion, and competence, and whose stories have been lost to their home towns. How much more for the history of the church! I’m also keenly aware as I look at the landscape of the American church that this transformative reading of church history seems greatly lacking. This raises questions for me about what happens in the training of pastors in our seminaries.

More foundationally, Sunquist reminds us of the only threads that can tie together the diverse global movements that identify as Christian: time, cross, and glory. We all believe God has acted in time to create and to incarnate his saving work in his Son, extending that through his people. We all believe in the centrality of the cross and the resurrection, and that these central events ought shape our lives. We all belief that our greatest end is God’s glory. What a fascinating study Christian history can be when given to seeing how this thread plays out, even in the darkest times, when we are at our worst and occasionally, at our best.

____________________________

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a complimentary review copy of this book from the publisher.
… (més)
 
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BobonBooks | Jul 14, 2022 |
Scott W. Sunquist. Understanding Christian Mission: Participation in Suffering and Glory. Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2013. xiv + 448. $34.99

Understanding Christian Mission is an introduction to mission that is essentially three books in one. Part 1 sets the historical background, overviewing the spread of the church in the ancient and medieval world, showing how mission, colonization, civilization, and commerce have been intertwined since the age of Columbus, and outlining the reconception of mission after World War II and the collapse of the colonial era. Part 2 builds a trinitarian theology of mission that is rooted in the life, teaching, and ministry of Jesus and his experience of suffering and glory. Christ’s experience should define Christian existence and should permeate the church because it is a mark of true spiritually. Part 3 sets out a missional ecclesiology that aims to involve the whole church in mission as it follows the God whose very nature is missional. Three themes highlight the church’s mission in the modern world: urban mission, partnership, and spirituality.

Due to its breadth and depth, clarity and charity, academic insight and spiritual warmth this book delivers. The historical section benefits readers by grounding the missionary task in history and putting evangelical missions into perspective by placing it alongside Roman Catholic, Orthodox, and ecumenical missions—a feat rarely attempted in evangelical missions literature. The theological and practical sections—following the words of the subtitle—remind us that just as the Lord experienced suffering and glory, so too will his church. In spite of our difficulties, the book wonderfully proclaims that “The final word in mission is glory—not suffering” (410).

While the book is best suited for a course on Christian mission, it is accessible to laypeople and should be read by everyone who has a part in the missio Dei. Understanding Christian Mission received the Christianity Today book award for missions in 2014.

From Mission Round Table May 2015
… (més)
 
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ClunyRoad | May 15, 2017 |
Mark Noll reviews two books on the worldwide history/spread of Christianity in 11-12/13 B&C: History of the World Christian Movement (1454-1800, 2012)-Dale T. Irwin/Scott W. Sunquist and The Church in the Long Eighteenth Century (2011)-David Hempton/I. B. Tauris

Christianity and Islam continue to expand, while the world's nonreligious population continues to shrink; the number of Christians in Africa, Asia, and Latin America is rising from about 2/5 of the world total in 1970 to about 2/3 by 2020; the Pentecostal or Pentecostal-like proportion of the world's Christians is moving in this same short span from about 5 percent to about 30 percent; the number in Africa is climbing to well over 600 million (in 1900 there were barely 500 million identifiable Christians in the whole world); the most rapid expansion of Christianity is taking place in East Asia; waves of immigration continue to disperse Christians (and Muslims) ever more widely in the world; and much more.[1]

Christianity's worldwide expansion was not without its cruelties and cultural impositions, but neither was it devoid of heroism and humanitarianism, sacrifice and service."

The expertise that Hempton displayed in several earlier books on the Methodists is put to unusually good use in describing the evangelical revivals of the 18th century. Following the landmark work of W. R. Ward, he defines the essential thrust of pietistic and evangelical religion as the resistance of personally appropriated faith to the controlling efforts of established churches and hegemonic states. Pietists and evangelicals were partly traditionalists as they stressed the liberating force of Protestantism's historical doctrine of justification by faith, but also very much of the modern 18th century as they practiced a religion keyed to "personal experience" and "personal and communal discipline." Through hymns, sermons addressing ordinary people, "testimonies" (especially recording the death scenes of the godly), and a new confidence in the inner spiritual authority accessible by the most ordinary laypeople, evangelicals and pietists began the transformations of daily life that continue to influence churches and Christian expressions to this day.

Both books also agree that the Jesuits were the era's most farsighted and effective "world Christians." This Counter-Reformation religious order deployed the pioneers who most boldly imagined that Christian faith might take shape differently in Chinese or Caribbean or Canadian cultures than it had in Europe.

The books are also agreed that the great Christian scandal of the early modern era was slavery.

Finally, both books clarify what most centrally defines the Christian faith itself. For Hempton it is the recognition at "the most profound level that Christianity is in its essence a missionary religion." For Irvin and Sunquist, it is the claim that Christian faith can never be adequately grasped except as a "world movement." Both thus flesh out the luminous insight of Andrew Walls that Christianity can be at home everywhere, even as it is fully at home nowhere—that every instantiation of the faith deserves to be appreciated for how it has taken up residence in a particular culture and also critiqued for how it compromises the faith's inner character by that residence. Walls describes this dual character as "the indigenous principle" in constant tension with "the pilgrim principle."3 In these two very different but complementary books we see clearly what pilgrim and indigenous principles have meant in the past; we also may glimpse a path for discerning what that combination might mean in the present and the future.

Mark Noll is Francis A. McAnaney Professor of History at the University of Notre Dame.
… (més)
Aquesta ressenya té una marca de diversos autors com a abús dels termes del servei i per això ja no es mostra (mostra-la).
 
Marcat
keithhamblen | Nov 22, 2013 |

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