Transforming Mission: Paradigm Shifts in Theology of Mission (American Society of Missiology)
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #101450 in Books
- Published on: 1992-12
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 587 pages
Editorial Reviews
Synopsis
Explores Christian mission: theology, history, praxis.
Customer Reviews
A penetrating study of the paradigm shifts of missions.
Transforming missions is a scholarly work of importance for all scientists occupied with cross cultural encounters and matters of religion. The author, David Bosch, is one of several missologists who willingly share his rich and well documented work with other disciplines.
The book is well researched and the author is able to communicate complicated theological matters in a most convincing way. The book is readable and accessible to a long range of intrested persons and not merely to experts or specialists.
From a scholarly point of view Bosch provides the researcher with an analysis that gives a good framework for further research on the matter of missiology and historical cross cultural encounters. However, I miss references and analysis that can be more easily related to central social science authors like Giddens and Habermas and modern philosophers of care and interpersonal relationships.
I also miss a more penetrating discussion of the Eastern Orthodox churches and the paradigm shift in their missiological thinking.
Bosch has provided as with a bridge of understanding that is most helpful. His book will hopefully be read by many and will most certainly provide inspiration for many scholars.
A penetrating study of the paradigm shifts of missions.
Transforming missions is a scholarly work of importance for all scientists occupied with cross cultural encounters and matters of religion. The author, David Bosch, is one of several missologists who willingly share his rich and well documented work with other disciplines.
The book is well researched and the author is able to communicate complicated theological matters in a most convincing way. The book is readable and accessible to a long range of intrested persons and not merely to experts or specialists.
From a scholarly point of view Bosch provides the researcher with an analysis that gives a good framework for further research on the matter of missiology and historical cross cultural encounters. However, I miss references and analysis that can be more easily related to central social science authors like Giddens and Habermas and modern philosophers of care and interpersonal relationships.
I also miss a more penetrating discussion of the Eastern Orthodox churches and the paradigm shift in their missiological thinking.
Bosch has provided as with a bridge of understanding that is most helpful. His book will hopefully be read by many and will most certainly provide inspiration for many scholars.
Transforming read...
David Bosch, killed in a car accident in 1992, was professor and head of the department for missiology at the University of South Africa
(from the back cover:)
Bosch examines the entire sweep of Christian tradition to show historically how five paradigms have encapsulated the Christian understanding of how God saves and what human beings should do in response. With the considerable talents that make him the foremost theologian of Christian vocation and mission today, Bosch then outlines the key characteriestics of an emerging "postmodern" paradigm dialetctially linking salvation's transcendent and immannent dimensions
(my review:)
A stunning work! I read this work from cover to cover, since it was a part of my formal studies--but I did so with no reluctance: there was something to learn in every section, beginning with the early church missionary paradigms that lay behind the new testaments documents, through the medieval Roman Catholic, Eastern (Orthodox) and Protestant missionary paradigms, through to the enlightening (sic) section on Mission in the wake of the Enlightenment. All this before Bosch thrusts the reader out into the 'glaring light' of an emerging ecumenical missionary paradigm.
I say 'glaring', because I found myself bowled over by the substance of this final, lengthy section. Until then, I had not realised how almost-completely post-modern so much my own missionary paradigm was. No wonder I have always felt out of step with so much of the western traditions of Christianity, which I now learn were in no small measure birthed within and grew up out of the 'Enlightnment project.'
Absorbing the enormous substance of this tome is another thing, of course, but I am grateful to have encountered this extraordinary thesis and work by Bosch. I feel that I have understood my own vocation even more deeply. I understand much better where the broad Christian tradition has come from and some of the damage done by it in the wake of the Englightenment in particular.
I also understand why, as a Pentecostal with an emerging ecumenical leaning, my faith is relatively radical here in the West. I think that is probably why I have continually experienced a quite different response to my faith and ministry amongst non-Western mission leaders and post-modernists, whilst finding myself almost continually out-of-step with modern, western Christianity and leadership.
Alongside this text, Orbis have published a Reader's Guide, to be used as an accompaniment to Bosch's academic and weighty text. I found it relatively lightweight when reading it besides Transforming Mission, but it is obviously more accessible and a worthwhile place to start if
you are interested in Bosch's message, but daunted by the 500+ academically structured pages.
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