Mission - quo vadis?

Thorsten Prill  |  Features
Date posted:  1 Oct 2012
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So far we have identified three issues which cause problems. These are theological ignorance, the work of false teachers, and an unfettered pragmatic approach to ministry as possible reasons for the current theological crisis in evangelical mission organisations. However, there are other factors which may support the spread of heresy and problematic mission strategies.

Low view of local church

Sometimes it is a low view of the local church and its role in world mission that fosters unhelpful strategies and even heretical views in the mission field. For many years mission organisations have been reminding local churches in the West of their responsibility for world mission. Local churches, they rightly argue, must be mission-minded.

However, there is also a need for mission organisations to be church-minded. Unfortunately, there is still an attitude among mission organisations that sees local churches first and foremost as a source of new missionaries and financial means1. Local churches and their individual members are seen as supporters of mission agencies and their missionaries rather than as mission partners. This is especially true for interdenominational mission organisations which have no formal link with any particular church body. One reason for this is obvious: a lack of understanding of the biblical view of mission.

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