Missional church and local constraints: A Dutch perspective

The missional church concept promises to guide local churches in the direction of a new identity and mission. It is a response to a sense of ecclesiological and congregational urgency that is felt all over the world. In Africa, North America and Europe, churches and local faith communities have been...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rein Brouwer
Format: Article
Language:Afrikaans
Published: AOSIS 2009-09-01
Series:Verbum et Ecclesia
Subjects:
Online Access:http://verbumetecclesia.org.za/index.php/VE/article/view/329
_version_ 1828827739691417600
author Rein Brouwer
author_facet Rein Brouwer
author_sort Rein Brouwer
collection DOAJ
description The missional church concept promises to guide local churches in the direction of a new identity and mission. It is a response to a sense of ecclesiological and congregational urgency that is felt all over the world. In Africa, North America and Europe, churches and local faith communities have been challenged by the changes in the religious state of affairs since the 1960s. Whether we still call it �secularisation� or rephrase it as �differentiated transformation�, the face of religion is changing globally. In many parts of the world, this raises a feeling of crisis that gives way to the redef nition of the mission and purpose of the church. �Missional church�, however, is a precarious concept. Nobody disagrees with the intention but can it be more than an inspiring vision? In order to realise this vision, a multi-layered and multi-dimensional analysis of �culture� is essential. We should move the analysis beyond the philosophical interpretation of relatively abstract and evasive macro-level processes, such as �modernity� and �post-modernity�. The future of the missional church depends on a differentiated and empirical, informed perspective on culture. For this purpose, this article proposes the concept of ecology: A system of diverse populations, including populations of congregations and faith communities, that interacts with these populations and with their specific environments. Preparing a missional congregation for the future should be accompanied with a thorough empirical investigation into the ecology of the congregation. We should be thinking intensively about and looking for vital ecologies.
first_indexed 2024-12-12T15:07:24Z
format Article
id doaj.art-e5e1e2392cd94a91a7590034cbb04a53
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1609-9982
2074-7705
language Afrikaans
last_indexed 2024-12-12T15:07:24Z
publishDate 2009-09-01
publisher AOSIS
record_format Article
series Verbum et Ecclesia
spelling doaj.art-e5e1e2392cd94a91a7590034cbb04a532022-12-22T00:20:43ZafrAOSISVerbum et Ecclesia1609-99822074-77052009-09-0130210.4102/ve.v30i2.329293Missional church and local constraints: A Dutch perspectiveRein Brouwer01 Protestant Theological UniversityThe missional church concept promises to guide local churches in the direction of a new identity and mission. It is a response to a sense of ecclesiological and congregational urgency that is felt all over the world. In Africa, North America and Europe, churches and local faith communities have been challenged by the changes in the religious state of affairs since the 1960s. Whether we still call it �secularisation� or rephrase it as �differentiated transformation�, the face of religion is changing globally. In many parts of the world, this raises a feeling of crisis that gives way to the redef nition of the mission and purpose of the church. �Missional church�, however, is a precarious concept. Nobody disagrees with the intention but can it be more than an inspiring vision? In order to realise this vision, a multi-layered and multi-dimensional analysis of �culture� is essential. We should move the analysis beyond the philosophical interpretation of relatively abstract and evasive macro-level processes, such as �modernity� and �post-modernity�. The future of the missional church depends on a differentiated and empirical, informed perspective on culture. For this purpose, this article proposes the concept of ecology: A system of diverse populations, including populations of congregations and faith communities, that interacts with these populations and with their specific environments. Preparing a missional congregation for the future should be accompanied with a thorough empirical investigation into the ecology of the congregation. We should be thinking intensively about and looking for vital ecologies.http://verbumetecclesia.org.za/index.php/VE/article/view/329empirical theologypractical ecclesiologycongregational ecologymissional churchlocal faith communities
spellingShingle Rein Brouwer
Missional church and local constraints: A Dutch perspective
Verbum et Ecclesia
empirical theology
practical ecclesiology
congregational ecology
missional church
local faith communities
title Missional church and local constraints: A Dutch perspective
title_full Missional church and local constraints: A Dutch perspective
title_fullStr Missional church and local constraints: A Dutch perspective
title_full_unstemmed Missional church and local constraints: A Dutch perspective
title_short Missional church and local constraints: A Dutch perspective
title_sort missional church and local constraints a dutch perspective
topic empirical theology
practical ecclesiology
congregational ecology
missional church
local faith communities
url http://verbumetecclesia.org.za/index.php/VE/article/view/329
work_keys_str_mv AT reinbrouwer missionalchurchandlocalconstraintsadutchperspective