Scripture and Strategy: The Use of the Bible in Postmodern Church and Mission
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David J. Hesselgrave
David J. Hesselgrave is also the author of Communicating Christ Cross-Culturally and Planting Churches Cross-Culturally. After serving as a missionary in Japan for twelve years and receiving his Ph.D. degree from the University of Minnesota, in 1965 he joined the faculty of Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, where he is Professor of Mission.
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Scripture and Strategy - David J. Hesselgrave
Foreword to the Evangelical Missiological Society Series
We are navigating a sea change
in missions today. The old paradigms, which God used so greatly in the past two centuries despite their flaws, no longer serve missions well. New ones are beginning to emerge, but not all are faithful to biblical teaching and most are untested.
This sea change is due to many factors. One is the success of the modern mission movement that has left churches in most countries around the world. Today these churches are maturing in strength and leadership, and many are involved in mission. A second factor is the changing world scene. The currents of nationalism, cultural revivalism, resurgent ethnic loyalties, urbanization, world trade and global communication networks are pulling the world in different directions. The result is growing conflicts between traditional cultures and modernity, between rival ethnic groups, between rich and poor, and between nations vying for dominance. How do we carry out our mission mandate in such turmoil? How do we free ourselves from identification with Western cultures, and manifest in our ministry the global nature of the church and mission?
In 1993 the Evangelical Missiological Society began a concerted study of the mission scene to provide guidance for evangelicals involved in missions in these times of transition. It decided to focus its conferences each year on a common theme addressing one of the major challenges facing contemporary missions, highlighting especially the theological issues involved. These challenges offer us both opportunities for greater outreach and risks of undermining the mission cause. Select papers from these conferences and from members of the association are to be published each year in a volume that focuses our attention on a critical issue in contemporary missions and provides evangelical responses to these questions. The goal is to create both awareness and discussion among missionaries and mission scholars, and to present in-depth evangelical responses to the questions.
We are privileged to present Scripture and Strategy by David Hesselgrave as the first volume in the series. The author has played a key role in the development of the EMS and its wide-ranging ministries. In this book he examines the place of the Bible in formulating church and mission strategy for the postmodern age which we have now entered. In doing so, he lays a foundation for discussing the various issues that will be addressed in subsequent volumes.
The second volume, to be edited by Edward Rommen and Harold Netland and published in 1995, will address the questions of religious pluralism and the uniqueness of the Gospel. The plan is to issue at least one volume each year during the remaining years of this decade, D.V. We hope that the series will help pastors, evangelists, administrators, practitioners and mission scholars see a clear way through our confusing times so that they can serve with greater faithfulness and fruitfulness. Above all we pray that the series may bring glory to our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, the Head of the church and the beginning and end of all missions.
Paul G. Hiebert
Chairman, Publications Committee
Evangelical Missiological Society
Foreword to
Scripture and Strategy
It must have been a sickening sight. A band of bold adventurers who had braved an unknown ocean stood on the shore of a Caribbean island and watched their ship, the Santa Maria, dashed to pieces on the rocks. How could anyone have let it happen? Did someone cut the anchor line? Was someone asleep on their watch? Accounts vary, but Columbus’ voyage of adventure, discovery, business and missions nearly went down with that ship.
In New Testament times there were concerns that believers might drift away from their moorings and shipwreck themselves and perhaps the church as well. The writer of Hebrews, referring to salvation by faith in Christ, made known through the sure Word of God, urged his readers to pay more careful attention to what we have heard, so that we do not drift away
(Heb. 3:1). This is the basic concern of David Hesselgrave and of this series, expecially as it relates to the missionary movement.
The biblical and theological foundations for this magnificent enterprise we call missions
has been well laid. Writers and practitioners like Bavinck, Allen, Nevius, Kraemer, Verkuyl, Peters and Beyerhaus labored effectively to base the modern mission movement on the Word of God. The United Bible Societies and Wyc1iffe Bible Translators have made the Bible more than the middle name of their respective organizations. They, along with others, have worked to make the Scripture available in every language of the world. But will the churches and missions keep the Bible foundational and central to their task as the Lord grants yet more time to carry forward the missionary mandate? The thesis of Scripture and Strategy is that they can and must.
Michael Pocock
President, Evangelical Missiological Society
Acknowledgments
In writing this book I owe so much to so many colleagues, friends and family members that the following paragraphs could easily be extended beyond the patience required to read them. However, to overlook the contributions of at least some of these benefactors would be inexcusable. So, with a plea for understanding on the part of those whose names are omitted though deserving of inclusion as well as on the part of readers who will pause to read these lines, I will proceed.
First of all, I express my appreciation to faithful colleagues at home and abroad whose faithfulness to Christ, his Word and his cause have both inspired and informed this book. The list is long, but all whose works and writings are highlighted in the following chapters would certainly be included. In addition, Carl Henry, William Larkin, Paul Hiebert, Timothy Warner, John Piper and Ralph Winter made themselves available to review chapters focusing on their respective and related writings. In several sections of this book I have leaned rather heavily on certain writings of David Wells and Walter Kaiser. They reviewed this entire manuscript and made valuable suggestions. A number of others have kindly responded to my request for their insights and evaluations. My secretary in the School of World Mission and Evangelism at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, Linda Walters, helped out at critical junctures. I am greatly indebted to them all.
Since this book is the first in a series being projected by the Evangelical Missiological Society, it is appropriate that I express gratitude to the entire membership both for the privilege of serving them as executive director and the opportunity to contribute this first volume in the series. I am especially grateful to the former EMS president, Paul Beals, the current president, Michael Pocock, the publications chairman, Paul Hiebert, and the members of the executive and publications committees for all they have done to make this publication possible.
As always, members of my immediate and extended families deserve mention. My wife Gertrude undertook duties that I should rightly share and thus made this writing possible. My son, Ronald Paul, proofread the manuscript. My son-in-law Martin Kroeker put it on Microsoft Word. And my nephew, Ric DuBois, designed the cover. Finally, I want to recognize the special contributions of David Shaver, Jone Bosch, Ralph Winter and all who are in any way connected with William Carey Library. For many years now all of us who are concerned with Great Commission mission have been the beneficiaries of their sacrificial service in publishing and distributing missionary literature. This book, being the first in the EMS series, has required special attention and effort. They are to be commended for the way in which they have responded. I offer them my special thanks.
Finally, I want to recognize the special contributions of David Shaver, Jone Bosch, Ralph Winter and all who are in any way connected with William Carey Library. For many years now all of us who are concerned with Great Commission mission have been the beneficiaries of their sacrificial service in publishing and distributing missionary literature. This book, being the first in the EMS series, has required special attention and effort. They are to be commended for the way in which they have responded. I offer them my special thanks.
My readers will be aware of the fact that this book is in some ways unique. But it is not unique in that it has its limitations and shortcomings. Insofar as these accrue to human disabilities of one sort or another, I acknowledge them as my own. My solace is that there is one Book that rises above the weaknesses of any of its human authors, and this book is designed to direct its readers to that Book and its Divine Author. Of several excellent modem translations of the Bible, I have elected to quote most often from the New American Standard Bible except in those cases where another translation is indicated. Therefore I express my thanks to The Lockman Foundation and the NASB translators.
David J. Hesselgrave
Deerfield, Illinois
Part I
Introduction
1
Back to the Future
Have you noticed? A quiet revolution is going on. Amidst all the noisy revolutions-made noisy by detonations, demonstrations, and demagoguery-there is one that has largely escaped notice. It is occurring in the church and its missions. For that reason as well as others, it is accompanied by little fanfare and has captured minimal press. But it is happening. And it is hopeful. Hopeful for the church. Hopeful for the mission. Hopeful for the world.
This book has to do with that quiet revolution, with the strategy that characterizes it, and with Christian leaders who have contributed to it. To understand the potential of this hopeful aspect of contemporary Christian witness and ministry it would be helpful to trace some contours of the emerging world.
A Look Around:
The Postmodern World
Our part of the world at least has been characterized as post-Christian for some time now. We can quarrel with the term if we want, but the Western world is post-Christian in the sense that governmental and educational institutions not only refuse to take Christian values for granted, they seldom take them into account. Also in the sense that, while the a significant part of the larger society tenaciously clings to inalienable rights,
it implacably disregards the Creator apart from whom those rights are neither self-evident nor sustainable.
Now the Western world is being characterized as postmodern as well. There is less agreement on what it means to be postmodern, but it is apparent that there is a widespread disenchantment with the premises, promises and productions of the modern era. The optimism that accrued to the dawning of the Enlightenment and the rise of modern science has somehow dissipated in the smoke of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and strife in the streets of Los Angeles and Sarajevo. For over a hundred years would-be Christians as well as confessed skeptics have brought Scripture and Christian faith to the bar of human reason. During the years that Scripture has been on trial, people have placed implicit faith in science-secure in the belief that, given more time, science would answer our questions and solve our problems. The key phrase here is given more time.
But already time is running out. And people are looking elsewhere. They probe the depths of the human spirit. They look to the stars. They investigate Eastern mysticism. What they find is not objective truth but intuition, feeling and experience. Psychologies, philosophies, religions abound, but none provides the truth, only truth for me
or you or someone else. In all, most people remain hopeful, not because the facts of contemporary life warrant optimism but because optimism is the last bastion of sanity and self-preservation.
G. Edward Veith, Jr., indicates that postmodern humanity creates not only its own truth
; it also exalts power. So society fragments into competing power groups each exerting a will to power that expresses itself in practical anarchy and lawlessness. Finally, postmodern humanity searches for law and order at any price. The political outcome is fascism (Veith 1994).
A variety of terms and characterizations, then, have been used to characterize the postmodern world, depending upon whether one’s perspective is political, moral, social, philosophical, or religious. Our present perspective is philosophical and religious. Our concern is for the discovery and dissemination of the revealed truth of God in the face of subjectivism, relativism, and religious pluralism. For postmodern men and women, any truth but their own truth
is in short supply and absolute truth is undiscoverable. Religion used to provide it for many, but, now that adherents of so many religions surround us, postmoderns are quite assured that all have some truth but none has the truth.
But what about the non-Western world? Perhaps hope for the future lies somewhere in Asia or Africa or Latin America or the Middle East or the Island World? Perhaps so, but it seems less likely with every passing day, especially when we view the situation rationally rather than romantically. The noble savage of yesterday’s pseudo-anthropology now appears to have been a product of Western myth-making. Upon careful examination, the ancient religions of the East hold little hope for life in this world and mostly mystification with respect to any future one.
A quarter century ago in Nigeria, a British expert on African affairs told us that there is no way Africa can leapfrog into the modern world without decades of bitterness and bloodshed. We now know he was right. At the moment, postapartheid South Africa is one of the more hopeful nations and their chief economic hope lies in the manufacturing of hightech military equipment!
Perhaps nothing is more indicative of dramatic change in the non-Western world than a pervasive disenchantment with the West itself-with its types of democracy, its morals, its values, and even its peoples-though there remains a desire for freedom and technology. In fact, in almost every nation there is a pronounced tendency to return to centuries-old folkways, traditions, religions and loyalties. It is not unlikely that those nations that have only recently modernized will also become postmodern, and that others will become postmodern
without ever becoming really modern
!
A Look Back:
The World of the Bible
It is common to think of the biblical world faced by the prophets and the apostles as a world apart. But that perception is in great measure molded by imagination. Some imagine it to have been a naive world in which everyone was ready to believe almost any superstition or fairy tale. Actually, it was a world with which contemporary students of philosophy begin their studies and then discover whether or not they are good enough to continue. Some view the biblical world as a world devoid of all science and technology whereas the people of that world actually produced architectural marvels that baffle engineers to this very day. Some think of the world of the Bible as so culturally different that moderns cannot be expected to understand it, or learn anything from it if they do. Actually it is our modern Western, particularly American, culture that is so culturally distant from both the ancient world and the rest of our contemporary world that others have a difficult time understanding us and learning much of lasting value if they do.
Nowadays perceptions are in flux. In the modern era Western culture was largely sealed off from other cultures except as it sent its explorers and entrepreneurs to their shores. Now uncounted millions of erstwhile foreigners come to us with their languages, folkways and alliances. More ,than that, they insist upon their right to maintain their own cultural identity. The West itself has become multicultural.
More important from our perspective is the fact that, in the modern era, the West was largely sealed