Contextual Theologies
Contextual Theologies
Contextual Theologies
THEOLOGIES
It has been said that, ‘if one wants to make things real, he/she must make it local.’ This is
precisely what God has done in his son Jesus Christ, the coming of Jesus was not just a
momentary theophany, but constituted an actual dwelling among his people and he became to
be known as Jesus of Nazareth.
In relating to another culture the Gospel needs to penetrate the world of the native people’s
thinking, the world of their feelings, and the world of their living. One should identify
himself/herself as much as they are able at the physical, emotional, intellectual, social,
cultural, and practical levels.
All contextual theologies are made from the local theologies or the local experiences. At the
time of early Christianity, the Christian faith was based on eternal, unalterable truth, which
had already been stated in its final form. The 17th Century protestant confessions were soon
treated as universals, valid in all times and setting. On the other hand, the encounter of the
Gospel with different cultures suggests the experimental and contingent nature of all
theology. We need an experimental theology in which an on-going dialogue takes place
between text and context, a theology which, in the nature of the case, remains provisional and
hypothetical. However, this should not lead to an un-critical celebration of an infinite number
of contextual and often mutually exclusive theologies.
Signs of the times: How we are to interpret God’s action in the history and so learn to
commit ourselves to participate in this. Which are the signs in human history that reveal
God’s will and God’s presence? There was a time when the west colonialism was widely
viewed as a sign of God’s providential intervention in History, For many decades the policy
of separate development-Apartheid- was hailed by serious Christians in Africa as a just and
God’s will solution to the problems of that country. But today all of these signs of the time
have been discredited. Therefore, Contextual theology is concerned with the present signs of
the time as well as the future non-oppression but not rejecting the history. Our interpretations
of the signs only have relative validity and they involve tremendous risk. Mathew’s parables
of reign of God emphasized the need of watching. (Mat. 25) Watching flows from not
knowing, at the same time watching is a form of an interpretation of signs.
Conclusion:
Christ meets us in our own cultural contexts. In the inculturation process, the core of the
gospel message must take flesh and blood in a given culture. It must be born in a culture and
not superimposed. The deep felt aspirations and needs of a people find their fulfilment and
enrichment in the Gospel. In the present day scenario, engaging in Christian mission thus,
takes into account the process of secularism, technology and the struggle for human justice,
which characterized the historical movements of nations in the third world. It is also takes
seriously the culture of the community. But one thing which is very important for all the
above contextual theologies is the ‘Bible’. In every religious life of Christians and its mission
the importance of the Bible cannot be diminished or ignored.