MT510: Doing Theology in Context (4 units)
Charles Van Engen, Arthur F. Glasser Professor of
Biblical Theology of Mission
Winter 2006 Pasadena
DESCRIPTION:
This course assumes that theology is not the same as the gospel.
Rather, theology is the way we reflect upon and explain the gospel. Therefore,
just as the Bible reveals God's word in a specific time and place and among
particular people, so our theology is always in all places constructed in
context. The aim of the course is to examine the theoretical, cultural and
biblical realities through the lenses of a variety of models for doing theology
to analyze and communicate the truth of the gospel in ways appropriate to
specific contexts. Students will
examine five perspectives on doing theology in context: communication,
indigenization, translatability, local theologizing and epistemology and will
consider their various implications for doing theology in a specific selected
context with reference to a particular problem or situation.
LEARNING OUTCOMES:
• Gain knowledge of the
purposes and objectives of a variety of approaches to contextualization and
acquire some familiarity with the implications of those approaches for doing
theology in context;
• Begin to understand how culture and worldview impact theological reflection
and may be integrated with scripture to communicate and teach the gospel in
contextually appropriate ways.
• Begin to do theology appropriately in response to a selected contextual
situation or problem faced in a specific mission situation.
COURSE FORMAT:
The course meets daily fro
two-weeks. Through reading, class lectures and group discussions/sharing
students will be introduced to various perspectives on doing theology in
context and how the various perspectives impact the way Christians reflect on
selected contextual situations. Each
student will select a specific situation or problem arising in a particular
missional context and will be asked to reflect theologically, biblically,
contextually, and missionally in response to the selected situation or problem.
During the last one-third of the course students (individually and possibly in
groups) will present to the class a summary of their project.
REQUIRED READING: Students
should select texts that they have not read in another course at Fuller.
Stephen Bevans, Models
of Contextual Theology. New York: Orbis, 2002.
Dean Gilliland, The Word Among Us.
Dallas: Word, 1989.
Charles Kraft, Communication Theory for Christian Witness. Nashville: Abingdon; 1983; reprinted by
N.Y.: Orbis, 1991.
Roland Allen, The Spontaneous Expansion of the Church OR J. V. Taylor. Primal
Vision. London: SCM, 1963.
Lamin Sanneh, Translating the Message. Maryknoll: Orbis, 1989; OR Andrew
Walls, The Cross-Cultural Process in Christian History. Maryknoll:
Orbis, 2002; OR René Padilla, Mission Between the Times. G.R.:
Eerdmans, 1985.
Charles Kraft, edit Appropriate Christianity. Unpublished text.
Shaw, Daniel, and Charles Van Engen. Communicating God’s Word in a Complex World:
God’s Truth or Hocus Pocus? Lanham,
MD. Rowman and Littlefield, 2003.
RECOMMENDED READING:
A selected bibliography of works relevant to the course
will be distributed with the syllabus. Examples:
Harvie Conn. Eternal Word and Changing World: Theology, Anthropology, and
Mission in Trialogue. G.R.: Zondervan
Hesselgrave, D., Contextualization.
Michigan: Baker, 1989; Koyama, Kosuke, Waterbuffalo
Theology. NY: Orbis, 1974; Schreiter, Robert, Constructing Local Theologies. NY: Orbis, 1985.
ASSIGNMENTS:
• Seven book reviews as per the required reading
• Reading reports on 200 additional pages of reading from the recommended
reading and selected articles.
• Each student will select a contextual situation or problem, choose the
appropriate perspective of contextual theology to apply to the situation, and
reflect theologically on the situation/problem and suggest some biblical,
ecclesial, cultural and missiological responses to it. This will be written up in a 15 to 20 page
paper.
Th.M. Students: Th.M. students are asked to read 2 additional
books, deepen and broaden their theological analysis of the contextual
situation/problem and respond to it in a 25-30 page paper.
PREREQUISITES: None.
RELATIONSHIP TO CURRICULUM: Elective. Foundational for
all work in contextualization.
FINAL EXAM: None.
Last
Date Edited: August 31, 2005