Lexington Books / Fortress Academic
Pages: 236
Trim: 6⅜ x 9
978-1-9787-0366-7 • Hardback • June 2020 • $117.00 • (£90.00)
978-1-9787-0368-1 • Paperback • December 2021 • $44.99 • (£35.00)
978-1-9787-0367-4 • eBook • June 2020 • $42.50 • (£35.00)
Jione Havea is a native pastor (Methodist Church in Tonga) and research fellow with Trinity Theological College (Aotearoa) and the Public and Contextual Theology (PaCT) research centre of Charles Sturt University (Australia).
1.repatriation of native minds
Jione Havea
CONTEXT MATTERS
2.Turn to Decolonial Theology: A Southern African Invitation
Teddy Chalwe Sakupapa
3.Hermeneutical Embers from the “Zone of Non-being”
Vuyani S. Vellem
4.Reading Christ in the Neighbor’s Eyes: An Asian Invitation
Samuel Ngun Ling
5.Who is Christ for Ali? Refugees in a Post-Truth Age
Eunice Karanja Kamaara
6.Get Out: Soul Trans-Formations in Trumpire
Jennifer Leath
7.The Philippine Nation-State and the Killing of Indigenous Peoples: Christianity and Modernity as Walls of Legitimation and Conquest
S. Lily Mendoza
8.Dare Not! Or Fear Not! Reimagining the Story of the Canaanite-Noisy Woman (Matthew 15)
Surekha Nelavala
MISSION MATTERS
9.Counter-creating Mission in but not of Empire
Peter Cruchley
10.Conservative Evangelicalism, Prosperity Gospel, and the Pornification of Western Christianity
Roderick R Hewitt
11.Calling for Communities of Resistance in the Context of Empire
Sindiso Jele
12.Mission and Violent Conflict: Seeking Shalom
Deborah Storie
13.Reassembling the Oikoumenē
Kathryn Poethig
14.Theology at the Nexus of Spirit and Life
Kim Yong-Bock
The series is essential reading for our times, and challenging for those of us shaped by the powerful presumption that the modern theologies of Europe are of universal validity, with those from ‘elsewhere’ mere marginalia.
— Modern Believing
Mission and Context is a courageous endeavor of fourteen scholars, including the editor, Jione Havea, to raise our consciousness about chronic effects of colonization of the church around the globe. Churches of marginalized people, specifically in the global south, suffer the pains of abusive power wielded by “Empire Churches” that are more concerned about mega memberships and individualized spiritualities than “the vulnerable and the dispossessed.” This book provides a bold and brave position on the real meaning of mission considering context and culture through interpretation of scripture, ethical analysis, and reexamined/reshaped theologies. Such an undertaking is the practice of decolonization, the dismantling of Empire. This book is essential reading if theological educators are serious about equipping students for mission that transforms lives in contexts of poverty, racism, and political ineptness.— Evelyn L. Parker, Perkins School of Theology
This book is a missiological treasure trove of our times. It contains the latest cutting-edge reflections on the greatest challenges facing Christian mission globally. The chapters are written by a carefully assembled group of some of the best theologians in the world at this time. At the heart of each chapter is an analysis of the interplay between the Missio Dei and context in a world dominated by the ideology and the values of Empire. It is remarkable how contributors to this volume, each in her or his own way, manage at once to unmask the negative strategies of Empire and to point out the various ways in which Christians all over the world are resisting it and providing alternatives through their lived faith.— Tinyiko Maluleke, University of Pretoria
The publication of this book in academic and other church circles is—to use the phrase of my friend Tony Gittins—“a presence that disturbs.” But the disturbance that it causes is a grace, a grace that only those who speak from the margins of society and empire can offer. The entire church, but especially those of us at the privileged center, need to listen, learn, repent, and be converted.— Stephen Bevans
Mission and Context is the fifth and last volume of a series of collections of essays edited by Jione Havea that re-examine and challenge all aspects of Christian practice and theology from the perspective of resistance to Empire and imperialism. Contributors hailing from all corners of the globe unflinchingly unmask the various ways in which Christian churches have colluded with imperial power in “matters of power, position, protection and plethora.” If readers feel uncomfortable with the views expressed in this book, it will have achieved its goal of provoking them to critically rethink the traditional understanding of Christian mission and to acknowledge that “empires do not have the final word,” nor are they the “final world.” Reading this book with an open mind is already an act of resistance.— Peter C. Phan, Georgetown University
Mission and Context is an empowering collection of experiences and theological discourse that turns the concept of mission upside down. Mission was for the majority of its history carried out in the context of Empire. This book decolonizes the concept of empire and the forces with which it was associated. For instance, it captures the impact of the missionary movements of the 18th century and their silent and complicit relationship with slavery. The different contexts represented in these chapters give us an honest insight into the role and place of mission, both historically and in contemporary context. This is a book about mission from the margins that looks with hope to the marginalized communities as the places where Jesus lives and speaks.— Feiloaiga Taule’ale’ausumai, Presbyterian Church of Aotearoa New Zealand