Throughout the history of the Christian church, two narratives have constantly clashed: the imperial logic of Babel that builds towers and borders to seize control, versus the logic of Pentecost that empowers ‘glocal’ missionaries of the kingdom life. To what extent are Westernized Christians today ready for the church of the Pentecost narrative? Are they equipped to do ministry in different cultural modes and to handle disruption and perplexity? What are Christians to make of the Holy Spirit's occasional encounters with cultures and religions of the Americas before the European conquest?
Oscar García-Johnson explores a new grammar for the study of theology and mission in global Christianity, especially in Latin America and the Latinx ‘third spaces’ in North America. With an interdisciplinary, ‘transoccidental, ‘ and narrative approach, Spirit Outside the Gate offers a constructive theology of mission for the church in global contexts.
Building on the familiar missiological metaphor of ‘outside the gate’ established by Orlando Costas, García-Johnson moves to recover important elements in ancestral traditions of the Americas, with an eye to discerning pneumatological continuity between the pre-Columbian and post-Columbian communities. He calls for a ‘rerouting of theology’—a realization that theology cannot make its home in Christendom but is a global creation that must come home to a church without borders.
In this volume García-Johnson
– considers pneumatological insights into de/postcolonial studies
– traces independent epistemic contributions of the American Global South
– shows how American indigenous, Afro-Latinx, and immigrant communities provide resources for a decolonial pneumatology
– describes four transformations the American church must undergo to break free from colonial, modernist, and monocultural structures Spirit Outside the Gate opens a path for a pneumatological missiology that can help the church act as a witness to the gospel message in a postmodern, postcolonial, and post-Christendom world.
Missiological Engagements charts interdisciplinary and innovative trajectories in the history, theology, and practice of Christian mission, featuring contributions by leading thinkers from both the Euro-American West and the majority world whose missiological scholarship bridges church, academy, and society.
Tabela de Conteúdo
Preface: An Amorphous Journey in Transoccidental Studies
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I: The Narrative: The American Global South: Challenges and Visions
1. A Child of the Occident
2. A Child Without History
3. The Transoccidental Imagination: Christian Theologies and Missions Within Trans-Americanity
Part II: The Gate: The Geopolitics of Western Theology and Mission
4. Theological Paradigms Inside the Gate: The Geopolitics of Knowledge and the Decolonial Alternative
5. Naming the Gates in ‘Christian’ America
Part III: Outside the Gate: In Search of Ungating Christian Logics in the American Global South
6. Outside the Gate and Orlando Costas’s Missiological Legacy
7. Colonial Wound: Moving Beyond Christology
Part IV: Theology Otherwise: Decolonial Pneumatologies in the American Global South
8. Rerouting Theology: The Pneumatological (Transoccidental) Difference
9. Traditioning the Spirit Outside the Gate: On the Canonical Imagination of the Americas
10. The Spirit as Decolonial Healer
Part V: Crossings: Perspectives on Theology, Whiteness, and Global Designs
11. A Dis-claiming Theology
12. Church Without Borders: Ecclesial Tales of the Spirit Outside the Gate
Epilogue: ¿Y Ahora Qué? Can the ‘White Western’ University Be Freed? (An Indiscreet Email)
Bibliography
Author Index
Subject Index
Scripture Index
Sobre o autor
Oscar García-Johnson is associate professor of theology and Latino/a studies and assistant provost for the Center for the Study of Hispanic Church and Community at Fuller Theological Seminary. An ordained Baptist minister, he has also served as a regional minister with the American Baptist Churches of Los Angeles, and his books include Conversaciones Teológicas del Sur Global Americano, coedited;Theology Without Borders, coauthored with William Dyrness; and The Mestizo/a Community of the Spirit.