MODULE I - Flow and Input
MODULE I - Flow and Input
MODULE I - Flow and Input
Preface
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1. Informative
- through His Word, God interprets man/woman, his existence and
history by giving meaning and direction to him/her
- by listening to God’s Word, he/she comes to a knowledge of himself,
his being, and destiny
o 2 Tim 3:17 “All Scripture is inspired by God and useful for
refuting error, for guiding people’s lives and teaching them
to be upright. This is how someone who is dedicated to God
becomes fully equipped and ready for any good work.”
2. Expressive
- Through His Word God teaches us about Himself. He reveals Himself to
us because He considers us as His friends.
o Jn 15:15 ‘I call you friends, because I have made known to
you everything that I have learned from my Father.”
- By many names, images, metaphors and examples, God reveals
Himself and His love to all that we may have eternal life.
o Jn 17:3 “Eternal life is this: to know you, and only true God,
and Jesus Christ whom you have sent.”
3. Appellative
- God teaches and reveals Himself because He summons us to a
response.
- The truth of God’s Word is not to be known (conceptually) but to be
done.
o Lk 11:28 “More blessed are those who hear the Word of God
and keep it.”
o Mt 7:21 “It is not anyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord, will
enter the Kingdom of Heaven, but the person who does the
will of my Father in Heaven.”
- In the early Church, the faithful who belonged to the community were
called the kletoi (Rom. 1:6-7; 1 Cor. 1:2, 24), or the “called” because
they had listened to the call.
- Community of the “called:” ekklesia, that is, the assembly of those
who responded and gathered by the Word of the herald.
o Jesus assured them of his presence (Mt. 18:20 “Where two or
three are gathered in my name, there am I in their midst”).
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• For the Jews “dabar” is more than the spoken word. It is a thing, an
affair, an event, an action.
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(2) to God’s laws which He gave to His people through the
prophets (propositional)
E. Jesus as Logos
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• Dual role of Jesus: human expression of God and God’s idea of
what the human being is supposed to be
Addendum
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• Catholic Nature and Orientation of the Church
In EDM 1 you were taught that Jesus embodied the fullness of the
Father’s love and this was precisely the mission of Jesus: to proclaim by word
and example what that Father’s love is all about. Before Jesus ascended to
heaven he made it sure that his disciples (the church’s apostolic foundation)
would carry out that mission (review Matt 28:18-20). Indeed the disciples did
just that but after Jesus sent his Spirit upon them who were gathered inside
a house (Acts 2:1-36), because the Spirit it was who removed their fears and
timidity and replaced it with boldness and courage. What was striking during
the Pentecost was that the disciples preached in different languages so that
the crowd who came from different regions were able to understand what
they were preaching (Acts 2:1-11). That early, the young Christian
movement had already exhibited its catholic character and orientation.
Catholicity is derived from the Greek katholikos, which means “pertaining to
or oriented to the whole). This catholic character means that Christian unity
would welcome diversity inside the movement. This is called differentiated
unity, or unity in diversity: one Gospel, one Lord, one faith, one baptism, yet
its expressions would take in a plurality of forms. Cultural difference was not
destroyed but became the very instrument for a realization of a more
profound spiritual unity.
What are the three religious bases of the Church’s belief on the
goodness of difference?
There are three, namely: the doctrine of creation, of incarnation, and of the
Trinity.
(1) doctrine of creation, that is, since creation is good, then differences
in creation must be celebrated;
(2) doctrine of incarnation, that is, God, other than God’s self has truly
become the other in Jesus of Nazareth;
(3) doctrine of Trinity, that is, differences grounded in the God who is a
tri-unity of distinct subsistent relations.
In the Old Testament, there were actually two contrasting traditions
which emerged. The first believed that God’s saving love was exclusivist,
which was linked to ethnic purity. The second viewed God’s salvation as
inclusive (Is 49:60 “I will give you as a light to the nations, that my salvation
may reach to the ends of the earth.” See also the books of Ruth and Jonah).
The inclusive view was affirmed in Acts whose central theme was the
emergence of the church as a missionary community confident that the
gospel is hospitable to all people and cultures (Acts 1:8 “But you will receive
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power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you will be my
witnesses in Jerusalem, in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the
earth.” So the catholicity of the Church is revealed in and through its
missionary mandate.
Ecclesiological principle of the biblical origin of the church: the Holy Spirit
does not erase difference but renders difference nondivisive.
- Significance of the Council of Jerusalem: the good news of Christ was
to be offered to all peoples as approved by the council
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d. Missionary work was primarily concerned with the quantitative
expansion of the church by way of the plantatio ecclesiae.
e. Operative conquest paradigm which disparaged local cultures and
sought to purge indigenous peoples of their cultural heritage as a
precondition to receiving the gospel.
Nonetheless there were voices that challenged the dominant
Conquest paradigm like Bartolome de Las Cases in Mexico, Matteo Ricci in
China, Roberto de Nobili in India, and Alexandre de Rhodes in Vietnam. A
document from Vatican in 1659 also challenged the prevailing paradigm of
conquest. Written by the Congregation for the Propagation of Faith, it was
addressed to two bishops in Vietnam and gave directives on dealing with
indigenous customs. What did the document basically say?
Still those who advocated greater cultural sensitivity in mission practice had
a narrow view of the relationship between cultures and the Christian
message:
a. They presumed an artificial distinction between the cultural and
religious practices of the indigenous peoples, affirming the former
while condemning the latter.
b. There was little sense that these cultures were themselves
mediations of God’s grace.
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cultures. On virtually every page of the Vatican II documents is the notion of
dialogue. The dialogical vision of the church is biblically and theologically
founded on the Trinitarian shape of both creation (there’s so much diversity
in it) and divine revelation (God reveals himself to other cultures). The
church is conceived out of the divine dialogue effected at every step by the
missions of Word and Spirit. Again Vatican II expressed the church’s
catholicity in terms of unity-in-diversity. The net of catholicity was extended
to the following groups: all Christian peoples, Jews, Muslims, practitioners of
other great religious traditions, spiritual seekers, and men and women of
goodwill. Part of the church’s task is to transform the world without negating
the positive features of contemporary society. The missiological orientation
of the church toward the world is expressed in the council’s document Ad
Gentes 2: “The church on earth by its very nature missionary since, according
to the plan of the Father, it has its origin in the mission of the Son and the
holy Spirit.” This means that just as God’s being is fundamentally oriented
toward the world that God created, so too the church exists in mission as a
sacramental sign of salvation to the world. The council’s offered new insight
into the church’s catholicity suggests that some of the church’s experience of
ecclesial diversity may come by way of its engagement with the world, and
this engagement, in turn, depended on the church’s capacity for authentic
dialogue. How does Vatican II now see the relationship between the saving
gospel and human culture? Answer: the saving gospel, the foundation of
Christian unity, must find expression in and through human culture.
The enduring legacy of Vatican II is its unswerving commitment to
dialogue among the human family (Gerard Mannion). God must become
Asian or African, black or brown, poor or sophisticated…(Stephen Bevans)
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and theologians > dialogue of spirituality, sharing of religious
experience
5. The mission of the church is not oriented in the first instance to the
salvation of souls but rather to the furthering of God’s reign.
6. Authentic dialogue include a moment when the Christian conversation
partner is free to share his or her most profound convictions regarding
the gracious love of God that has come to our world in Jesus Christ by
the power of the Holy Spirit.
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