Christian Joy
Christian Joy
Christian Joy
Christian Joy
Christian Joy
The Antioch
Agenda*
By Daniel Jeyaraj and Rodney
Petersen
Christian mission is deeply concerned with establishing
new relationships that transcend cultural, social, economic, political and
other boundaries. Its cross-cultural communication enables people to
overcome deep-rooted prejudices by providing an alternate lifestyle that
bridges the gap between outsiders and insiders. It brings together people
with differing worldviews, and helps them to learn from one another.
Antiochian Agenda
The ancient Roman city of Antioch, now situated on the
eastern side of the Orontes River in southern Turkey, played an important
role in the formation of the first multicultural and multiethnic Christian
congregation outside of Jerusalem. In all probability, early Jewish
Christian converts from Palestine founded a congregation there. They seem to
have invited both Jewish and non-Jewish peoples to accept Jesus Christ as
their savior and lord. This meant a complete orientation of life around the
ministry and person of Jesus, understood to be the messiah or anointed one
(Christ) of God. They encouraged them to become full-fledged members of the
newly established congregation. It is truly astonishing that the first
Jewish Christian converts in Antioch did not require the non-Jewish
Christian converts to first follow the characteristic ethos of Judaism
(e.g., adherence to the Mosaic Law, circumcision, Jewish dietary habits, and
the like), and then to become Christians. Instead they encouraged them to be
what they were before with the exception of consciously developing Christian
worldviews and evaluating their cherished socio-cultural values from the
perspective of Jewish monotheism, the one God whom Jesus Christ had further
revealed and whom His apostles proclaimed.
As a result, the followers of Jesus Christ in Antioch
were known as Christians ("Christ-bearers," Acts 11:26).[1]
They placed their commitment to Jesus Christ in the center of their belief
and life. Their devotion to Jesus Christ did not eradicate their previous
socio-cultural identities, but they did not become the constitutive factor
of their new identity as Christians. Their new identity drastically changed
their former concepts about ritual purity and pollution, interpersonal
relationships, religious communion and table fellowship between Jewish and
non-Jewish Christians. This change of worldviews and lifestyle enabled them
to effectively communicate the Gospel of Jesus Christ with people belonging
to diverse cultures, religions and other ideologies. As a result, they
established intercultural and multiethnic relationships and formed an
alternate community that welcomed inquirers, converts, and trainees for
cross-cultural ministry.
The Antioch Agenda Today
The Antioch Agenda today is an agenda that
involves all peoples in the proclamation of the good news of Jesus Christ.
It finds specific focus in the pressing issues of our day, but stands as a
trajectory with mission from the earliest days of Jesus' mission and
proclamation of Good News (Luke 4: 18 - 21). These issues can be said to be
the need for human flourishing, the demands of reconciliation in specific
settings, an affirmation of religious freedom in the context of a dialogue
among religions, and the necessity of freedom from fear.
The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) offer a vision
of human flourishing. Defined by the United Nations, they form a template
for action. The lens of Christian reflection offers missional perspective:
the goal of eliminating extreme poverty and hunger draws us to consider how
all are made in the image of God; that of reducing child mortality calls us
to reflect on the incarnation, that the embodiment of Christian hope came
into the world as a child; promoting gender equality draws us to reflect on
the mystery of unity and diversity; that of gender, ethnicity and race; the
goal of achieving universal primary education reminds us that education,
schools and universities, have been the gift of the Church to global
cultures; improving maternal health reminds us that the health of the mother
is key to the health of the community; the work of combating HIV/AIDS,
malaria, and other Diseases drives us to ask whether calamity/suffering is
payback for sin; the task of ensuring environmental sustainability calls us
to stewardship; and developing networks for development raises the question
of those with whom we are willing to associate, to issues of "exclusion and
embrace."[2]
Mission in the twenty-first century fosters human flourishing.
Mission in the twenty-first century is also about
reconciliation. Reconciliation, accompanied by forgiveness, grounded in
justice. These all are central to Christian spirituality and open the gates
forward to the repair of the world (tikkun olam). Robert Schreiter
calls attention to the vertical, horizontal and cosmic aspects of
reconciliation.[3]
In work for the Conference on World Mission and Evangelism of the World
Council of Churches (Athens 2005), he outlines six aspects of reconciliation
and healing: truth, memory, repentance, justice, forgiveness and love.[4]
Reconciliation begins in particular settings and reaches out to cosmic
dimensions. If there is a role for reconciliation in the political realm, as
seen in Helmick.s chapter, it finds its deepest grounding in theological
reflection on God.s work in Christ.[5]
This is where cycles of revenge and release are first encountered within a
movement toward health and wholeness.[6]
Reconciliation involves, to use the words of Samuel Escobar, "Transforming
Service."[7]
It is the "liturgy after the liturgy," to adopt the expression of Orthodox
theologian Ion Bria.[8]
Third, Christian mission assumes and promotes religious
freedom. There is a growing sense across the globe that rights and
obligations arise from the people as embodied in the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights set forth by the United Nations (1948). This was given
further significance for religious consciousness and liberties in the U.N..s
Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of Intolerance and of
Discrimination Based on Religion or Belief (25 November 1981). The social
reality of people migrating around the world, contemporary technology and
media - as well as an increasing tendency to standardize national
citizenship - have all promoted a sense of global citizenship. With this has
come an increasing understanding of the necessity for a dialogue among
religions[9]
in the context of the freedom of religion.[10]
Religious citizenship takes shape around issues of identity, lifestyle,
specific needs and networks.[11]
Just as Christianity played a role in globalization through the democracy of
salvation, fostering global religious freedom in the context of a dialogue
among religions must also be affirmed as a mission goal so as to promote the
authenticity of religious choice and commitment.
A fourth goal for mission in the twenty-first century
is to promote freedom from fear. At another time and place Franklin Delano
Roosevelt offered a vision of a world founded upon four essential freedoms:
the freedom of speech, freedom of religion, freedom from want, and the
freedom from fear.[12]
This must also be a dimension of mission in the twenty-first century. .Do
not fear. is the charge given to Abraham, alike to Joshua, then with
resonances through Jesus to John.s vision, the Apocalypse: .Be strong and
courageous. I will be with you. (Deuteronomy 31-23). The monotheistic faiths
tell us that we live in a world of the one God, upon whose goodness we can
totally rely.[13]
The victory cry of the Lamb who was slain is that, .He will wipe away every
tear from their eyes. There will be no more death or mourning or crying or
pain, for the old order of things has passed Strategies for Holistic Mission
away. (Revelation 21:4).
* This material is taken from: The Antioch Agenda:
Essays on the Restorative Church in Honor of Orlando E. Costas. Edited
by Daniel Jeyaraj, Robert W. Pazmińo and Rodney L. Petersen. Printed by the
Indian Society for the Promotion of Christian Knowledge, New Delhi, 2007).
[1]
Not all followers of Jesus Christ were/are known as Christians. The
Nazarenes in some parts Iran and India and the Malankara Nazranikal
in southwestern India are different from traditional understanding of
being Christians. In addition, numerous "unbaptized Christians" live in many
parts of India. Due to certain social, cultural, political and communal
reasons they do not want to be baptized, and formally join a church.
Similarly, the "anonymous Christians" claim that they live in God's grace
and that they will attain "salvation" in their own religious traditions
because they believe that the Holy Spirit is present and active in these
traditions. It is evident that these and many other similar faith
communities live somewhere in the in betweenness of cultures and
human systems.
[2]
Sabina Alkire, What Can One Person Do? Faith to Heal a Broken World
(Church Publishing, 2005). Economist and Anglican priest, Sabina Alkire
calls us to craft mission goals that begin with prayer and then move through
stages of study, financial giving, connecting with the impoverished, ritual,
advocacy, and politics so as to be the Ambassadors of Hope (Robert
Seiple) that we are called to be. The term "exclusion and embrace" is from
the book of that title by Miroslav Volf (Nashville: Abingdon, 1996).
[3]
Robert Schreiter, Reconciliation. Mission & Ministry in a Changing Social
Order (New York and Cambridge: BTI/Orbis, 1992). Schreiter has gone on
to develop his ideas in different settings and articles.
[4]
Jacques Matthey and the Ecumenical Formation Team, "Mission as Ministry of
Reconciliation," Preparatory Paper No. 1. Conference on World Mission and
Evangelism, Athens, May, 2005; cf. John Paul Lederach, The JourneyToward
Reconciliation (Scottdale, PA: Harold Press, 1999).
[5]
Desmond Tutu, No Future Without Forgiveness (New York: Doubleday,
2000 ); and with attention to the overtly political, see: Martha Minow,
Breaking Cycles of Hatred. Memory, Law, and Repair (Princeton: Princeton
University, 2002); also: Olga Botcharova, "Implementation of Track Two
Diplomacy: Developing a Model of Forgiveness," in Raymond Helmick and Rodney
Petersen, eds., Forgiveness and Reconciliation. Religion, Public Policy
and Conflict Transformation (Philadelphia: Templeton Press, 2002): pp.
279-304; Christopher D. Marshall, Beyond Retribution. A New Testament
Vision for Justice, Crime, and Punishment (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans,
2001): 251-280.
[6]
Literature on forgiveness is now legion. One might begin with Robert D.
Enright and Joanna North, eds., Exploring Forgiveness (Madison:
University of Wisconsin Press, 1998); Michael Henderson, Forgiveness.
Breaking the Chain of Hate (Wilsonville, OR: Book Partners, 1999). A
theology of forgiveness has been written by L. Gregory Jones, Embodying
Forgiveness: A Theological Analysis (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans Publishing
Co., 1995); cf. Paul Ricoeur, Memory, History, Forgetting (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 2004); and Vladimir Jankelevitch,
Forgiveness (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005).
[7]
Samuel Escobar, The New Global Mission. The Gospel from Everywhere to
Everyone (Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press, 2003): 142-154.
[8]
Ion Bria, The Liturgy After the Liturgy: Mission and Witness from an
Orthodox Perspective (Geneva: WCC, 1996).
[9]
Hans Küng has long argued for the importance of a dialogue of respect among
the religions, see the Parliament of the World's Religions, Global Ethic:
The Declaration of the Parliament of the World's Religions (New York:
Continuum, 1994).
[10]
On religious citizenship, see Bart van Steenbergen, "The Condition of
Citizenship," in Bart van Steenbergen, ed., The Condition of Citizenship
(London: Sage Publications, 1994), 1-9, esp. 2.
[11]
On "lifestyle politics," see Anthony Giddens, The Consequences of
Modernity (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1991). On the "politics
of identity" and related matters, see Jonathan Sacks, "Judaism and Politics
in the Modern World," in Peter Berger, ed., The Desecularization of the
World: Resurgent Religion and World Politics (Grand Rapids: William B.
Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1999), 51-63.
[12]
Franklin D. Roosevelt, "Four Freedoms"; Address to Congress January 6, 1941
(Congressional Record, 1941, Vol. 87, Pt. I.).
[13]
I owe this reflection to Raymond Helmick, S.J. The paper in which he
develops these ideas is entitled, "'Do not Fear', Because I am with You."
(December 2004).
