Missional
Narrative and Missional Hermeneutic for the 21st Century
Enoch Wan & Paul Hiebert
Published in “Featured Article” of www.GlobalMissiology.org
January 2009
Here is a list of theological and
missiological insights from reading J. H. Wright’s 535
pages work entitled: The Mission of God: Unlocking
the Bible’s Grand Narrative (Baker)
for this book is a key publication for missional narrative and missional hermeneutic
for the 21st Century:
·
We ask, “Where
does God fit into the story of my life?” when the real question is where does my little life fit into the great story of God’s
mission. ·
We want to be driven by a purpose that has been
tailored just right for our own individual
lives (which is of course infinitely preferable to living aimlessly), when we
should be seeing the purpose of
all life, including our own, wrapped up in the great mission of God for the
whole of creation. ·
We talk about the problems of “applying the
Bible to our life,” which often means
modifying the Bible somewhat adjectivally to fit into the assumed “reality”
of the life we live “in the real
world.” What would it mean to apply our lives to the Bible instead, assuming the
Bible to be the reality – the real story – to which we are called
to conform ourselves? ·
We wrestle with the question of how we can “make
the gospel relevant to the world”
(again at least that is clearly preferable to treating it as irrelevant). But
in this Story, God is about
the business of transforming the world to fit the shape of the gospel. ·
We wonder whether
and how the care of creation, for example, might fit into our concept and practice of mission, when this Story challenges us
to ask whether our lives, lived on God’s
earth and under God’s gaze, are aligned with, or horrendously |
1
Now the LORD said to Abram, "Go from your country and your kindred and
your father's house to the land
that I will show you. 2
I will make of you a great nation, and I will bless you, and make your name
great, so that you will be a
blessing. 3
I will bless those who bless you, and the one who curses you I will curse;
and in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed." Genesis
12:1-3 (NRSV) It is a reversal
of Babel. God will establish a great nation and all the people of the earth will be blessed; they will be “gathered” to God, not
scattered. Wright goes on
through the course of the book to show how God had called out for himself a particular people in a particular place. He called them out
to be his instrument for gathering all
people to himself. If the land was the stage and the people were the actors, then the nations of the world were the audience to witness
God’s relationship with his people.
While the Israelites tended to pervert there selection into haughty pride they soon learned that being God’s people meant experiencing his
blessing when they loved and
worshiped and Him, and the withdraw of that blessing when they refused. That was part of the witness God gave to the nations. The New Testament
expands how “the people of God” are understood and they are no longer
confined to a place and a temple. They are the living temple. Apostles are sent out to gather the nations in and reveal God for who He is. It is Wright’s
detailed investigation of passage after passage that truly makes the missional narrative come alive. Wright concludes the book by
describing the transformative
impact a missional hermeneutic has on those who adopt it. The book really is a wonder travelogue through the narrative God has given us
in the Bible. It accomplishes its
“mission” to give a missional hermeneutic. |
(Editor’s note: Paul’s personal notes
on The Mission of God: Unlocking the
Bible’s Grand Narrative by Christopher J. H. Wright are
informative to the theme of GM January 2009 as edited by Enoch Wan)