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Carregando... Kingdom Conspiracy: Returning to the Radical Mission of the Local Churchde Scot McKnight
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According to Scot McKnight, "kingdom" is the biblical term most misused by Christians today. It has taken on meanings that are completely at odds with what the Bible says. "Kingdom" has become a buzzword for both social justice and redemption so that it has lost its connection with Israel and with the church as a local church. McKnight defines the biblical concept of kingdom, offering a thorough corrective and vision for the contemporary church. The most important articulation of kingdom was that of Jesus, who contended that the kingdom was in some sense present and in some sense in the future. The apostles talked less about the kingdom and more about the church. McKnight explains that kingdom mission is local church mission and that the present-day fetish with influencing society, culture, and politics distracts us from the mission of God: to build the local church. He also shows how kingdom theology helps to reshape the contemporary missional conversation. Não foram encontradas descrições de bibliotecas. |
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Google Books — Carregando... GênerosClassificação decimal de Dewey (CDD)231.7Religions Christian doctrinal theology God; Unity; Trinity Relation to the world - divine law and miraclesClassificação da Biblioteca do Congresso dos E.U.A. (LCC)AvaliaçãoMédia:
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During the twentieth century, the rise of the social gospel and liberation theology has created an environment where people feel free to disdain the local church while at the same time claiming to serve the kingdom of God. The kingdom of God has in turn become a very vague notion. In modern terms:
"Kingdom means
good deeds
done by good people (Christian or not)
in the public sector
for the common good" (4).
In harsher terms:
"Contemporary kingdom theology tends mostly to be liberation theology articulated by white people on behalf of the oppressed and poor and marginalized, who (by the way) more often than not have themselves moved beyond anything whites have to offer" (254).
For McKnight, this anemic kingdom isn't good enough. He believes, simply stated, church = kingdom.
"Kingdom mission is church mission, church mission is kingdom mission, and there is no kingdom mission that is not church mission" (96).
The kingdom of God is made up of citizens who serve the king. While people outside the kingdom can do many good things—some that even coincide with kingdom values—they cannot do kingdom work. All genuine kingdom work is more than social.
"Kingdom mission offers holistic salvation in the context of the church of the redeemed, those who are being redeemed and those who will be redeemed. Kingdom mission forms communities of the redeemed. Any kingdom mission that does not offer this kind of redemption is not kingdom mission" (158).
One underlying concept in the book was the story of the kingdom. We are used to thinking of the story of the kingdom in terms of creation-fall-Israel-Jesus-church (as N. T. Wright memorably put it, a five act play in which we are improvising the final act). McKnight takes a different approach: A-B-A'.
A: God rules the world as king
B: God allows Israel to have a human king, culminating in David
A': God rules the world again in King Jesus
This simplified approach to the kingdom story is interesting to think through, although I find Wright's five acts more compelling.
Kingdom Conspiracy is a great resource for Christians who want to think biblically and honestly about their engagement in the world. ( )