Janice Price

World-Shaped Mission


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Links there is experience to be shared at all levels of the Church of England on relationships across cultures. What Fresh Expressions challenges and is seeking to enable is the need to transfer this learning and experience into mission in England. However, this is an altogether more difficult process as it requires a complex process of listening and reflection to understand our presuppositions and practices within our own culture. However, listening to the voices of the global church and first generation migrant residents in England can provide valuable insights and ideas as to how we can learn in our own context. The way we think about mission is challenged and, it is hoped, expanded and extended as we listen deeply to the global church and the migrant churches in England. This involves a willingness to be open with others about our vulnerabilities as well as our strengths. However, our world church partners and those arriving in England from other parts of the world have not always found the Church of England open and willing to learn from them. Relationships across cultures can expand our imagination in the service of God’s mission in the world as the local church understands itself as part of the global church. There is a blurring of the boundaries between home and overseas mission as new ways of participating in God’s mission in the world emerge.

      The ecological and environmental crisis

      So, creation is integral to God’s mission. Through the environmental crisis and the impact of climate change we are discovering new shapes or rhythms of God’s mission.

      1.21 Mission as reconciliation

      1.22 There is a practical impact of climate change and environmental crisis on all church partnerships which involves the Companion Links, the Mission Agencies of the Church of England as well as the Development Agencies. The demands on our partnerships are likely to increase rather than decrease as impoverished regions are forced to deal with high food and commodity prices as well as the reduction in land for agricultural use and the corresponding detrimental effect on social and community life. Climate change, the environmental crisis and world mission are intimately connected. The Anglican Alliance for Relief, Advocacy and Development is highlighting food security as a key element in its work. Living responsibly in God’s world is becoming a strong theme in personal discipleship and church life as those in the high consumption areas of the West understand the impact of their lifestyle on the Majority World. Partnership will be increasingly expressed in terms of how personal and corporate lifestyle impacts others across cultural and political boundaries. In the West lifestyle changes become an important part of our discipleship because of their impact on Majority World partners.

      The Five Marks of Mission

      1.24 First, the Five Marks are ‘marks’ but it is not defined theologically what those marks express. The Five Marks of Mission are characteristics of God’s mission in the world and are signs of God’s gracious and generous presence in his world building the Kingdom of justice and peace in Christ. The roots of the Five Marks of Mission are in God’s mission as it is God who is the initiator in mission out of love for the world as an overflowing movement from the communion of the Trinity. Each of the Marks is an expression of God’s overflow of love into the world and where they are evident they are a mark or sign of God’s mission.

      1.25 A suggested change to the Five Marks concerns the primacy of the first mark of mission.

      ‘To proclaim the good news of the Kingdom.’

      It is proposed that as this first mark of mission embraces all of the other four marks it should be the key statement about everything in mission. It expresses what Jesus himself says about his nature and mission. While this is a welcome development it should not mean that the evangelistic element in this statement be lost in a more general interpretation. The proclamation of the good news of God’s Kingdom is that to which all other activities are purposed.

      1.27 A fundamental area of mission that is not currently reflected in the Five Marks is reconciliation. It has been noted earlier that reconciliation of all things in Christ is the eschatological hope that God’s entire mission in the world points to.