Reconciliation as a Pneumatological Mission Paradigm: Some Preliminary Reflections by an Orthdox

Vassiliadis, Petros (2005) Reconciliation as a Pneumatological Mission Paradigm: Some Preliminary Reflections by an Orthdox. International Review of Mission, 94 (372). pp. 30-42. ISSN 1758-6631

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Official URL: https://www.academia.edu/1896479/RECONCILIATION_AS...

Abstract

This article underlines the importance of reconciliation and healing in the life and mission of the church. It develops a new theology of mission that is no longer based on the old Christocentric universalism but on a new trinitarian (i.e. pneumatological) understanding of the witness of the church. This is possible nowadays because of the reinforcement of pneumalology into missiological reflections, which together with the amazing expansion worldwide of the Pentecostal movement, determines the present day Christian mission. The article it based on the assumption that the Holy Spirit in both the biblical and patristic traditions is first and foremost eschatologically- (Acts 2:17ff) and communion- (2 Cor. 13:13) oriented. Since, however, a pneumatological approach of Christian mission cannot be received in the wider Christian constituency unless it is Christologically conditioned, the article makes Christology its starting point. It argues that on the basis of Christ's teaching, life and work, the apostles were, and all Christians thereafter are commissioned to proclaim not a set of given religious convict urns, doctrines and moral commands, but the coming kingdom. The message, therefore, is the good news of a new reality of full-scale reconciliation. From the epistemological point of view, the article builds upon the existence of two types of pneumatology in the history of the church. One type is “historical” and is more familiar in the West. It understands the Holy Spirit as fully dependent upon, and being the agent of Christ in order to fulfil the task of mission. The other type is “eschatological”, and id more widespread in the East. It understands the Holy Spirit as the source of Christ, and the church in term more of ‘coming together’, i.e., as the eschatological synaxis of the people of God in hut Kingdom, than of ‘going forth' for mission. Taking the second type of pneumatology one step further, the article argues that mission in the conventional sense is the outcome and not the source of Christian theology. That is why for the Orthodox what constitutes the essence of the church is not her mission but the Eucharist, the divine Liturgy; the mission is the meta-liturgy, the Liturgy after the Liturgy. Nevertheless, reconciliation being the primary precondition of the Eucharist, it also automatically becomes a source of mission.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: Eucharist, Pneumatology, Christology, Mission of the Church
Subjects: B Mission theology/theory
B Mission theology/theory > Missio Dei
B Mission theology/theory > Evangelism/Proclamation of Gospel
D World Christianity and Central Eastern Europe > Europe
G Christian traditions/Denominations > Eastern Orthodox
Divisions: Balkan countries
Balkan countries > Greece‎
Depositing User: Speranca Tomin
Date Deposited: 21 Dec 2021 14:56
Last Modified: 11 Jul 2022 07:48
URI: https://ceeamsprints.osims.org/id/eprint/2417

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