Faced with the Basics.jpg) MISSION
IN CHINA POINTS THE WAY
by
Hugh MacMahon, SSC
Today mission to
China is viewed as impossible by many missionary societies because there are
no openings for parochial ministry, or directing social and educational
projects. This shows how narrow our thinking has become.
In modern China the
foreign missionary contribution is made through quiet presence and personal
service. This is not a second-class way of doing mission, rather it is a
reminder of how mission began and how it is best achieved.
Original role
The original role of
missionaries was to sow the Gospel seed, form local leaders and hand over to
them the responsibility for the growing Church. Then they moved on. It was
only later that they saw their task as that of establishing churches on the
Roman model and taking on the responsibility for running those churches
till, sooner or later, a local clergy could share that responsibility with
them. Often that took many generations and there was a reluctance to leave
at all. Mission became “ministry in another culture”.
It took the challenge of
entering “closed” cultures like those of China, India and the Islamic
countries to renew modern mission and return it to its basics. That in
itself might not have been sufficient to make mission societies change their
thinking, but the contemporary shortage of missionary vocations forces them
to consider how they can make the best use of their reduced membership. The
fulltime missionaries that do exist should not be hidden away in minor roles
but be placed where they can make most impact.
Before expanding on the
three primary goals of mission (sowing, forming and handing over) a prior
question must be addressed: is mission still necessary at all today?
Motivation for mission
The old inspiration for
going on mission - to save souls - has lost its value and the need to spread
the Kingdom by defending human rights and creating sufficiency has been
taken on by professional dedicated NGOs.
What Christianity offers
is at the most basic level. People are not going to adjust their life-style
- even if they know it make others poorer and destroys the environment -
unless they have a radical transformation of heart and this is the area in
which Christianity specializes.
Reflection on the life
and death of Christ, and his/her own experience, has led the missionary to
find God as the living and molding force in their own life. Because this
means much to them they wish to share the discovery with others, encouraging
them to change their lives if necessary. This liberating challenge of
Christianity has to be asserted in all cultures but missionaries see their
task as that of focusing on those who historically have had little or no
opportunity to hear it.
Now we can return to the
manner in which this is done.
Sowing the seed
In order to influence
others one must be present among them, and the most appropriate form of
Christian presence is personal service. Those who are attracted by its
unselfish example will want to know the reasoning behind it, and its
simplicity will not distract them by seeming to offer any institutional
benefit - social, educational or economic.
To answer initial
enquiries the bearer of the message must be able to articulate his/her
convictions in simple terms. Young people, in China and elsewhere, recognize
propaganda in any form and are impressed only by a sustained life-style that
challenges the superficial values around them. When they seek written
materials to deepen their understanding of Christianity it should be primary
sources such as the Gospels, and not doctrinal works, that are offered to
them. It is the Holy Spirit that guides the seed to fruition and
missionaries should be in no hurry to assume that role.
While missionaries need
to be clear on what they have to offer, familiarity with the local language
and culture is also essential, so that local concepts and symbols are used
to deepen communication and draw the seeker into dialogue.
Finding leaders
The timing of the urban
poor project in Seoul in the 1990s was too late to succeed in forming
communities on personal, Scripture-based spirituality. The people had
already found a certain attraction in a Catholicism based on church
fellowship and a set of practical religious regulations. It provided
continuity with the formality and hierarchy of their Confucian background.
At the same time, a
number of people were looking for a closer relationship with God and sought
Bible study and meditation groups to help deepen their spirituality. Earlier
missionaries should have sought out and concentrated on such candidates.
However, the theological context of the age and the widely accepted drive
for rapid Church expansion encouraged missionaries to opt for large numbers.
They used catechetics and public devotions to cope with the crowds, and this
also solved the problem for them as foreigners to share on a serious level.
Entrusting the Church
The missionary ideal
would be to gather in communities those who showed an awareness of what
Christianity is about so that they could support each other and enable group
witness and worship. In due time such communities - in communion with the
universal Church - would be the ones to develop the institutions, sacraments
and theologies of a truly local Church. They would be the ones to take
evangelization on to its later stages.
However in many
countries, including China, the Church already exists in some form, and even
those who have found Christianity outside it will eventually come in contact
with its present day reality. They may be disappointed by what they find so
the missionary will have to help them cope with the situation and show them
how they can contribute to the renewal of their Church.
Foreigners can also
broaden the formation of local clergy, Religious and lay leaders by
providing them with opportunities to experience alternative forms of Church.
Finally
Mission will be by small
groups of well motivated and specially trained missionaries. Rather than
getting involved in long-term “hands-on” ministries they will concentrate on
finding committed Christians to take on those tasks.
Their witness will be
personal rather than institutional and articulated in scriptural language
rather than theological.
Their efforts will be
addressed, not to large numbers, but to potential servant-leaders who are
attracted by the spiritual basis of Christianity.
Their goal will be to
encourage communities of reflecting Christians to take on the
responsibility, in communion with the wider Church, of developing a local
Church that evolves its own theologies, liturgies and Christian identity.
If they succeed, their
model of mission will have much to offer their home Churches in their
efforts to recreate the Church in the modern world. <WM
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