This letter is part of the project “Theology for Idyllic Ministries,” funded by the Association of Theology Schools’ Lily Fund.
David, the servant of Christ Jesus, is a pastor and finger of God’s Church in our modern age, to us, especially those who work in the English-European context.
Greed and peace from God of our Father and Lord Jesus Christ. I have written to you as a fellow worker of the Gospel, and have been forced by the Holy Spirit to deal with the urgent matter before us, the state of the Church as we see today. .
In the land where faith once flourished, we are now witnessing stagnation, division, and deep cutting off from the current movement of the Holy Spirit.
In the land where faith once flourished, we now witness stagnation, division, and a deep disconnect from the current movement of the Holy Spirit. The theological problems we face today stem from the long-standing separation between our beliefs and the social, ethnic and racial realities in which our lives and beliefs are embodied. Masu.
Our job is not only to reassess the historical roots of this issue, but also to consider ways to create new wine skins. It is a structure that abstracts the gospel from its living representation, rather it integrates beliefs and social embodiment in a way that reflects reality. The body of Christ across space and time.
The collapse of the churches of Christendom in Anglo-Europe
Over the centuries, Anglo-European Christianity grew alongside the structure of state power, blending the influence of the church with the rise of empires, borders and enforcement of political will. Christian growth in this context was not neutral, but deeply intertwined with ethnic and geographical identities, shaping the distinction between theological beliefs and sects that sparked political and social significance.
Denominations like Lutheran, Reformed, Anglican Church and later Protestant evangelical and major traditions emerged as confessional groups, each carrying marks of ethnicity, linguistic and political context. . These departments reflected the clear social and regional composition of the era, not merely theological preferences.
The problem is, therefore, that these theological identities are perceived as abstract or universal, stripped of social and historical idiosyncraticity. In reality, these sectarian structures are old wine skins, a contextual representation of faith linked to the political, racial and ethnic realities of early modern Europe.
They served their purpose within their historical and cultural context, but as Paul warns, the body of Christ fractures with such distinctions firmly in place. Follow Cephas, “I follow Christ.” Is Christ divided? (1 Corinthians 1:12-13).
Today, the Holy Spirit seeks new forms and structures.
Today, the Holy Spirit seeks new forms and structures that can embody, explain and guide Christian faith in various regions of God’s creation.
I’m listening to the Global South
The center of gravity of the Catholic Church has changed. The Holy Spirit moves with power from regions historically far from the Christian core (Africa, Asia, Latin America) where Christians live their faith in a different reality than those in the North.
Jesus’ declaration (Matthew 20:16) resonates here, “The first will be the last, and the last will be the first” and to consider our assumptions about theological and cultural superiority, we will be able to see globally. We’ll challenge us in the North. For too long we have seen Anglo-European theology as normative, and we imagine our models of church and theology as universal.
This is the implicit assumption that theology can somehow transcend social embodiment divorced from the ethnic and geographical contexts that shape it. However, this assumption often blinds us to the movement of the Holy Spirit in other contexts, preventing the universal body of Christ from receiving the gift of the Holy Spirit poured into the global South.
“The eyes cannot say the hand, “I don’t need you!” And the head cannot say to the feet, “I don’t need you!” (1 Corinthians 12:21) is fresh here Take a relationship. With a belief in facing poverty, injustice and persecution, the Global South confronts the North’s tendency to reduce faith to confessional abstraction.
Theological insights emerging from the global South, shaped by living struggles, persecution and solidarity, provide the counterpoints needed for historical domination of the Eurocentric category. From economic disparities to political oppression, the issues they wrest up are far from theological debates in the North. Here, faith is experienced and embodied in trials that transcend sectarian boundaries, bringing us back to the inexplicable connection between belief and social context.
Today, the North must ask what spirits are doing in a world of majority.
Just as early churches gathered at the Council of Jerusalem to identify the work of the Holy Spirit among the Gentiles, the north today must hear what spirits are doing among the majority worlds. . In this listening, we may begin to confirm that global Southern theology is not an addendum, but an important expression of the gospel. This listening employs an attitude of humility and acceptability, and challenges us to welcome certain expressions of the body of Christ across space and time.
The Need for a New Wine Skins: Global Christian Church Studies
The parable of Jesus’ Wine Skins provides the principles of guidance in our moments. Otherwise, new wine will burst the skin, spill the wine, destroy the skin” (Mark 2:22).
Theological assumptions, church frameworks, and sectarian structures shaped by the Christian world of British Europe cannot contain the new work that the Holy Spirit is achieving in the global South. The old Wineskins, shaped by Western power, privilege and universalising tendencies, no longer serve the needs of the church.
The new wine skin we need must embrace the truth that theological doctrine and church identity are inseparable from social and regional expressions. Rather than unabbreviated doctrine, the gospel is always reincarnated in the lives, peoples, and places of its followers.
Ethnicity, race, and place are not associated with faith, but they are channels in which the Holy Spirit uniquely works in each context. Theology that emerges from the context of the majority world is a specific expression of the universal Christian faith. The new Wein Skins must reflect this reality and integrate beliefs with social embodiedness into ways that acknowledge the work of the Holy Spirit across people.
Race and ethnicity, when exploited, can become idols who replace unity with exclusion.
However, this approach is being paid attention. Race and ethnicity, when exploited, can become idols who replace unity with exclusion. Churches around the world must be wary to ensure that the emerging church structures do not replicate the ethnocentrism, nationalism, or racial divisions that are destructive in the history of the church.
Ethnic and racial identities are signs of the particularity of God’s creation, but they should not become schism forces that fragment the body of Christ. The Holy Spirit’s New Wine Skins call brings together faith that unites unites unity and differences, and recognizes the rich specialities of different expressions while committing to the reconciliation of the gospel.
Accepting new wine skins without sacrificing unity
At the heart of the gospel is a deep theological tension between the universal and certain people. The good news of Jesus Christ is a message to all people in every place and age, but is always expressed through specific places, language, and embodied experiences.
The church is called to honor both universal and specific.
It reminds us that the incarnation itself, that is, the eternal logo becomes physical at a particular time and place – the universal truth of the gospel cannot be separated from its socially embodied representation. The church is called to honor both universal and specific, allowing the gospel to flourish in the particularity of God’s creation.
Paul’s reminder to the Galatians, “No Jews, no Greek, no slaves, no freedom, no men or women, because you are all in Christ Jesus” (Galatians 3:28), is calling for unity. However, we should recognize that we cannot do this without recognizing the particularity of our social embodiment.
At current age, race and ethnicity are not only markers of difference, but also tools for navigating tensions between universal and specific people. Understanding properly, they reveal the work of the Holy Spirit in a clear way in different people and places. So, beware of the dangers of ethnocentrism and racism that distort the gospel’s unified message. When race and ethnicity become tools of exclusion or superiority, they obscure the reconciliation of Christ.
The new Wine Skins we create serve as a ship for justice, reconciliation and mutual recognition, and as the Holy Spirit celebrates the specific ways in which the Holy Spirit moves through different people and places, and while the Holy Spirit moves, the universal love, truth of God. , we must embody the grace.
Be united in Christ, spiritually diverse, and be constantly paying attention to the specific ways God moves among us.
These new structures should not idolize or reduce cultural and regional peculiarities, but create spaces for the work of the Holy Spirit to flourish within a diverse and socially embodied context. Should be. In doing so, we are faithful to our call for the Gospel to be a united and spiritually diverse church in Christ, and we are constantly paying attention to the specific ways God moves between us. Masu.
When we try to build these new wine skins together, grace and peace are with you.
Originally published by the imagination of the Asian American Christian Center. It was reissued with permission.
Dr. David C. Chao is the director of the Asian American Christian Center at Princeton Theological Seminary. He teaches courses related to Asian American theology and organizes programs for Asian American Theology and Ministry. His research and writing focuses on the faith and practice of ordinary Asian Christians in the context of diasporicism, Christian doctrine for liberation, Convergence and divergence of Protestant and Catholic dogmatics, Carl Bath It focuses on the use of theology of theology. His research into the religious life and politics of Asian Americans is funded by the Henry Ruth Foundation, the Louisville Institute, and Aparri.
The Center for Asian American Christianity advances academic research on Asian American Christianity, develops a vision of future prospects for Asian American theology, and loyal evangelization and public witnesses as Asian American Christians Equipped and empowered.