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Centering The Margins : Missionary Discipleship Essay

Decent Essays

Centering the Margins: Missionary Discipleship in Praxis Where Are We, the Missionary Disciples, at the Margins?
US THEM

PARTICIPANT
INSIDERS
[Holders of authority and power]
1
PARTICIPANT
OUTSIDERS
[Jesus]

4
2
NON-PARTICIPANT
INSIDERS
[Nobodies] 3
NON-PARTICIPANT
OUTSIDERS

Knowing our position(s) from the margins truly affects of ways of doing ministry/mission. Gittins charts the complexity of cultural and social polarities in a cultural grid of four quadrants. The bold lines represent the boundaries which configuring population. In the time of Jesus for example, by virtue of social status, everyone belonged to one of these quadrants. If in religious world, the occupants were the insider-participants (clergy, hierarchy, religious leaders), “they would established an exclusionary zone whose borders would be patrolled by upholders of strict orthodoxy and executors of appropriate sanctions.” These small numbers of elite also declared the will of God and exercised their authority over the other three groups. It was difficult to move from the ranks of insider non-participants and outsiders to the insider participants. However, “not all insider participants are self-serving: the kenotic ministry of Jesus illustrates the possibility of moving from the centers of privilege to the margins or boundaries where missionary encounters take place.” This gives us an encouragement to rethink and shift our position(s) in serving the people of God more effectively. Gittins points

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