The Missio Dei Embodied in Local Community Ministry in Scotland

Authors

  • Rev. Dr. Steve Taylor Principal, Knox Centre for Ministry and Leadership Senior Lecturer, Department of Theology, Flinders University
  • Rev Dr Mark Johnston Department of Theology & Religious Studies, University of Glasgow

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54195/ef12043

Abstract

This paper examines missio Dei in a local community context, interpreting the Blue Horizon Youth Charity, Aberdeen, Scotland, in light of a missiology of listening, diagnosing, and discerning. John 5:9 is read in conversation with Terese Okure to clarify an abiding in mission. Luke 10:1–11 is read in conversation with Alan Roxburgh to develop a contextual particularity in the naming of God’s activity in the world. A local missional ecclesiology is developed with the missio Dei understood as practices of neighborhood listening, diagnosing local narratives, and discerning God and the gospel. The result is a theology of local community ministry as action-reflection on what the Father is doing by paying attention to vulnerable voices, particularly of youth in the community and so partnering with non-church actors in ways inclusive and gospel affirming. Missiology is returned to the local church as the missio Dei is embodied in the practices of local community mission.

Downloads

Published

2020-12-01

How to Cite

Taylor, Steve, and Rev Dr Mark Johnston. 2020. “The Missio Dei Embodied in Local Community Ministry in Scotland”. Ecclesial Futures 1 (2):75-94. https://doi.org/10.54195/ef12043.

Issue

Section

Articles