Bishop Donald D. Phillips, PhD, is honorary fellow of St. John's College, University of Manitoba.
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Description
Chapter 1The Challenge Chapter 2Understanding Local Culture(s) Chapter 3Local (Contextual) Theology Chapter 4"What about the impact of the Gospel in a local culture?" Chapter 5Developing a Contextual Christology in a Postmodern Culture Chapter 6Transformative Potential of Inculturated Texts in the Liturgy Chapter 7Examining the Christology of Canadian Anglican Contemporary Eucharistic Prayers for Cultural Reflexivity Chapter 8Bringing Together Culture and Christology in Proposed Eucharistic Prayer Texts Chapter 9The Way Forward
Communication of the Gospel of Jesus Christ for transformation is Philipps' goal in Developing a New Christology for a Postmodern Culture: Knowing Christ Today. He knows what's been tried and failed in the past. On the one hand, faithfulness in the form of antiquated expression, while it is safe, leaves the Christian message hovering at 50,000 ft - it does not communicate to our time and place. The church is called to faithfulness for the time it is in. On the other, fitting in and uncritically reflecting the values of the time and place, while it aims at relevance, it hits redundance dead centre. It means that the transformative power of the Gospel is translated into cultural common sense for apologetic purposes. Deploying theological, social scientific and liturgical resources, Philipps articulates a missional theology that engages culture with the transformative message of the Gospel. And he shows us how it works in evaluation and articulation of Christologies of eucharistic prayers that are both faithful and intelligible for engagement now. -- Richard R. Topping, President and Vice-Chancellor, Vancouver School of Theology