Inculturation is one of the issues
facing the modern church – Occidental (Western) thinking has been imported and imposed
onto other cultures, leading to inculturation (and in many cases,
homogenization). There is a shift toward a world church and away from a mainly
Western way of thinking theologically. In other words, we are attempting to be
diverse, yet also unified. In a Protestant church, this kind of diversity could
probably lead to the formation of another denomination. In the Catholic Church,
this diversity is accepted, appreciated and upheld. This is why we have local
theology - the dynamic interaction between gospel, church and culture. This
itself has problems, however.
It is very difficult to
find a community that does not have prior theological development. As these
communities already have prior theological developments, they therefore already
have a sort of local theology in place. Certainly, there seems to be those who
prize their differences, accept part of their former local theology yet also
help to devise a new local theology. But there are also many communities across
the planet that have had established traditions for hundreds of years.
For
example, there is a community allegedly planted by St. Thomas the disciple in
the 1st century in India. Early Thomean literature, such as the Acts of Thomas, develops apocryphal
tales of the saint’s time there and the effects of the gospel within that
culture. In the Acts of Thomas
(likely written between AD 150-200), the disciple is called by God to go and
preach to India in a dream, and much like the ancient prophet Jonah, he
declined. Yet God had him taken to India by a merchant having been sold as a
slave by a disguised Jesus, where he then proceeds to bring the gospel into the
Indian culture.
Regardless of the historicity or implications of
this account, the tale demonstrates that we have been inculturating others from
the start. Local theology and tradition had a clash at the Council of Jerusalem
in AD 49-51, where Jewish traditions were debated. Other councils have
addressed such traditions and local theologies (sometimes heretical theologies,
such as the Arian theology). On a related note, there is one point which has
been continually occupied one’s thinking: how local is local theology? Should we have a local theology for every town?
For every county? For every state? For every country?
Certainly, Western
theology has dominated thinking for centuries, and in many cases it will likely
continue to stay a mainstream theology. But what about those who live in small
villages in Africa? And as we continue to not only expand across the world but
now across the solar system, do we then decide to have cosmic theologies?
Should the astronauts on the International Space Station have a particular
theology? If and/or when the NASA moon base is developed, should the
individuals who live there have their own theology? There are certainly a lot
of questions associated with local theology. But perhaps the main thing binding
all Christians is the central element: Christ. Our views of Christ may change,
but Christ himself does not.
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