Mission is contrived from and performed over lived contexts, but the visions that guide and drive mission are oftentimes blinded by power, position, protection, and plenitude. This collection visits those matters with queering attention to the shadows empires cast over the contexts of mission, and to the collusion and complicity of Christians and churches with empires past (as in the case of Rome) and present (as in the case of the United States of America). In the interests of those in mission fields who survived, but continue to agonize under the burdens of empires, the contributors to this work dare to re-vision the course and cause of mission.
Writing from minoritized settings in Africa, Asia, the Americas, and Oceania, the authors interweave the principles and practices of mission with the opportunities in decolonial theology and hermeneutics, minoritized and migrant Christologies, repatriation and the courage to get up and get out, indigenous insights and wisdom, mission archives, stories of resistance and endurance in zones of contact and violence, restless souls and returning spirits, and life-centered spiritual (en)countering. In Mission and Context as with previous volumes in this series—empires do not have the final word, nor the final world.
Foreword by: Collin Cowan
Contributions by: Peter Cruchley, Jione Havea, Roderick R. Hewitt, Sindiso Jele, Eunice Karanja Kamaara, Kim Yong-Bock, Jennifer S. Leath, Samuel Ngun Ling, S. Lily Mendoza, Surekha Nelavala, Kathryn Pothig, Teddy Chalwe Sakupapa, Deborah Storie, Vuyani S. Vellem