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    Missionalia

    On-line version ISSN 2312-878XPrint version ISSN 0256-9507

    Abstract

    SUDERMAN, Andrew G.. "Who'll be a witness for my Lord?": Witnessing as an ecclesiological and missiological paradigm. Missionalia (Online) [online]. 2016, vol.44, n.1, pp.68-84. ISSN 2312-878X.  https://doi.org/10.7832/44-1-110.

    The Christian church's expansive zeal has often, throughout its history, walked hand-in-hand with the colonial pursuits of empires and nation-states. This cooperative approach between church and empire, which has been described as a Christendom or Constantinian paradigm, has not only implicated the church in the oppression and violent exploitation of people, but, because this paradigm has shaped the church's ecclesial and missiological imagination, such violent and oppressive tendencies are perpetuated. This paper will argue that, in order to break free from such an understanding, we need to reimagine how we understand our ecclesial being and missional purpose. In remembering what it means to be "witnesses" of Jesus Christ in the early church, an understanding which, because of the lifestyle it required, was intimately connected with the very real possibility of becoming a martyr, we are challenged by this alternative paradigm to reimagine our ecclesial being and missional purpose. This alternative imagination, based on a self-sacrificial paradigm of power, changes the very nature and "witness" of the church and its mission.

    Keywords : power; witness; Christendom; Constantinianism; John Howard Yoder; William Cavanaugh; martyrdom.

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