Ripe for Harvest

Introduction Sacred Roots, Church Planting, and the Great Tradition

Sacred Roots, Church Planting, and the Great Tradition This essay was previously entitled “Going Forward by Looking Back: Toward an Evangelical Retrieval of the Great Tradition” by Don L. Davis (Wichita: TUMI Press, 2008). We are inserting it here as a fine introduction to this guidebook, since it concisely explains the fundamental importance of rediscovering the roots of our faith in our theology, worship, discipleship, and mission. We are convinced that we must place our activity of evangelism, discipleship, church planting, and mission in the context of what the Church has done and believed – always, everywhere, and by all of us. As church planters we must rediscover the apostolic faith, contextualize it among particular people groups, and then train them to express culturally that faith in a way that defends, extends, and embodies the one, true faith which the Church has always held. For those of us who long to see the Good News come alive in places where Jesus has never been known (i.e., the world’s urban poor), this message is essential for us to remember – and to relearn. As we progress through the stages of church planting among the city’s poor, we must stay aware of these insights, and strive to implement them in every facet of our outreach and empowerment. Rediscovering the “Great Tradition” In a wonderful little book, Ola Tjorhom, 1 describes the Great Tradition of the Church (sometimes called the “classical Christian tradition”) as “living, organic, and dynamic.” 2 The Great Tradition represents that evangelical, apostolic, and catholic core of Christian faith and practice which came largely to fruition from 100-500 AD. 3 Its rich legacy and treasures represent the Church’s confession of what the Church has always believed, the worship that the ancient, undivided Church celebrated and embodied, and the mission that it embraced and undertook. While the Great Tradition can neither substitute for the Apostolic Tradition (i.e., the authoritative source of all Christian faith, the Scriptures), nor should it overshadow the living presence of Christ in the Church through the Holy Spirit, it is still authoritative and revitalizing for the people of God. It has and still can provide God’s people through time with the substance of its confession and faith. The Great Tradition has been embraced and affirmed as authoritative by Catholic, Orthodox, Anglican, and Protestant theologians, those ancient and modern, as it has produced the seminal documents, doctrines, confessions, and practices of the Church (e.g., the canon of Scriptures, the doctrines of the Trinity, the deity of Christ, etc.).

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