Richard Shaull and the globalization of the ecumenical movement

Maybe it is a cyclical generational thing, but suddenly there seem to be a whole series of reflections on the globalization of the ecumenical movement in the late 1960s and the early 1970s. In Karlsruhe, there is the project on the globalisation of the World Council of Churches, which is organizing a conference on the theme in March 2010. Now there is a new book by Angel D. Santiago-Vendrell, focusing on the contribution of the missiology of Richard Shaull to contextual theology and revolutionary transformation in Latin America. The 1966 World Conference on Church and Society in Geneva is remembered among other things for Shaull's contribution. Here's the blurb:
U.S. audiences know Latin American liberation theologies largely through translations of Latin American Catholics from the 1970s and beyond. Most of the few known Protestant authors were students of Richard Shaull, whose critical thinking on social change, prophetic Christianity, and dialogue with Marxism and Christian use of Marxist analysis precedes the emergence of the formal schools of liberation theology by two decades. His own education at Princeton, and the education he provided in Brazil, charts the course of Protestant influences into this stream of theological reflection that became a global phenomenon in the latter decades of the twentieth century.

Also, Shaull's career roughly parallels the emergence of the World Council of Churches and the engagement of the Catholic Church—in Latin America and around the world—after the Second Vatican Council. He himself was engaged, and became the flash point, in some of the major conferences, movements, and institutions of the 1960s and beyond.

Santiago-Vendrell documents the entrance of the ecumenical movement in Brazil, among the most dramatic transformations in Catholic-Protestant relations around the globe, as well as Shaull's role in that development. Along the way he notes Shaull's prophetic and destabilizing role in the worldwide student movement in the 60s and 70s, charting decisions that mark the ecumenical movement. Shaull's contributions are important for an understanding of the ethical debates in the worldwide, ecumenical Protestant and Orthodox communities.

Santiago-Vendrell examines primary, secondary, and historical documents that shine a light on Shaull's transformation into a contextual theologian of the poor. He offers a definitive view of this North American Protestant missionary who wrote extensively on Latin American liberation theology, the base Christian communities, and how conversion to solidarity with the poor offers transforming possibilities for the mainline churches' theological identity and practical faith.

And here are the book details: Angel D. Santiago-Vendrell: Contextual Theology and Revolutionary Transformation in Latin America: The Missiology of M. Richard Shaull, Pickwick Publications, ISBN 978-1-60899-305-5.

1 comments:

Xenom said...

Globalization is a reality of the world today - an inescapable fact of life. All people are affected. Globalization is not simply an economic issue. It is a cultural, political, ethical and ecological issue.

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