whoandhow.jpg

Over the weekend I participated in an online dialogue for my online class Global Impact. For the class we’re required to post two posts each week in response to a forum question. This weeks questions was: What is the role of the Western Church in 21st Century mission? I already posted a fairly extensive paper on my overall view, but in one of my posts I said we the Western Church need to make way for Other voices. Here is what I said:

As the Western Church seeks to “do missions” in our 21st Century context, it must do so post-colonially. To do so, She must start by giving way to other voices, especially theologically. While our version of Christianity is decidedly Western, mainly because the theological discourse has passed through the West and out to other parts of the world, a post-colonial worldview of missions must make way for African Christological categories or Asian undersandings of pneumatology. Are we so threatened and fearful of that these voices might just be better and replace our own understandings that we will try and stifle them with the great ‘H’ word (heresy)? I hope not!

This response generated a fair amount of dialogue on the forum. One of my virtual classmates took some issue with my assertion that we should not be so quick to break out the ‘H’ word when Africans give us different Christological categories, for instance, saying: “However, if we go so far as to say that there is no such thing as heresy (which I am not sure if you are saying or not) than haven’t we just claimed that all roads lead to God? What-ta-ya say?”

What-ta-I-say? Here’s what I said:

but then the question remains: WHO decides what is heresy? Is it the West, the East, the South…all ‘voices’ as one other student said? And please dont tell me the Scriptures decide heresy because that’s pretty lame…when we all know real humans (mostly Western White Men) are the ones who make decisions about what Scriptures say, thus what is orthodox and what is heresy.

So thats the real question: WHO decides what is orthodox and heresy…in addition to probably more important one: HOW do we decide. The question of WHAT is orthodox and heresy simply has lost any credibility as a viable quesiton…for the time being at least.

Given the volatile nature of what is happening within American Evangelicalism right now with the emerging church movement and confusion regarding what theology/doctrine/dogma from History do we keep and toss, I see these two questions being central to contemporary theological and ecclesiological discourse.

Who decides what is orthodox and what is heresy?

How do we decide what is orthodox and what is heresy?