Friday, April 3, 2026

Contextual Proclamation: Learning from Paul the Apostle

A striking feature of early Christian mission is the flexibility with which its message was communicated. Nowhere is this more evident than in the contrast between what Paul preached in Athens and what he later wrote to believers in Ephesus.


1. Paul in Athens: Beginning from Common Ground

In Athens (Acts 17), Paul addresses a non-Christian audience shaped by Greek philosophy and religious pluralism. Instead of presenting complex doctrines about Christ, he begins with ideas familiar to them:

  • He refers to their altar “to an unknown god”
  • He quotes their own poets
  • He speaks of God as the creator and sustainer of all life

His message is simple, accessible, and relational:

God is not far from any one of us.

Paul does not start with doctrines such as justification, atonement, or the nature of Christ. Instead, he proclaims a universal truth about God that his listeners can recognize.

This is not a dilution of the message, but a contextualization of it.


2. Paul to the Ephesians: Deepening the Faith of Insiders

In contrast, Paul’s letter to the Ephesians presents a highly developed theological vision:

  • The cosmic role of Christ
  • Salvation by grace through faith
  • The unity of Jews and Gentiles in one body
  • The mystery of God’s redemptive plan

Here, Paul is addressing an insider community—people already formed within the Christian faith. Therefore, he engages in deeper theological reflection and doctrinal articulation.


3. Two Modes of Communication: Not a Contradiction

This contrast reveals an important principle:

The content of the Gospel remains the same,
but its expression varies according to the audience.

  • To outsiders → simple, relational, experiential language
  • To insiders → deeper, structured, doctrinal teaching

This distinction is not inconsistency; it is pastoral and missional wisdom.

As Lesslie Newbigin observes:

“The gospel must be communicated in ways that make sense within the hearer’s worldview.”


4. Implications for Contemporary Christianity

Modern Christianity often reverses this pattern:

  • It presents complex doctrines to outsiders
  • It expects immediate acceptance of unfamiliar beliefs
  • It sometimes neglects the need for shared ground

This approach can lead to misunderstanding, resistance, and even rejection.

By contrast, Paul’s example suggests a different model:

4.1 To Outsiders: Proclaim the Simple Gospel of the Kingdom

  • Emphasize God’s love and nearness
  • Speak in universally meaningful terms
  • Begin with shared human experience

This aligns with the message of Jesus Christ, who proclaimed the Kingdom of God in ways accessible to ordinary people.


4.2 To Insiders: Deepen Understanding

  • Engage in theological reflection
  • Explore doctrines and mysteries of faith
  • Build a mature and rooted community

5. A Model for Mission Today

This leads to a crucial insight:

Effective mission requires both simplicity and depth—
but offered in the right context.

  • The mistake is not having doctrine
  • The mistake is starting with doctrine where relationship is needed

Christian mission today must recover this balance:

  • Not abandoning theology, but sequencing it wisely
  • Not avoiding truth, but communicating it appropriately

6. Conclusion

The contrast between Athens and Ephesus is not accidental—it is instructive.

It shows that:

  • The Gospel is not a fixed formula to be repeated identically in every context
  • It is a living message that must be incarnated in each cultural setting

If contemporary Christianity is to be faithful to its origins, it must rediscover this pattern:

To insiders, offer depth.
To outsiders, offer clarity.

And at the heart of both remains the same truth:

The good news of God’s Kingdom—
present, near, and open to all.


If you want, I can:

  • Integrate this into your main academic paper as a full section, or
  • Add biblical citations (Acts 17, Ephesians, etc.) in formal citation style (APA/Chicago) for journal submission.

Proselytization or Proclamation of Gospel?


Re-centering the Message of Jesus: From Doctrines about Jesus to the Proclamation of God’s Kingdom


Abstract

This paper argues that the original mission of Jesus consisted in proclaiming the good news about God and the Kingdom of God, rather than promoting doctrinal beliefs about his own identity. It critically examines how historical Christianity gradually shifted from this theocentric proclamation to a Christocentric system of belief propagation. While engaging with traditional theological counter-arguments, the study contends that a recovery of Jesus’ original vision is necessary for an authentic understanding of the Gospel in the contemporary world.


1. Introduction

A central question in Christian theology is this:

Did Jesus proclaim himself, or did he proclaim God?

The answer to this question has profound implications for how the Gospel is understood and communicated. This paper proposes that Jesus’ primary mission was not to invite belief in doctrines about himself, but to awaken humanity to the reality of God’s reign.


2. The Proclamation of Jesus: God and the Kingdom

The Synoptic Gospels consistently present Jesus as proclaiming the nearness of God’s Kingdom:

  • “The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God has come near; repent and believe in the good news” (Mark 1:15)
  • “I must proclaim the good news of the kingdom of God… for I was sent for this purpose” (Luke 4:43)

These texts indicate that the content of Jesus’ message was:

  • God’s active presence
  • God’s transforming reign
  • The availability of divine grace in the present

Notably, Jesus does not systematically call people to believe propositions about his identity, but to respond to God’s initiative.

N. T. Wright affirms:

“The gospel is the announcement that God has become king.”


3. The Shift: From God’s Kingdom to Beliefs about Jesus

Over time, Christianity underwent a significant transformation:

  • The message of God’s Kingdom became secondary
  • The focus shifted to beliefs about Jesus (his divinity, atonement, etc.)
  • Salvation came to be understood primarily in terms of accepting these beliefs

This shift can be summarized as:

From the proclamation of God’s reign
to the proclamation of Christological doctrines

Diarmaid MacCulloch observes:

“Christianity became entangled with power in ways that changed its original character.”

Similarly, Lesslie Newbigin notes:

“Mission has often been understood as the extension of the church rather than participation in God’s action.”


4. Proselytization as Doctrinal Expansion

In this transformed framework, mission often became:

  • The propagation of beliefs about Jesus
  • The conversion of individuals into a new religious identity
  • The expansion of institutional Christianity

As J. I. Packer defines:

“Evangelism is… communicating the gospel… with a view to conversion.”

While coherent within its own logic, this model risks:

  • Reducing the Gospel to intellectual assent
  • Disconnecting it from lived experience
  • Replacing transformation with affiliation

5. Reclaiming the Gospel: A Theocentric Vision

This paper proposes a return to a more original, theocentric understanding of the Gospel:

The Gospel is the good news about God—
that God is present, active, and loving here and now.

This implies:

  • The focus shifts from “believe in Jesus” to “recognize God’s reign”
  • Salvation is understood as participation in divine life, not merely doctrinal correctness
  • The emphasis moves from conversion to awakening

Karl Rahner supports this trajectory:

“The Christian of the future will be a mystic or will not exist at all.”


6. Counter-Arguments from Classical Theology

Despite this proposal, traditional theology raises important objections.

6.1 Christ as the Center of Salvation

  • “No one comes to the Father except through me” (John 14:6)
  • “There is no other name… by which we must be saved” (Acts 4:12)

John Stott insists:

“We must proclaim Christ, because he is the gospel.”

Response:
While these texts affirm the significance of Jesus, they may be interpreted as pointing to Jesus as the revealer of God, rather than the replacement of God as the message.


6.2 The Necessity of Faith in Christ

John Piper argues:

“Faith in Christ is necessary for salvation because Christ is necessary.”

Response:
Faith, in this alternative framework, is not primarily assent to propositions, but trust in the God whom Jesus revealed.


6.3 The Great Commission

The command to “make disciples of all nations” (Matthew 28:19) is often cited as a mandate for conversion.

David Bosch clarifies:

“Mission includes evangelism… but it is broader than that.”

Response:
Discipleship may be understood as learning the way of life Jesus embodied, rather than merely adopting a new religious label.


7. Theological Implications: A Necessary Correction

If the argument of this paper holds, then a critical conclusion emerges:

Christianity has, in part, shifted away from the original focus of Jesus.

Instead of proclaiming:

  • God’s Kingdom
  • God’s universal love

It has often emphasized:

  • Doctrines about Jesus
  • Institutional expansion

Therefore, a theological correction is needed:

👉 A return from Christ-centered belief systems
👉 To God-centered proclamation as practiced by Jesus


8. Contemporary Relevance

In a pluralistic world, this recovery is not merely academic—it is essential.

  • It allows for interreligious dialogue without coercion
  • It preserves the universality of divine love
  • It restores the ethical and transformative power of Jesus’ message

9. Conclusion

Jesus’ mission was the proclamation of the good news about God and God’s Kingdom.
He did not primarily call people to believe doctrines about himself.

Christianity, however, gradually shifted toward proclaiming beliefs about Jesus.

This paper argues that:

A faithful continuation of Jesus’ mission requires
not abandoning Christ,
but rediscovering what Christ himself proclaimed.

The task before Christianity today is not merely to defend its doctrines,
but to recover its original vision:

The living, transforming reality of God’s presence among all people.


References

  • The Holy Bible (NRSV / NIV)
  • Karl Rahner, Theological Investigations
  • N. T. Wright, Jesus and the Victory of God
  • Lesslie Newbigin, The Gospel in a Pluralist Society
  • David Bosch, Transforming Mission
  • John Stott, Basic Christianity
  • J. I. Packer, Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
  • John Piper, Let the Nations Be Glad
  • Diarmaid MacCulloch, Christianity: The First Three Thousand Years