Fuller Online
MB500: Winter 2010
Lingenfelter/Brewster
MB500: CULTURE AND
TRANSFORMATION (4 units)
Sherwood Lingenfelter,
Professor of Anthropology:
Online Facilitation by
Dr. Betty Sue Brewster, Associate Professor of Language and Culture Learning
DESCRIPTION:
In a world shrunk by jet air travel,
television, education, music, and internet connections, understanding culture
(what it is, how it works, and how to study it) is increasingly crucial to
church and mission ministries. These forces for globalization are not neutral,
nor are the counter forces of tradition. At the same time, the emergence of
World Christianity and the explosion of the church in the southern hemisphere
have dramatically shifted the focus of mission. The course will explore
questions of culture, globalization and partnership for mission in the 21st
Century. Students will learn to use some basic tools for exegeting a culture and understanding how to become
effective partners with the Majority World church. Through the analysis of case
studies, students will explore how Christianity and its social expressions in
the church may transform or fail to transform people and their communities.
LEARNING OUTCOMES: By the end of the
course students will be able to
á
Explain
the essential characteristics of incarnational
ministry;
á
Describe
their cultural bias through profiles of basic values and the social games of
family and church;
á
Evaluate
a ministry organization and its cultural context with reference to its
effective Òpractice of powerÓ for spiritual, social or economic transformation;
á
Propose
action steps on how to partner with Majority World Christians for ministry that
transforms people and communities.
COURSE FORMAT: The class will be conducted on the Internet
using a 10-week lesson program aligned with FullerÕs academic calendar. Each
week students and the instructor will interact with the course material through
journaling, threaded discussions, and web-based research.
REQUIRED READING: Reading will be assigned from the required
texts. In addition, each student will be required to read selected articles
that will be made available through the course syllabus. If you have
previously read any of the required texts, please select an alternative text
from the recommended reading list or a book approved by the instructor.
á
Gupta,
Paul R. and Sherwood G. Lingenfelter. Breaking Tradition to Accomplish
Vision: Training Leaders for a Church Planting Movement. Winona Lake, IN:
BMH Books 2006.
á
Harrison,
Lawrence E. and Samuel P. Huntington. Culture Matters: How Values Shape
Human Progress. Basic Books New York, NY: 2000.
á
Lingenfelter,
Sherwood G. and Marvin K. Mayers.
Ministering Cross-Culturally: An Incarnational
Model for Personal Relationships. Baker Book House, Grand Rapids, MI: 2003.
á
Lingenfelter,
Sherwood G. Transforming Culture: A Challenge for Christian Mission. Baker
Book House, Grand Rapids, MI: 1998.
á
Linthicum,
Robert. Transforming Power: Biblical Strategies for Making a Difference in
Your Community, Intervarsity Press, Downers Grove, IL: 2003.
RECOMMENDED READING:
á
Peter
Berger and Samuel P. Huntington. Many Globalizations: Cultural Diversity in
the Contemporary World. Oxford University Press, New York, NY: 2002.
á
Sanneh, Lamin. Whose Religion is Christianity? The Gospel
Beyond the West. Wm.B.Eerdmans,
Grand Rapids, MI: 2003.
ASSIGNMENTS:
1. Weekly Threaded
Discussions, Journaling, and Web research
2. Each student will be
required to work in a team with their small group online to write a 6500-8750
word major paper of a ÒtransformationalÓ ministry.
3. Each student will be required
to do a Basic Values Questionnaire and a questionnaire on the social game of
oneÕs family and church life. These questionnaires will be part of course
resource materials, which will be used to prepare a 1500-2000 word
self-assessment paper.
4. Two 500-750 word reflections on selected assigned reading in Harrison
and Huntington and in Linthicum.
PREREQUISITES: None.
RELATION TO CURRICULUM: Required course for the MA Cross-cultural
Studies (MA-CCS) program. Meets GLBL requirement. Ministry Focus Elective in MA
in Global Leadership degree.
FINAL EXAM: None.
This
ECD is a reliable guide to the course design, but is subject to modification
Updated October,
2009