MLV3630EN - Practicing Missional Community in Context

Course description

This course examines the impact of missional principles when applied to a group of people in community and on mission together. Students learn to interpret their context, as well as best practices in order to be “good news” to their locale as a faith community, ministry, or other Kingdom endeavor.

How this course benefits students

This course lays a foundation for students to learn principles of missional communities in praxis. These principles then guide students to become architects of their own best practices, specifically for their local context. Special attention is given to strategic inquiry of their culture, in order to shape a missional community that is a participant in the mission of God (missio Dei).

Why this course is important

This course is crucial for effective missional practice in a community environment. Missional communities must first understand their context before they can effectively be on mission together in their local environment.Every ministry context is unique and has different barriers and opportunities. Because of this, students learn strategic inquiry skills that they can apply to any local context.

Credit hours
3 hours
Subject area
Missional Living
Educational level
Bachelor
Learning type
Instructional
Prerequisites
None
Upcoming terms
Pending
* Schedule subject to change. Please contact the Registrar's office with schedule questions.
Certificates

How this course relates to missional core values

Biblically based

This course builds off of the Apostle Paul’s teaching in I Corinthians 9 to “become all things to all men”. Students also understand their identity as “sent” people of God based on Jesus’ words to his disciples, “As the Father sent me, so I am sending you” (John 20:21).

Missionally driven

Missional communities are not insular, they are by definition ‘sent’ into local contexts to incarnate the gospel to others. This course is designed to increase the effectiveness of those movements of the Kingdom, as a group of people participate in God’s mission together.

Contextually informed

Missional community principles are transferable in every context. However, every culture is unique and this course builds off the foundation of contextual intelligence, where the missional community understands and knows the location in which they are incarnationally planted.

Interculturally focused

This course is designed to do the important work of asking the right questions of a local context in order to build best practices for the missional community, so that it relationally crosses cultural boundaries to displaying the Kingdom of God to others.

Practically minded

This course leads the student to the specific practices of a missional community that are driven by strategic principles.

Experientially transformed

Students learn to see their neighborhood, city, workplace, and other contexts with “different eyes.” They utilize strategic inquiry in their own context, as this course is designed to dig deeper into the barriers and opportunities in the community they are located in.