The Triune God has a mission (missio Dei) to restore and recreate all things according to God’s original and ongoing vision of peace and wholeness…
…and that mission has a church.
The big question in the Missional Church conversation is, “What is the Church, and how does it understand its purpose in the rapidly changing cultural context of the twenty-first century?”
It is a theological shift from missions to missional.
This page contains my research and resources for understanding and leading The Missional Church. Keep scrolling to explore…
What is The Missional Church?
The missional imagination is an understanding that the Triune God has a mission (missio Dei) to restore and recreate all things according to God’s original and ongoing vision of peace and wholeness. The conversation in the West around missiology and ecclesiology has seen a dramatic shift in the past one hundred years. The eighteenth and nineteenth centuries were dominated by a Christendom model in which the church sent missionaries into the world to convert heathen nations to Christianity, thus colonizing the world into Western European culture and propagating oppression and marginalization of non-European people and cultures in the name of Jesus. A missional ecclesiology recognizes the Eurocentric and devastating effects the Christendom model of missions and ecclesiology has had on the world and strives to reimagine the nature of the church as missional at its core.
It recognizes the polycentric and pluriform nature of the Holy Spirit at work in the world. The church, within this perspective, is the congregation of those who are both gathered around the risen body of Jesus and sent into the world to find and proclaim the reign of God in and among all cultures as the church forms an interdependent relationship with all nations. This missional activity is not uni-directional, moving from one central place where God is located and correctly understood to another place where God is completely absent. Rather, it is a polycentric, pluriform, multi-directional movement of God at work in all cultures, in diverse ways, bringing all cultures into generative conversation, in order to bring about peace and unity through the particular incarnation of the risen Jesus of Nazareth and the various incarnations of the Spirit within diverse cultures.
The Missional Church–aka Missional Ecclesiology–is a theological framework that is constructed around two big areas of theological conversation. The first is the Trinity, the second is the shift in the West from modernity to late/post modern philosophy. Click the boxes below to do a deep dive.
The Trinity
The Missional Imagination is built around the idea that God is the relationship of the three persons of the Trinty. The theological term is the relationality of God and the core concept is that all of life springs forth from the Trinune God and exists in interconnected interdependence.
Post-Foundational Frame
Western Society has experienced a massive shift throughout the twentieth century from modernity and the notion that knowledge is build on a foundation of rational, epirical science, to a post-foundational recognition that knowledge is socially constructed and relative to context. This has a huge impact on how the church understands it place in society.
A Visual Guide to the Missional Church
I created the Prezi below in 2013 to serve as a visual map to help me study for my comprehensive exams for my PhD at Luther Seminary. It covers some key books that shaped the missional conversation, a timeline of Christian Missiology, an extensive timeline of the international mission organization meetings, and all my class notes from Dr. Craig Van Gelder. Enjoy!
Missional Church Posts
Book | Constants in Context by Bevans and Schroeder
Bevans, Stephen B., and Roger Schroeder. Constants in Context: A Theology of Mission for Today American Society of Missiology Series ; No. 30. Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 2004. Authors Stephen Bevans is Louis J. Luzbetak, S.V.D., Professor of Mission and Culture. He...
Book | The Church between Gospel and Culture edited by George R. Hunsberger and Craig Van Gelder
Hunsberger, George R., and Craig Van Gelder, eds. The Church between Gospel and Culture: The Emerging Mission in North America. Grand Rapids, MI: W.B. Eerdmans Pub. Co., 1996. This book is a collection of essays written in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Many of them...
Book | The Ministry of the Missional Church by Craig Van Gelder
Van Gelder, Craig. The Ministry of the Missional Church: A Community Led by the Spirit. Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books, 2007. Author read about Craig Van Gelder in this post. My Thoughts This book covers the bulk of the material we discussed in the class that Van...
Book | The Essence of the Church by Craig Van Gelder
Van Gelder, Craig. The Essence of the Church: A Community Created by the Spirit. Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books, 2000. The Author “At age 15, Craig Van Gelder made a personal profession of faith. Three years later as a freshman in college, he answered a call to...
Book | Transforming Mission by David Bosch
Bosch, David Jacobus. Transforming Mission: Paradigm Shifts in Theology of Mission American Society of Missiology Series. Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 1991. The Author Early life [from Wikipedia article] Bosch was born in Kuruman, Cape Province, South Africa, and died...
Book | The Open Secret by Lesslie Newbigin
Newbigin, Lesslie. The Open Secret: An Introduction to the Theology of Mission. Rev. ed. Grand Rapids, MI: W.B. Eerdmans, 1995. The Author: Lesslie Newbigin “Born in Newcastle upon Tyne, Newbigin's elementary and high school education took place in Leighton Park, the...
A Thketch of Missional Church
https://youtu.be/UA0dbBgosJA?si=NKuBGocCUEygD9-3
History of the Missional Church
Good overview of recent history. Must reference. missionalchurchnetwork.com/history-of-missional-church/
Paper | A Missiology for the ELCA Suburban Congregation by Steve Thomason
This is the paper I wrote for CL8965 Missiology and the Missional Church with Craig Van Gelder in the Spring of 2012. Read on academia.edu A Missiology for the ELCA Congregation in the United States Suburban Context by Steve Thomason A Term Paper presented to...
The Gospel and the God-Forsaken: The Challenge of the Missional Church in Suburbia by Todd Hiestand
Todd's paper was presented to the Evangelical Theological Society in March of 2007. Todd blogs about being a pastor and trying to be missional in suburbia. He has a personal blog and a collaborative blog.
Book Reviews of the Missional Church
The following list contains visual reviews of books that deal with the Missional Church.
Reveal the List
- The End of Theological Education by Ted Smith | A Visual Book Review
- Reading Reading While Black While White
- Elizabeth Johnson and The Strength of Her Witness | Notes from the Ministerium
- Book | The Mission Table: Renewing Congregation & Community by Stephen P. Bouman
- Book Review | The Agile Church: Spirit-Led Innovation in an Uncertain Age by Dwight Zscheile
- Book | The Gospel in a Pluralist Society by Lesslie Newbigin
- Book | Foolishness to the Greeks by Lesslie Newbigin
- Book | Christianity After Religion by Diana Butler Bass
- Book | Missional Map-Making by Alan Roxburgh
- Book | Testing the Spirits edited by Patrick Keifert
- Book | Critical Social Theory by Gary Simpson
- Book | The Witness of God by John G. Flett
- Article | Missio Dei – Understandings and Misunderstandings by Tormod Engelsviken
- Book | Faith as a Way of Life by Christian Scharen
- Book | Welcoming the Stranger by Patrick Keifert
- Book | Congregation and Community by Nancy Ammerman
- Book | We Are Here Now by Patrick Keifert
- Book | The Missional Church in Perspective by Van Gelder and Zscheile
- Book | To Understand God Truly by David Kelsey
- Book | Constants in Context by Bevans and Schroeder
- Book | The Church between Gospel and Culture edited by George R. Hunsberger and Craig Van Gelder
- Book | The Ministry of the Missional Church by Craig Van Gelder
- Book | The Essence of the Church by Craig Van Gelder
- Book | Transforming Mission by David Bosch
- Book | The Open Secret by Lesslie Newbigin


