nsmlogo

January 26, 2000






Latin Americans must see
'clearer face' of Christ

___By Art Toalston &
___Herb Hollinger

___Baptist Press
___MELBOURNE, Australia (BP)--Latin America suffers from an "underdeveloped" Christ, a Baptist leader and educator said in a theological education focus group during the 18th Baptist World Congress in Melbourne, Australia.
___Daniel Carro, executive director of the Union of Baptists in Latin America and professor of philosophy and hermeneutics at the Baptist seminary in Buenos Aires, Argentina, noted five incomplete faces, or images, of Christ found in Latin America.
bwalogo
BAPTIST WORLD CONGRESS
___First, "the suffering Christ."
___This is the face of Christ seen as "eternally on the cross," said Carro, who also is pastor of Ramos Mejia Baptist Church in Buenos Aires. Brought to Latin America by the Spanish, the image of a tragic victim needs to be corrected by "a risen Christ, a Christ victorious, a Christ that is alive and well," Carro said.
___Second, "the American Christ."
___This is the face of Christ imparted by American missionaries who mixed "the message of Christ with the American way of life," Carro said. It is "the image of an American imperialist ... a Christ that is alive in the McDonald's and multinational (corporations) of this world."
___Third, "the pious Christ."
___This image of Christ was left by pietist missionaries "only interested in saving souls" and in going to heaven, but not "in politics or the social aspects of reality," Carro said, advocating a corrective image of Christ as "interested in the whole person."
___Fourth, "the magical Christ."
___Indigenous to Latin America and spread through the Pentecostal movement, yet one that is drawing Baptists as well, this image of Christ focuses more on healing and on liberation from the demonic than on personal salvation, Carro said, describing it as an emphasis largely on the human body.
___Fifth, "the ethnical Christ."
___Stemming from the many faces of Christ brought by the millions of Europeans who immigrated to Latin America, it is a face of Christ claimed by a particular ethnic group and limited to their culture and churches, Carro said.
___It will be a painful process, Carro said, for Latin Americans to begin seeing "the real face of Christ" to be found behind the various underdeveloped images now clouding their faith.
___Also during the session, Ken Hemphill, president of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth, recounted that the Jesus Seminar, in which a group of scholars have been voting on the veracity of the various New Testament writings, has pushed the modern understanding of Jesus "into the arena of public opinion."
___The group's view of Jesus, however, "is a far cry from the Jesus of evangelical Christianity," and the New Testament remains "the most credible portrait" of Jesus, a view held by the broad sweep of evangelical theologians, Hemphill said.
___At the heart of the issue, Hemphill said, is the uniqueness of Jesus as the only way to God, which will become "an increasingly unpopular declaration" in the face of the modern world's rush toward pluralism--a declaration that will be "as scandalous" as it was in the first century.
___Without a grasp of Jesus' uniqueness, Christians have "nothing more to offer the world" than a New Age guru or a Buddhist monk, Hemphill said.

nsmlogo


Contents/ Masthead / Why We're Here / Links / Archive / E-mail us/ SUBSCRIBE!


PREVIOUS STORY | NEXT STORY