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Why Jesus Wants You to Lose Hope
Wed Feb 08, 2012
by Justin Holcomb
God Gospel Justification Sin -
Dangers Leaders Face
Tue Feb 07, 2012
by Dave Kraft
Mission Church Preaching Church Leadership Wisdom Church Planting -
Confessions of an Idol Worshiper
Tue Feb 07, 2012
by Dustin Kensrue
God Scripture Worship Gospel Sin Culture -
Win the Man, Not the Argument
Mon Feb 06, 2012
by Douglas Willson
Church Leadership Heart Wisdom Gospel Apologetics -
Developing a Philosophy of Ministry
Sun Feb 05, 2012
by Jeremy Pace
Mission Church Preaching Church Leadership Evangelism Wisdom Church Planting
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Interview with Eric Mason
Wed Sep 03, 2008
by Darrin Patrick
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Interview with John Piper
Thu Sep 04, 2008
by Mark Driscoll
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The Call to Formative Instruction
Sun Sep 28, 2008
by Tedd Tripp
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Lecrae - Rebel Intro
Tue Sep 30, 2008
by Lecrae
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Interview with Lecrae
Tue Sep 30, 2008
by Mark Driscoll
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What Is Missional Christology?
Dr. Bruce Ware is teaching a course on Missional Christology at the Resurgence Training Center this fall. Find out more at ReTrain.org.
"Missional Christology" focuses on aspects of the Person and Work of Jesus Christ which are central to the mission he fulfilled, by the ordination of the Father, in the power of the Spirit. Christology is relevant to the mission of the church because we are called to express and extend the mission of Christ. His mission is now ours.
"Missional Christology" focuses on aspects of the Person and Work of Jesus Christ which are central to the mission he fulfilled, by the ordination of the Father, in the power of the Spirit. Christology is relevant to the mission of the church because we are called to express and extend the mission of Christ. His mission is now ours.
The Father's Plan
Understanding the Person and Work of Christ as missional is crucial and central to understanding Jesus and his work correctly. The mission of the Son began long before his going to the cross, or his baptism, or even his incarnation. The mission of the Son began in eternity past when the Father devised his plan by which the Son would be preeminent over the created world the Father designed, planned, and willed to create. As the Father chose the Son to be his Agent by which creation would come into being, so the Father chose the Son to be his Agent by which re-creation also would come to pass. The Son's mission, then, was from eternity past the mission of one thing—he sought in all that he thought and felt and said and did to do the will of his Father.Divine Empowerment
But to accomplish this mission, the Son had to take on human nature and live as one of us. While he was fully God, he also was fully man. And as man, he needed divine empowerment to obey the Father, resist temptation, and fulfill the mission the Father sent him to carry out. The Spirit's indwelling presence and power on the Son was necessary for the Son to accomplish what he did. Only as the Spirit-anointed Messiah could this Christ be our Savior. To see the mission of the Son correctly requires that we see him in Trinitarian context. Both the Person and the Work of the Son are fully inexplicable apart from seeing the Son's relation to the Father and the Spirit. Getting the Trinity right is crucial to getting the mission of the Son right.Christ's Mission
So, the Son was sent by the Father and empowered by the Spirit—but to do what? Here we realize that the Son's mission was about regaining the lost creation through the salvation of the elect and his victory over the powers of darkness. At the core of the Son's accomplishment are the dual biblical themes of penal substitution and Christus Victor. His payment for sin and victory over sin constitute the basis for the fulfillment of all that the Father sent the Son to do.


