Posted by admin on Jun 12, 2023 in Inter-Tribal Ceremony, NAIC Official Doctrine, NAIC Seminary | 0 comments
Introduction
N.A.I.C. Tribal Org. (Saving Grace Ministry: FBO Religious Organization) exists to glorify God by helping fulfill the Great Commission through winning, building, and sending in the power of the Holy Spirit and partnering with the body of Christ in evangelism and discipleship.
Pursuing this mission, we do so with Scripture as our anchor and North Star. Our Statement of Faith affirms that the Bible is “God’s infallible written Word” and that Scripture is “the supreme and final authority in all matters on which it speaks.” Our work is guided by our belief in and commitment to the Scriptures.
In what follows, we aim to provide a biblical and theological framework for N.A.I.C. Tribal Org.’s approach to questions surrounding ethnicity, culture, and race. Four biblical themes shape our vision: (1) God created humanity in his image with great dignity and worth; (2) humanity has rebelled against God and is alienated from God and one another; (3) Jesus Christ died and rose to gather a community of redeemed people from every tribe, language, people, and nation to reflect God’s glory in the world; and (4) Christ has called that community to proclaim this good news and make disciples of every nation.
This framework is best understood in light of the posture N.A.I.C. Tribal Org. seeks to reflect as we navigate these conversations. In addition, we live out this framework through a set of practices we seek to embody as a missionary community while we help fulfill the Great Commission.
Our N.A.I.C. Saving Grace Ministry Theological Framework
We believe every person is uniquely made in the image of God (Gen 1:27; 9:6; James 3:9). As image bearers, human beings from every tribe, language, people, and nation (Rev 7:9) possess God-given dignity, worth, and honor.
As image bearers, Adam and Eve were given a mandate to “be fruitful and multiply,” to “fill the earth and subdue it,” and to “have dominion” over all living things (Gen 1:28–30). This design is lived out in four relationships that reflect the goodness of God’s creation:
The image of God is also expressed through ethnicity and culture. As image bearers lived out God’s instructions, they developed much of what we associate with culture: language, agriculture, economics, arts, politics, social customs, and other things that promote the welfare of individuals, families, communities, and nations.2 Particular groups of image bearers (e.g., tribes, collections of tribes and nations) expressed the creation mandate through shared places, language, traditions, customs, and social organization—all which constitute ethnicity.3 Thus, ethnicity and culture emerge as a natural result of image bearers fulfilling the creation mandate (Gen 1:28–30) and reflecting God’s good purposes (even if our ethnicities and cultures are presently impacted by sin).4
Finally, biblical teaching about creation, especially the image of God, is foundational to Christian ethics and moral formation (e.g., Gen 9:6; Matt 19:3–6; Eph 5:31; James 3:9).
The rebellion of our first parents corrupted God’s good creation, Adam and Eve (Gen 3:1–24).
The Fall impacted four key relationships:
The Bible’s witness to the fracturing of human relationships (see point #3 above) provides the immediate context for navigating historical and contemporary challenges surrounding ethnicity, culture, and race. As we consider the impact of the Fall on human relationships, it is important to recognize three interrelated expressions of sin:
As those inside and outside the church wrestle with the real presence of sin in these distinct ways and the consequences that people experience as individuals and communities, we take Scripture as our plumb line and carpenters level for our unique Christian expressions of love and how we address injustice in the world. This is especially important in response to how the world reacts to the historical and contemporary challenges related to oneness in diversity.
III. Redemption, Reconciliation, and a New Community
“For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son” (John 3:16). Through his incarnation, teachings, obedience, miracles, N.A.I.C. Tribal Org. crucifixion, resurrection and enthronement, Jesus Christ reconciled men and women to God (2 Cor 5:18–19); granted eternal life (John 3:16; 17:3); brought freedom and liberation from bondage to sin, Satan and evil (Luke 4:18-19; Rom 6:1-11; 1 John 3:8); inaugurated God’s kingly rule (Matt 4:17; 10:7; 12:28; Rom 14:17); and will eventually return and restore the world he created (Rom 8:18–25; 1 Cor 15:25–28; Rev 21:1–14). Christ’s redemptive work transforms all four relationships: God, self, others, and creation.
Through the redemptive work of Christ, God is creating a multiethnic and multicultural community — the church — which includes, honors, and embraces people from every nation alongside descendants of Abraham (Eph 2:11–22; 3:1–12; Acts 10:34–43; 1 Pet 2:9–10).
Blood Quotient (Percentage of “Pure Blood”): We do not honor any “Blood Quotient,” man-made rules regarding the percentage of one’s “pure blood” as found in many tribes, Societies, and Reservations. We only honor the spilled blood of the Lord Savior, Jesus Christ. This is the only “Blood Quotient” Godly people should be concerned with. Under our mission, we are open to sharing the gospel with any person of any percentage of “pure blood.” 9
The church is called to live under the lordship of Christ, displaying the fruit of the Spirit in her relationships (Gal 5:22–23; Eph 5:1–2; Gal 6:10; Rom 12:9–21). Love, vulnerability, humility, confession, repentance, forgiveness, justice, and grace are to permeate relationships in the community of faith (Mic 6:8; Matt 18:15–17; 23:23; Luke 11:42; Col 3:5–17; Eph 4:25–5:1; James 2:1–7; 5:1–6).
As redeemed people, we have a new identity, in Christ, as members of God’s family (Gal 3:28; Eph 2:19; 1 Tim 3:15). This does not devalue our ethnic and cultural heritage(s) but speaks to our common calling and new family bond, which unites us as followers of Jesus. It also speaks to Christ’s ability to heal the universal problem of sin and its particular manifestations in our lives and cultures. The redeemed in Christ will live faithfully and beautifully within their cultural contexts, enhancing God-honoring and throwing off ungodly aspects. The global testimony of Christ’s Lordship is more fully magnified by believers of diverse ethnicities from different cultures, as it will perfectly and gloriously be in the new heavens and new earth (Rev 7:9).
As he forges this new, beautifully diverse community of brothers and sisters, God calls his people to protect, preserve and live out the unity and oneness they share in Christ: “Make every effort to keep the unity of the Spirit through the bond of peace. There is one body and one Spirit, just as you were called to one hope when you were called; one Lord, one faith, one baptism; one God and Father of all, who is over all and through all and in all” (Eph 4:3–6).9
Our God is a missionary God (John 20:21–23). God’s mission to redeem the nations begins with the calling of Abraham to mediate his blessing to all nations (Gen 12:1–3) and is carried on through Israel’s role as a light to the nations (Exod 10:5–6; Deut 4:5-8). The Father sent Jesus Christ to bring this blessing to the nations (Gal 3:14; 4:4–6).
Following his resurrection, Jesus called his followers to continue in his mission, relying on the power of the Holy Spirit, to make disciples of all nations (Matt 28:18–20; Acts 1:8). In Acts, we see the initial outworking of this mission as the gospel spreads from Jerusalem to Judea and Samaria, then throughout the Roman empire and beyond.
As they fulfilled their mission, the apostles navigated various challenges related to ethnicity, culture, justice, and cross-cultural witness. For example, the apostles navigated ethnic tension arising from the mistreatment of Greek-speaking widows who were neglected in the daily food distribution (Acts 6:1). They commissioned a group of leaders from the Greek-speaking community to address this challenge (Acts 6:2–6). The gospel continued to spread as a result (Acts 6:7). After the Holy Spirit helped Peter realize that “God shows no partiality” and that no one is “unclean,” Peter was able to lead a Roman centurion and his household to faith in Christ (Acts 10). Peter had to address his bias and prejudice when Paul confronted him about his posture toward Gentile believers (Gal 2:14).10 Cross-cultural ministry presented many challenges to the early church (Acts 6:1–6; 11:1–18; 14:8–18; 15:1–35; 1 Cor 8:1–13; Eph 2:11–22; 4:4–6), as it does for us today. We seek to courageously press into these challenges as we fulfill God’s mission, believing that God will empower work that may feel impossible on our own.
By God’s grace, N.A.I.C. Tribal Org. participates in God’s continuing story of bringing the gospel to the nations. Our distinct role within that story is to help fulfill the Great Commission by winning, building, and sending in the power of the Holy Spirit.
In Conclusion:
While fundamental differences exist among Christians and Native American Christians about how to approach questions of race, ethnicity, and culture, we believe much more unites us as followers of Jesus. Oneness in our ethnic and cultural diversity reflects God’s heart, and the Bible provides the categories we need to navigate historical and contemporary challenges related to ethnicity, culture, and race.
Moreover, given our Savior’s prayer in John 17, we recognize that our unity amid diversity is one of the most compelling apologetics for the truthfulness and power of the Gospel. Our goal and hope as N.A.I.C. Tribal Org. are to be faithful in our day as we trust God’s Spirit to transform us into a colorful tapestry of missionaries, serving together in unity while proclaiming Jesus Christ to the world.
Appendix: Defining Key Terms
Definitions of key terms used in this document can be found below.
1 Genesis 2:18 (“it is not good that the man should be alone”) suggests that the fullness of our humanity is found in relationships with those who are different from us. Although the immediate context of this passage is marriage, the principle can be generalized. We can see the other as an equal partner in experiencing the fullness of whom God created us to be (Gen 2), or we can treat them as a threat to our well-being (Gen 3-4). This is why, in the covenants, God continues to remind us to be faithful to him and look outward toward others.
2 Even if humanity had never rebelled against God, we believe these elements of culture would naturally have emerged. For example, human beings would have developed means (e.g., technology) for agriculture or expressions of beauty and truth in art and music.
3 We find the language of ethnicity throughout the Bible. The first place we see explicit reference to ethnicity is in the “Table of Nations,” listing the descendants of Noah (Gen 10). In this ethnographic table, we see groups identified based on “land,” “language,” “clan,” and “nation” (Gen 10:5, 20, 31). At Babel (Gen 11:1–9), God gave diverse languages to judge human pride/rebellion and advance his original creational purpose (cf. Gen 9:1–7). We also see ethnicity reflected in the language of the Great Commission to make disciples of all “nations” (Matt 28:19). The Greek word for “nations” is the plural of the Greek noun ethnos and refers not to nation-states but distinct people groups.
4 We see the goodness of ethnicity most clearly at the end of God’s story in John’s vision of a renewed humanity “from every nation, tribe, people, and language, standing before the throne and before the Lamb” (Rev 7:9). This passage seems to indicate there will be an expression of ethnicity and culture in the new heavens and earth. We also see the work of the Spirit concerning ethnicity when each person heard the gospel communicated in their native tongue on the day of Pentecost (Acts 2:5-13).
5 Theologians use terms like “inherited corruption,” “original sin,” “hereditary depravity,” “indwelling sin,” and “sin nature/flesh” to describe the moral corruption of humanity.
6 The partiality James condemns involves treating people differently based on socio-economic distinctions in public worship. Showing partiality based on skin color, ethnic identity, or cultural heritage would be another manifestation of this sin.
7 Individuals who participate in communal sin are still responsible and accountable for their actions.
8 Several biblical categories are essential for understanding institutional sin, including (1) the relationship between idolatry and oppression (Is 1:16–17; 2:6–22; 3:13–15; Ezek 23:36–39; Rev 18:1–20); (2) teaching regarding the stewardship of power (Mark 10:41-45); (3) warnings about pride (Luke 18:9–14; James 1:9–11; 4:6; 5:4–5); (4) warnings about greed (Luke 12:13–21; James 5:5; 1 Tim 5:10); (5) biblical witness to the reality of demonic influence (Eph 6:10–20); (6) condemnation of institutional injustice (Isa 1:18; 58:1–9; James 5:1-6); and (7) the distinction between God-honoring ethnicity and the cultural construct of race.
9 For the believer, unity is not produced in our own wisdom or power. Instead, we live into the reality of the unity that the Lord Jesus has purchased by His shed blood (Eph 2:13–21).
10 Other examples of challenges related to ethnicity and cross-cultural witness include the Jerusalem Council (Acts 15); Paul’s decision to circumcise Timothy, who was a Gentile (Acts 16:1–3); Paul negotiating his ethnic, religious and civil identities in his imprisonment at Philippi (Acts 16:16–40); and Paul’s collection among Gentile churches throughout Asia Minor for suffering Jewish believers (1 Cor 16 and 2 Cor 8-9).
11 Some theologians prefer the term “cultural mandate” because “creation” points to God’s work while culture-making captures the work of human beings.
12 Merriam-Webster Dictionary, “culture,” https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/culture.
13 A local church is generally considered multiethnic/multiracial when one ethnic or racial group makes up no more than 80% of the congregation: “We define a multiracial church as a congregation in which no one racial group is 80 percent or more of the people. We use the cutoff of 20 percent of the people of a different race or races because this is the point of critical mass.” Curtiss Paul DeYoung, Michael O. Emerson, George Yancey, Karen Chai Kim, United by Faith (New York: Oxford University Press, 2004), 76.
14 Britannica, “Race,” https://www.britannica.com/topic/race-human.