Constructive Pneumatological Hermeneutics in Pentecostal Christianity

(Barry) #1

© The Author(s) 2016 197
K.J. Archer, L.W. Oliverio, Jr. (eds.), Constructive
Pneumatological Hermeneutics in Pentecostal Christianity,
DOI 10.1057/978-1-137-58561-5_12


CHAPTER 12

Diakrisis Always En Conjunto: First


Theology Understood from a Latino/a


Context


Daniel Castelo

D. Castelo ()
Seattle Pacifi c University , Seattle , WA , USA


“All theology is contextual” is a common remark, but at day’s end, what

difference does the phrase make? On the one hand, the phrase validates

theological perspectives from various self-identifi ed ethnicities (such as the

Ghanaian, Puerto Rican, and Korean, among others), and this develop-

ment certainly is important. People from different contexts will appropriate

features of the Christian way of life in a variety of ways, and these differ-

ences are rich with possibility for expanding and deepening one’s appre-

hension of the mystery that is the Christian God who bestows the “good

news” of healing and redemption. On the other hand, the phrase that “all

theology is contextual” has the danger of itself becoming a decontextu-

alized abstraction—a shibboleth that all recognize verbally while having

little to no effect on the way theology is pursued. Lamentably, for those

who simply “do theology” in some generic sense, the tendency might be

to recognize this phrase with a single chapter or an isolated lecture on

“contextual” or “global” perspectives while the bulk of the endeavoring

might go on to refl ect a more “typical” presentation or order forged in
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