Mission Matters: Trends, Challenges, and New Perspectives in Christian Mission in Central and Eastern Europe
CEEAMS Annual Conference 2021 23-25 February 2021-ONLINE
Program
Please note, that all times are CET!
Day I – Tuesday, February 23rd, 2021
9:15 Login-in to Zoom
9:30-9:40 Opening
Session chair: Dorottya Nagy
9:40-10:00 Bible Study: Klippies Kritzinger
10:00-10:45: The Development of the Missionary Studies in Romania. Landmarks, tendencies, and challenges (1921-2021)
Keynote lecture by Cristian Sonea
Faculty of the Orthodox Theology, Babes-Bolyai University Cluj, Romania, Orthodox Department
10:45-11:15 Coffee break
11:15-12:15 Parallel Sessions
Session I.1 Mission and Society- Engaging the Socio-Political Spheres A
- Valentin Kozhuharov: The Teaching Ministry of the Church under the Shadow of Recent “Liberal” Shifts in Traditional Values in Understanding Human Beings and Families (CEE)
- Pavol Bargár: The Phenomenon of “F-word Pseudoreligion” as a Challenge in Mission in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE)
Co-chairs: Cristian Sonea and David Symon
Session I.2 Exploring Missional “Place” in God’s World
- Mihail Ciopașiu: The Role of Place in Mission
- Kristina Ecis: Use of Digital Tools in a Small Town Church in Latvia
Co-chairs: Martine Audéoud and Joshua Searle
Session I.3 Contextual Approaches to Education
- Mihai-Viorel Hirt: Education – Cultural and Ethical Differences
- Viktoria Soltesova: Children´s Images of God in Mission among the Roma in Slovakia
Co-chairs: Roman Soloviy and Cameron Armstrong
Session I.4 Theological-Contextual Perspectives in Romania
- Doru Marcu – The Ecumenical Reception of the Activity and Theology of Rev. Ion Bria (1929-2002)
- Teofil Stanciu- Kenosis as a way of identifying with unbelievers in Anthony Bloom’s conception on „atheist” Christ
Co-chairs: Klippies Kritzinger and Dorottya Nagy
12:15-12:45 Debriefing and Community Announcements – Melody Wachsmuth
Day II – Wednesday, February 24th, 2021
9:15 Login-in to Zoom
9:30-9:40 Announcements
Session chair: Anne-Marie Kool
9:40-10:00 Bible Study: Kristina Ecis
10:00-10:45 Towards an Understanding of the American Evangelical Missionary in the Eastern European Region: historical contemporary insights
Keynote Lecture by David Hosaflook
Institute for Albanian and Protestant Studies/University of Tirana
10:45-11:15 Coffee break
11:15-12:15 Parallel Sessions
Session II.1 Mission and Society- Engaging the Socio-Political Spheres B
- Corneliu Constantineanu: Public Theology as Mission: An Argument for Christian Public Witness in Central and Eastern Europe
- Gyöngyi Mazsu: From God-Church-World to God-World-Church: Hoekendijk´s Understanding of the Church-Mission Relationship in the Light of the Ecumenical movement
Co-chairs: Ravinder Salooja and Viktória Šoltésová
Session II.2 Cultural and sociological insights informing contextual mission
- Tim Noble: Musings on Mission and Mushrooms
- Szilárd Amadé Jóföldi: What should the post-Christendom church look like? The results of Hungarian sociology of religion after the change of regime for church-building concepts.
Co-chairs: Taylor Denyer and Klippies Kritzinger
Session II.3 Partnership in Mission
- Üllas Tankler: Theology of Partnership in Mission
- Miroslav Čobrda: Local Churches’ Benefit from Short-Term Missions Teams: Analysis of the Experiences of Evangelical Churches in Serbia
Co-chairs: Doru Marcu and Preston Pearce
Session II.4 Identity and Mission
- David Symon: “Mission in Two Directions: Missiological Implications of Religious Identity in Czech and Former Yugoslavia Countries”
- Open Forum Discussion on Identity and Mission in Central and Eastern Europe
Co-chairs: Dorottya Nagy and Joshua Searle
12:15-12:45 Debriefing and Community Announcements – Pavol Bargar
Day III – Thursday, February 25th, 2021
9:15 Login-in to Zoom
Session chair: Melody Wachsmuth
9:30-9:40 Announcements
9:40-10:00 Bible Study: Tim Noble
10:00-10:45 Movement Matters. Considerations of the role and challenges of art in the mission
Keynote lecture: Gilija Žukauskienė
“Portico for Dialogues”, Vilnius, Lithuania
10:45-11:15 Coffee break
11:15-12:15 Parallel Sessions
Session III.1 Theological Education in Shifting Contexts
- Joshua T. Searle: The EAAA and Prospects for the Reform of the Post-Soviet Evangelical Movement (Ukraine)
- Sasa Bakic: Roma Bible School in South-Eastern Europe
Co-chairs: Anne-Marie Kool and Roman Soloviy
Session III.2 Case Studies: Pastoral Training and “Fresh Expressions”
- Barry Sloan: INSPIRE-Chemnitz – A Missional experiment (Germany)
- Cameron Armstrong & Preston Pearce: IMB at ITBB: Partnerships from the beginning (Romania)
Co-chairs: Cristian Sonea and Taylor Denyer
Session III.3 COVID and Church Practice
- Gabriel Sorescu: Current Missionary and Pastoral Changes and Their Consequences: A Christian-Orthodox Perspective
- Melody Wachsmuth: A Side Salad or Main Course?: An Argument for the Theological Importance of Creation Care in Southeastern Europe
Co-chairs: Viktória Šoltésová and Pavol Bargár
12:15-12:45 Debriefing and Community Announcements
12:45-16:00 Break
15:45 Arrivals
16:00-18:00 CET: CEEAMS General Assembly
For general questions, please contact the conference coordinator: Taylor Denyer (info@ceeams.org)
For questions regarding the program, please contact dorottya.nagy@ceeams.org or pavol.bargar@ceeams.org.
The Organizing Committee:
Pavol Bargár
Taylor Denyer
Anne-Marie Kool
Dorottya Nagy
and Melody Wachsmuth
About the keynote speakers:
Cristian Sonea is Rev. Jr. Prof. of Orthodox Missiology at the Faculty of Orthodox Theology from “Babes-Bolyai” University, Cluj-Napoca and an Orthodox priest, belonging to the Romanian Orthodox Church. Broadly, his research concerns contemporary theology of orthodox mission and the common Christian witness. He is also interested in ecumenical theology and is actively involved in ecumenical dialogues.
David Hosaflook is an American missionary, author and church historian who has worked with churches and humanitarian projects in the Balkans since 1992. He is a professor of intercultural studies, Christianity, European history, Philosophy of Religion, and Albanian history. He completed his Ph.D. in history at the University of Tirana and is co-founder and executive director of the Institute for Albanian and Protestant Studies. In 2019 Hosaflook was voted laureate of the first annual “22 November” Prize in the Republic of North Macedonia, an award “for achievements in the sphere of political, cultural and social life.”
Gilija Žukauskienė is a PhD student at Protestant Theological faculty of Charles University in Prague. Gilija has a bachelor’s degree in theater and master’s degrees in dance and in philosophy of media. Her main research interest – the transformative power of movement. Gilija is a missionary of the Lithuanian Baptist Union, artistic director of the mission project “Portico for Dialogues” (www.portikas.lt)