Because
of the “melting pot effect of cultures within communities,” proclaimers of God’s
message must not only be filled with the Holy Spirit, they clearly need to
consider cultural intelligence strategies for such communities. What presuppositions,
behaviors, even tastes will prevent the hearer from hearing this message? Livermore
suggests that organizations which lead without cultural intelligence (CQ),
often experience “increased time to get the job done, heightened costs, growing
frustration and confusion, poor working relationships and lost opportunities.”[1]
It is more than just going into these communities and homes and teaching/preaching
the Bible. The training for multicultural teams for these melting pot
communities ought to include: (1) awareness of their own cultural and
theological assumptions; (2) identifying racial/ethnic, cultural and class assumptions
of the hearers; (3) an awareness of pitfalls to hearing the Good News; (4) the
development of the spirit of awareness and dependence on God’s spiritual gifts
and (5) learn effective pedagogies and communication strategies.[2]
The question is “Will our leaders buy-in
to this vision/strategy?”
[1] David
Livermore, Leading With Cultural
Intelligence: The Real Secret To Success, (United States: AMACOM, 2015),
14.
[2] Bob Ekblad, Reading Scripture For Good News That Crosses Barriers Of Race/Ethnicity,
Class and Culture, Interpretation (2011): 229, accessed September 7, 2018, https://search-proquest-com.ezproxy.liberty.edu/docview/879074305?accountid=12085
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