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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Christianity > Christian institutions & organizations > Christian mission & evangelism
If there is one book you are going to read to understand the deep
currents affecting Christian life and witness today, this is it.
Paradigm Shifts in Christian Witness enlists the world's foremost
observers of global Christianity in the task of discerning in
short, incisive essays the most important patterns and paradigm
shifts as the Christian movement matures beyond both colonialism
and post-colonialism as a world faith translated into every culture
on earth. It also celebrates the life and work of Charles A. kraft,
one of the foremost cultural anthropologists, a man whose insights
have helped a generation of cross-cultural missioners and church
workers understand the processes involved in mission and the growth
of world Christianity.
The Diaconal Church presents a highly topical debate about an
innovative model of church described in David Clark's book Breaking
the Mould of Christendom. Thirteen scholars from different
denominations discuss the themes which underpin the model of the
diaconal church. In the final chapter, Clark argues that the
diaconal church has a contribution of paramount importance to make
to sacred and secular institutions alike.
Gallagher and Hertig have collected a range of seminal articles and
papers that offer students insight into thinking by the makers of
modern mission and world Christian studies. This is a priceless
book for the classroom, bringing between two covers the most
important reflections on these issues in our age.
This marvelous book answers the prayers of teachers who have
struggled for a generation with the problem of providing their
students a resource that will offer an entre into the best thinking
on the nature of mission and the emergence of world
Christianity.
In a world in which resources are unjustly distributed, identities
are under threat and solidarity is fragile, the toughest task
facing humanity is the quest for community. Yet the contribution of
the church to that task is undermined because its message and
organization remain stuck in the past. Christians fail to grasp
that in the gifts of the kingdom community - life, liberation, love
and learning - they hold the key to what the search for community
is all about. This book describes those gifts and how a servant
church, through the creation of its diaconate as an order of
mission, might offer a fragmented world new hope.The Methodist
Church in Britain is taken as a model of what could be achieved.
Mission in the world of work has been neglected by the churches
within the UK for decades. The Kingdom at Work Project addresses
this crippling failure. It sets out a new and comprehensive model
of mission for the transformation of the workplace. The model is
founded on a radical theology of community and related spirituality
which guide and empower an innovative process of discernment and
intervention. The last covers individual and collective action,
dialogue, the use of symbols, prayer and worship. Mentoring, the
role of chaplains and ministers in secular employment, and the
responsibilities of the gathered church are key issues covered in
depth. This book is the most thorough and imaginative exploration
of mission in the world of work to appear for many years.
The Provocative Church offers a liberating understanding of
evangelism as a corporate activity, in which all the gifts needed
to enact the life of the Kingdom - to stir people into asking,
'What does this mean?' - are spread throughout the whole Church. It
encourages the development of a theology of conversion.
Recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize, feted by politicians, the
Church and the world's media, Mother Teresa of Calcutta appears to
be on the fast track to sainthood. But what makes Mother Teresa so
divine? In this frank and damning expose of the Teresa cult,
Hitchens details the nature and limits of one woman's mission to
help the world's poor. He probes the source of the heroic status
bestowed upon an Albanian nun whose only declared wish was to serve
God. He asks whether Mother Teresa's good works answered any higher
purpose than the need of the world's privileged to see someone,
somewhere, doing something for the Third World. He unmasks
pseudo-miracles, questions Mother Teresa's fitness to adjudicate on
matters of sex and reproduction, and reports on a version of
saintly ubiquity which affords genial relations with dictators,
corrupt tycoons and convicted frauds. Is Mother Teresa merely an
essential salve to the conscience of the rich West, or an expert PR
machine for the Catholic Church? In its caustic iconoclasm and
unsparing wit, The Missionary Position showcases the devastating
effect of Hitchens' writing at its polemical best. A dirty job but
someone had to do it. By the end of this elegantly written,
brilliantly argued piece of polemic, it is not looking good for
Mother Teresa. - Sunday Times
This book is more than family history. It will open your eyes to
how the British subjugated their colonies and Christian missions
were used to promote British trade. It also deals with the fallouts
from the clash between Christianity and local (Igbo) customs. It
derives from the handwritten personal account of one of the early
Nigerian Christian missionaries and explains some of these and
more. Feed your curiosity!
"What are Christians to make of their mission in an pluralistic
world?" asks Paul F. Knitter, author of the landmark work in
interfaith dialogue No Other Name? As a recognized scholar and
participant in interfaith dialogue, Knitter is in a unique position
to explore the key concept of what Christian mission must entail in
a world that will remain a world of many religious faiths for the
foreseeable future. From the first chapter of Jesus and the Other
Names, which recounts his own theological and dialogical odyssey,
Knitter constructs what he calls a "correlational,
globally-responsible theology of religions" as a necessary
correction to traditional pluralist and exclusivist approaches. By
anticipating and addressing his critics - both conservative and
liberal - Knitter makes a powerful argument for a reconstruction of
mission faithful to the Christian imperative and dynamically
attuned to the plurality of the world. Jesus and the Other Names
will give pause to those who believe Christian mission can be
carried on as it was in the modern era. Sure to inspire debate as
well as dialogue it offers a more humble, but perhaps more
"Christic", postmodern approach to mission in the new millennium
that has little to do with earthly glory and nothing to do with the
sense of cultural superiority that has so often - and often so
tragicallyaccompanied modern missionary movements. Theologians,
missiologists, Christian historians, can all benefit from its
thoughtful and timely message.
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