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Creating Christian Indians - Native Clergy in the Presbyterian Church (Paperback)
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Creating Christian Indians - Native Clergy in the Presbyterian Church (Paperback)
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Histories of missions to American Indian communities usually tell a
sad and predictable story about the destructive impact of
missionary work on Native culture and religion. Many historians
conclude that American Indian tribes who have maintained a cultural
identity have done so only because missionaries were unable to
destroy it. In Creating Christian Indians, Bonnie Sue Lewis relates
how the Nez Perce and the Dakota Indians became Presbyterians yet
incorporated Native culture and tradition into their new Christian
identities. Lewis focuses on the rise of Native clergy and their
forging of Christian communities based on American Indian values
and notions of kinship and leadership. Originally, mission work
among the Nez Perces and Dakotas revolved around white
missionaries, but Christianity truly took root in
nineteenth-century American Indian communities with the ordination
of Indian clergy. Native pastors saw in Christianity a universal
message of hope and empowerment. Educated and trained within their
own communities, Native ministers were able to preach in their own
languages. They often acted as cultural brokers between Indian and
white societies, shaping Native Presbyterianism and becoming
recognized leaders in both tribal and Presbyterian circles. In 1865
the Presbyterian Church ordained John B. Renville as the first
Dakota Indian minister, and in 1879 Robert Williams became the
first ordained Nez Perce. By 1930, nearly forty Dakotas, sixteen
Nez Perces, a Spokane, and a Makah had been ordained. Lewis has
mined church and archival records, including letters from Native
ministers, to reveal ways in which early Indian pastors left a
heritage of committed Presbyterian congregations and a vibrant
spiritual legacy among their descendants. Bonnie Sue Lewis is
Assistant Professor of Mission and Native American Christianity at
the University of Dubuque Theological Seminary in Iowa.
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