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The Bible is by far the most widely translated and circulated book
in the world, and Christianity is by far the most globally
dispersed religion. The Christian faith can no longer be said to be
a Western religion. The axis of influence in the world Christian
movement is now in the South and the East. Africa is home to the
largest number of Christians, and now China, where a generation ago
prospects for the faith looked most unpromising, represents the
locus where the church is growing most rapidly.
Theological education has also changed radically in recent years.
As the church has grown throughout the world, new forms of
equipping both clergy and laity for ministry have sprung up to meet
changing needs and circumstances.
Carl E. Armerding has played a major role in re-shaping
theological education. He was a founding member of the faculty of
Regent College, Vancouver, Canada (1970 91), a globally influential
school of theology, and served as its second President (1977 88).
Having given leadership to the college during the period of its
greatest growth and the development of its beautiful campus, he
invested the next decade- and-a-half of his life in providing
innovative Christian higher education to a wide range of
international students, especially those from Central and Eastern
Europe, as the Director of Schloss Mittersill Study Centre, Austria
(1991 2006), and at the Oxford Centre for Mission Studies (1991
2002). He continues to teach and to advise students associated with
these three institutions, along with others around the world. This
collection of essays by colleagues, former students, and friends is
an expression of appreciation for the leadership he has given to
Christian higher education.
Among the contributors are Soo-Inn Tan (Singapore), Gordon D. Fee
(Vancouver), Clark H. Pinnock (Hamilton, Ontario), James M. Houston
(Vancouver), Michael Green (Oxford), Jeffrey P. Greenman (Wheaton),
R. Paul Stevens (Vancouver), and Peter Shaw CB (London).
David W. Baker is Professor of Old Testament and Semitic Languages
at Ashland Theological Seminary (Ohio) and is author, editor or
contributor to more than forty books and author of many articles
and essays.
W. Ward Gasque was a founding professor at Regent College and
served as the first E. Marshall Sheppard Professor there. He is
currently the English Ministries Pastor of Richmond Chinese
Alliance Church.
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