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L**T
Five Stars
Everything as expected
A**Y
Bought for divinity class
Easy to read. Covers the development of missionaries and missions from Christ until modern times. Sometimes timelines are difficult to follow but overall one of my easier and more informative reads.
M**S
Christian Mission History - Inspiring and Uplifting
Educational and enlightening. Thanks very much.
D**P
Five Stars
Good
R**N
Five Stars
Good information for my research.
A**R
A usefull history of mission
Robert offers challenging yet helpful insights into the history of missions. I applaud her inclusion of more than just the usual evangelical view. I felt that she left out too large a chunk of history between 900 and 1500. There were also some small inaccuracies concerning Patrick (treating him as part of the Roman Church); but these in no way detracted from the point of his story.
J**S
Fresh perspective
Christian Mission by Dana L. Robert was an insightful book and one that was enjoyable and interesting to read. She places a special emphasis in her study upon how the gospel incarnated itself in different ways as it passed from one culture to another. She begins by using a modern illustration of how youth in the Cold War era Soviet Union got a hold of a Jesus Christ Superstar sound tract and how that sound tract opened them up to the gospel. She then goes back to the first century church and traces how the gospel became the world religion.She begins be describing how Christianity is really the only universal world religion with it existing in every nation. She then explains why she believes this is: the adaptability of the faith. She traces how the message has been able to be faithfully presented but still "incarnated" in different cultures. This is the lens she uses to study the history of mission.As a youth minister, I appreciated the time she took out to study the connection between youth discipleship movements and the student missionary movement of the late 19th century. I also found interesting her comparison of St. Patrick here in Ireland (where I live) and the African apostle Bernard Mizeki. She also highlights the unique contributions women have made in the cause of world mission. In fact, she devotes a whole chapter to the subject and introduced me to Annalena Tonelli, an apparently well known and important woman missionary in Africa that I was previously unaware of.It was a good book. I learned a good deal and recommend it.
C**N
The World of World Christianity
Christianity is the religion of the colonizers bent on destroying cultures and dominating people. Or so we learn from popular depictions of the history of Christianity. By analyzing the impact of such crucial forces as globalization, history, gender, conversion, and Bible translation on the worldwide expansion of Christianity, Dana Robert has provided a superb rejoinder to this stereotype. Robert's book should be compulsory reading for all who are interested in understanding the expansion of the world's largest religion.
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