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AVBC VIDEO LIBRARY VIDEO CATALOG and GUIDE Revised to: October 31, 2008 GEOGRAPHY AND HISTORY OF CHRISTIAN ACTIVITIES [A600>A699] A) GEOGRAPHY OF CHRISTIAN ACTIVITIES [A600>A649] 1) World-wide N/A See Biography section for biographies of Christians with world-wide or [A700, C700] international missions or ministries : for example: Nicolaus Zinzendorf 2) Asia (China, Mongolia, etc) N/A See Biography section for biographies of Christian missionaries in Asia (China, Mongolia, etc) , for example: [A700, C700 ] Hudson Taylor 1832-1905 English China Eric Liddell 1902-1945 Scottish China Gladys Aylward 1902-1970 English China Jackie Pullinger 1944- English China Nora Lam 20C Chinese China Hanneke van Dam 20C Dutch Mongolia 3) Asia (India) N/A See Biography section for biographies of Christian missionaries in Asia (India, Tibet, Nepal, Indonesia, etc) , for example: [A700, C700 ] William Carey 1761-1834 English India Ludwig Nommensen 1834-1918 Danish Indonesia Amy Carmichael 1867-1951 Irish India Sadhu Sundar Singh 1889-1929 Sikh Indian India, Tibet, Nepal Mother Teresa 1910-1997 Albanian India Chawnga & Ruchunga Pudaite1948- Indian India 4) Africa “Rwanda living forgiveness”:aftermath of genocide - Rwanda , Africa,1994-2008 [A635a ] See Biography section for biographies of Christian missionaries in Africa , for example: [A700, C700 ] David Livingstone 1813-1873 Scottish Various areas Dr Helen Roseveare 1925- English Belgian Congo/Zaire Judy Mbugua 1947- Kenya Kenya, PACWA Rolland & Heidi Baker 20C US Mozambique Paul Rusesabagina 20C Rwanda Rwanda -
The Gospel of Sadhu Sundar Singh
www.akademijavjecnogproljeca.org The Gospel of Sadhu Sundar Singh by Friedrich Heiler, Ph.D.,D.D. CONTENTS Introduction PART I The Ancestral Faith of Sundar Singh I. The History of the Sikh Religion 2., Sikh Doctrine and Worship PART II The Life Story of Sundar Singh 1. Youth. Inner Conflicts 2. Conversion {a) Sundar Singh's Own Account {b) Critical Considerations 3. Trial and Persecution 4. The Sadhu's Sphere of Activity {a) Missionary Journeys in the East. Sundar Singh in North India ; Tibet and Nepal ; South India and the Far East (b) Missionary Journeys in the West PART III Sundar Singh's Religious Life A. Vita Contemplativa 1. Prayer 2. Ecstasy 3. Inward Peace 4. The Joy of the Cross 5. Heaven upon Earth 2 B. Vita Activa 1. Brotherly Love 2. Witness for Christ 3. In the World, yet not of the World PART IV The Religious Thought-World of the Sadhu Theologia Experimentalis The Conception of God The Creation . The Living Christ Salvation . Miracles . The Future Life The Bible The Church and the Churches Christianity and Heathenism . PART V The Significance of Sundar Singh 1. His Position in the History of the Christian Religion . 2. The Significance of Sundar Singh for India 3. The Significance of Sundar Singh for Western Christianity Bibliography Notes 3 INTRODUCTION A STRANGE guest is standing before the door of an English house : a tall, upright figure in a long, saffron-coloured robe, with a large turban wound round his head. His olive complexion and his black beard proclaim his Indian birth ; his dark eyes, with their gentle expression, reveal a heart at rest, and they shine with an infinite kindness. -
The Legacy of Henry Martyn to the Study of India's Muslims and Islam in the Nineteenth Century
THE LEGACY OF HENRY MARTYN TO THE STUDY OF INDIA'S MUSLIMS AND ISLAM IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY Avril A. Powell University of Lincoln (SOAS) INTRODUCTION: A biography of Henry Martyn, published in 1892, by George Smith, a retired Bengal civil servant, carried two sub-titles: the first, 'saint and scholar', the second, the 'first modern missionary to the Mohammedans. [1]In an earlier lecture we have heard about the forming, initially in Cambridge, of a reputation for spirituality that partly explains the attribution of 'saintliness' to Martyn: my brief, on the other hand, is to explore the background to Smith's second attribution: the late Victorian perception of him as the 'first modern missionary' to Muslims. I intend to concentrate on the first hundred years since his ordination, dividing my paper between, first, Martyn's relations with Muslims in India and Persia, especially his efforts both to understand Islam and to prepare for the conversion of Muslims, and, second, the scholarship of those evangelicals who continued his efforts to turn Indian Muslims towards Christianity. Among the latter I shall be concerned especially with an important, but neglected figure, Sir William Muir, author of The Life of Mahomet, and The Caliphate:ite Rise, Decline and Fall, and of several other histories of Islam, and of evangelical tracts directed to Muslim readers. I will finish with a brief discussion of conversion from Islam to Christianity among the Muslim circles influenced by Martyn and Muir. But before beginning I would like to mention the work of those responsible for the Henry Martyn Centre at Westminster College in recently collecting together and listing some widely scattered correspondence concerning Henry Martyn. -
VOICE MAR 2014.Pub
Voice ljey@ho tmail.co m e are adopted into Christ by the W Spirit; weThe do not haveJournal a divine of the nature, like the incarnate Christ, but only a human nature. Evangelical Medical Fellowship of IndiaIndia March 2014 . Volume 12 : Issue 1 Voice No Contents Page 1 Reflections on Mission Hospitals 1 V oice is produced with the intention of inspiring, igniting and initiat- 2 Musings on Life’s Journey 2 ing thought, prayer and action. Your views and responses are crucial to this 3 Real Research … Real Results ... Real Change 12 process. Please e -mail your re- sponses, rejoinders and reflections on 4 His Ways are Higher than Ours 17 ‘The Professional Life of the 5 God is Mindful of His Children 20 Christian Doctor’ to <[email protected]> 6 A Shalom Story 21 The author of each article is responsible 7 Readers’ Responses 21 for the point of view expressed, which 8 Diligence at Work 22 may or may not represent the official position of the EMFI 9 Five Seasons in the Life of a Doctor 24 10 Crossword - Attitudes of Bible Professionals 32 The Editor Dr. Anna Mathew, Kolenchery 11 Caring from the Heart 33 The Editorial Board 12 Humour - Caught on the Wrong Foot 33 Mr. Andi Eicher, Thane Dr. James Zachariah, Vishakapatanam 13 Be an Encourager 34 Dr. Chering Tenzing , Herbertpur Dr. Santosh Varughese, Vellore 14 Christian Response to Mental Health 35 Mr. Timothy Velavan, Vellore 15 The Authors 36 Cover 15 Answers to Crossword 36 The Christian Doctor’s Professional life is characterised by a wholesome Back 16 Ten Commandments for the Modern Day cover attitude, aptitude and ability Address he voice of one calling in the wilderness; The Editor, Voice, EMFI, 4th Floor, Prepare the way of the Lord; Make Rainbow Vikas, 9, Varadarajulu Street, T straight in the desert a Egmore, Chennai 600 008 T. -
Timeline of Great Missionaries
Timeline of Great Missionaries (and a few other well-known historical and church figures and events) Prepared by Doug Nichols, Action International Ministries August 12, 2008 Dates Name Ministry/Place of Ministry 70-155/160 Polycarp Bishop of Smyrna 354-430 Aurelius Augustine Bishop of Hippo (Africa) 1235-1315 Raymon Lull Scholar and missionary (North Africa) 1320-1384 John Wyclif Morning Star of Reformation 1373-1475 John Hus Reformer 1483-1546 Martin Luther Reformation (Germany) 1494-1536 William Tyndale Bible Translator (England) 1509-1564 John Calvin Theologian/Reformation 1513-1573 John Knox Scottish Reformer 1517 Ninety-Five Theses (nailed) Martin Luther 1605-1690 John Eliot To North American Indians 1615-1691 Richard Baxter Puritan Pastor (England) 1628-1688 John Bunyan Pilgrim’s Progress (England) 1662-1714 Matthew Henry Pastor and Bible Commentator (England) 1700-1769 Nicholaus Ludwig Zinzendorf Moravian Church Founder 1703-1758 Jonathan Edwards Theologian (America) 1703-1791 John Wesley Methodist Founder (England) 1714-1770 George Whitefield Preacher of Great Awakening 1718-1747 David Brainerd To North American Indians 1725-1760 The Great Awakening 1759-1833 William Wilberforce Abolition (England) 1761-1834 William Carey Pioneer Missionary to India 1766-1838 Christmas Evans Wales 1768-1837 Joshua Marshman Bible Translation, founded boarding schools (India) 1769-1823 William Ward Leader of the British Baptist mission (India) 1773-1828 Rev. George Liele Jamaica – One of first American (African American) missionaries 1780-1845 -
The Place of Church Planting in Mission: Towards a Theological Framework
ERT (2009) 33:4, 316-331 The Place of Church Planting in Mission: Towards a Theological Framework Richard Yates Hibbert KEYWORDS: Church planting; Missio points out, ‘theological reflection is the Dei; Kingdom of God; Holistic beginning point of ministry formation’.2 Mission; Theology of Mission While insights from the history of mis- sion and the social sciences are extremely helpful in shaping church I The Need for a Theological planting practice, a biblical and theo- Framework logical foundation is essential if church Until 1980, there were very few books planting is to fulfil God’s purposes for giving practical guidance to church it. Robinson and Christine are right in planters. The succeeding years have insisting that ‘we need to be sure that the activity of church planting lies not seen this vital need met through the just on the practical agenda of activists publication of scores of texts. Very few but that it also belongs to the purpose of these texts, though, provide any- and call of God for his church’.3 Murray thing approaching a satisfying theolog- warns: ical basis for church planting, one notable exception being Stuart Mur- An inadequate theological basis ray’s Church Planting: Laying Founda- [for church planting] will not nec- tions, first published in 1998.1 The biblical and theological founda- 2 Gailyn Van Rheenen, ‘The Missional Helix: tion for the planting of churches has Example of Church Planting’, Monthly Missio- generally been assumed rather than logical Reflections 26 (January 2001), explicitly articulated. As Van Rheenen http://www.missiology.org/mmr/mmr26.htm (accessed 21 May 2003). -
Transforming Anglicanism: Elements of an Emerging Anglican Mission Paradigm
255 JOHN CORRIE Transforming Anglicanism: Elements of an Emerging Anglican Mission Paradigm Few would question that Anglicanism is undergoing significant change at present but often this is not interpreted in a missional framework. John Corrie here offers such an approach to Anglican identity, arguing that we need to see beyond current conflicts to discern an emerging missional paradigm. He argues that this paradigm will be crucial for future Anglican unity and provide an approach to mission that is integral, sacramental and Trinitarian. Introduction You don’t need to be a missiologist to recognise my take on David Bosch’s Transforming Mission in the title of this article. The point of this echo is that I want to suggest that Anglicanism needs a new paradigm for its identity if it is to survive even to halfway through this century, and that that new paradigm needs to be missional. If a new paradigm is to emerge from out of the current crisis in Anglicanism then, as Bosch suggested was the case for his own thesis, it must have significant roots in the history of the tradition. The resources for renewed identity are, in other words, already there within Anglicanism. Bosch’s paradigm built upon six phases of Christian history identified by Hans Küng, taking from each of them what was of abiding significance and incorporating those elements into his own vision. Anglicanism needs to do something similar. It cannot deny its traditions and its history, but it has got stuck in an institutional and conflictual paradigm from which it can only be released by the transforming vision of mission. -
A Brief Survey of Missions
2 A Brief Survey of Missions A BRIEF SURVEY OF MISSIONS Examining the Founding, Extension, and Continuing Work of Telling the Good News, Nurturing Converts, and Planting Churches Rev. Morris McDonald, D.D. Field Representative of the Presbyterian Missionary Union an agency of the Bible Presbyterian Church, USA P O Box 160070 Nashville, TN, 37216 Email: [email protected] Ph: 615-228-4465 Far Eastern Bible College Press Singapore, 1999 3 A Brief Survey of Missions © 1999 by Morris McDonald Photos and certain quotations from 18th and 19th century missionaries taken from JERUSALEM TO IRIAN JAYA by Ruth Tucker, copyright 1983, the Zondervan Corporation. Used by permission of Zondervan Publishing House, Grand Rapids, MI Published by Far Eastern Bible College Press 9A Gilstead Road, Singapore 309063 Republic of Singapore ISBN: 981-04-1458-7 Cover Design by Charles Seet. 4 A Brief Survey of Missions Preface This brief yet comprehensive survey of Missions, from the day sin came into the world to its whirling now head on into the Third Millennium is a text book prepared specially by Dr Morris McDonald for Far Eastern Bible College. It is used for instruction of her students at the annual Vacation Bible College, 1999. Dr Morris McDonald, being the Director of the Presbyterian Missionary Union of the Bible Presbyterian Church, USA, is well qualified to write this book. It serves also as a ready handbook to pastors, teachers and missionaries, and all who have an interest in missions. May the reading of this book by the general Christian public stir up both old and young, man and woman, to play some part in hastening the preaching of the Gospel to the ends of the earth before the return of our Saviour (Matthew 24:14) Even so, come Lord Jesus Timothy Tow O Zion, Haste O Zion, haste, thy mission high fulfilling, to tell to all the world that God is Light; that He who made all nations is not willing one soul should perish, lost in shades of night. -
Henry Martyn, the Bible, and the Christianity in Asia Christianity in Asia
Henry Martyn, the Bible, and the Christianity in Asia Dr Sebastian C.H. Kim Director of the Christianity in Asia Project Along with many modes of missionary activity, the translation and distribution of the Scripture were a vital concern for Protestant missionaries in the nineteenth century. Stephen Neill commented that "the first principle of Protestant missions has been that Christians should have the Bible in their hands in their own language at the earliest possible date", whereas Catholic missionaries were engaged in translating mostly catechisms and books of devotion.[1] As the Protestant missionary enterprise rapidly grew in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, so the translation and distribution of the Bible was of great importance in many parts of the world. For this, the British and Foreign Bible Society and other Bible societies, and more recently the Wycliffe Bible Translators, played key roles in the translation and distribution of the Scripture. Eric Fenn of the BFBS even asserted that the missionary work of the church has been essentially "Bible-centred" in three ways: the Bible has been the source of inspiration for the missionaries, the basis of the worship of the church, and a means of evangelism in itself.[2] What motivated the missionaries and mission agencies to engage in Bible translation? When we read the accounts of these missionaries, the prospect of making available to people the good news in their own language was the most frequent and common testimony.[3] However, R.S. Sugirtharajah, in his recent publication The Bible and the Third World points out that the Bible was introduced into Asia and Africa by Catholic missionaries before the colonisation of these continents. -
260 Mission Studies Bibliography David J. Bosch, Transforming
260 Mission Studies Bibliography David J. Bosch, Transforming Mission. Paradigm Shifts in Theology of Mission, Maryknoll, N.Y.: Orbis Books 1991, 587 pp. A book such as this could only be written by someone who is really well acquainted with mission and missiological literature. David J. Bosch is Profes- sor of Missiology at the University of South Africa (Pretoria) and many publi- cations bear witness to his scholarship: Die Heidenmission in der Zukunfts- schau Jesu (1959), A Spirituality of the Road (1979), Witness to the World: The Christian Mission in Theological Perspective (1980), The Church as Alternative Community (1982), Mission in Creative Tension: A Dialogue with David Bosch (1990), etc. The author is aware of the escalation in the use of the word "mission" in recent times and the concomitant insecurity which the ambivalent under- standings of mission engender. He has no intention of restricting himself to one of the many "definitions" that may obstruct the view for an unprejudiced scrutiny of the "paradigms" of history. But in every phase of the book one thing is crystal clear: the Christian faith is missionary by its very nature; it is meant for all people; it is concerned with other-worldly and this-worldly salvation; the Church is both "sacrament and sign": sign in the sense of "pointer, symbol, example or model", sacrament in the sense of "mediation, representation, or anticipation" (p. 11). A thought which meanders like a golden thread through the whole book is that the "mission" of the Church cannot be detached from the "missio Dei," that mission belongs to the essence of the Church, as lasting concern and task of the Church inseparable from it. -
FULL ISSUE (48 Pp., 2.3 MB PDF)
Vol. 16, No.1 nternatlona• January 1992 ctln• Our Mission Legacy hallmark of this journal is its award-winning mission Crowther, "the most widely known African Christian of the A "legacy" series. In this issue, A. Christopher Smith nineteenth century." Author Andrew F. Walls underlines the offers a fresh assessment of our debt to William Carey, who, two pointed ways in which the dynamics surrounding Crowther's hundred years ago, helped launch the modern missionary move ministry anticipated the central issues of indigenous leadership ment with the publication of his An Enquiry into the Obligations of down to the present time. Christians, to Use Means for the Conversion of the Heathens. The INTERNATIONAL BULLETIN is grateful for the opportunity Wilbert R. Shenk inaugurated the legacy series in April 1977, to recall and share our legacy. with a study of the life and work of Henry Venn, father of the indigenous church, three-self principles: self-support, self-gov ernment, and self-propagation. In the last fifteen years the INTERNATIONAL BULLETIN has profiled sixty-seven individuals who contributed in a formative, pioneering way to the theory and practice of the Christian world mission. Over the next several On Page years the editors foresee a comparable number of additional leg acy articles, examining such figures as Charles H. Brent, Amy Carmichael, Orlando Costas, Melvin Hodges, J. C. Hoekendijk, 2 The Legacy of William Carey Jacob [ocz, John A. Mackay, Donald A. McGavran, Robert A. Christopher Smith Moffatt, Constance E. Padwick, Pope Pius XI, Pandita Ramabai, 10 "Behold, I am Doing a New Thing" Ruth Rouse, Charles Simeon, Alan R. -
I the EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH
THE EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH IN NAMIBIA (ELCIN) AND POVERTY, WITH SPECIFIC REFERENCE TO SEMI-URBAN COMMUNITIES IN NORTHERN NAMIBIA - A PRACTICAL THEOLOGICAL EVALUATION by Gideon Niitenge Dissertation Presented for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in PRACTICAL THEOLOGY (COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT) at the University of Stellenbosch Promoter: Prof Karel Thomas August March 2013 i Stellenbosch University http://scholar.sun.ac.za DECLARATION I, the undersigned, hereby declare that the work contained in this dissertation is my own original work and that I have not previously in its entirety or in part been submitted it at any university for a degree. Signed: _______________________ Date_________________________ Copyright © 2013 Stellenbosch University All rights reserved ii Stellenbosch University http://scholar.sun.ac.za DEDICATION I dedicate this work to the loving memory of my late mother Eunike Nakuuvandi Nelago Iiputa (Niitenge), who passed away while I was working on this study. If mom was alive, she could share her joy with others to see me completing this doctoral study. iii Stellenbosch University http://scholar.sun.ac.za ABBREVIATIONS AIDS Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome ARV Anti-Retroviral Treatment AFM Apostolic Faith Mission ACSA Anglican Church of Southern Africa AAP Anglican AIDS Programme AGM Annual General Meeting AMEC African Methodist Episcopal Church CAA Catholic AIDS Action CBO Community-Based Organisation CCDA Christian Community Development Association CAFO Church Alliance for Orphans CUAHA Churches United Against