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Full-Text Articles in Missions and World Christianity
Toward A Japanese Theology: Kitamori's Theology Of The Pain Of God, Richard Meyer
Toward A Japanese Theology: Kitamori's Theology Of The Pain Of God, Richard Meyer
Concordia Theological Monthly
Christian theologians of the younger churches in Asia have complained, perhaps facetiously, perhaps seriously, that they have not yet produced a serious indigenous heresy. Behind this is the realization that Christianity is still largely a foreign, an imported, religion for most people of Asia. Christians gather in buildings of foreign architecture, sing unfamiliar melodies, and hear the Gospel preached in strangely foreign thought patterns. Their concern is not merely nationalistic but also evangelical They want the Gospel to be meaningful and relevant also in Asia.
The Readiness Of The World For The Mission, R. Pierce Beaver
The Readiness Of The World For The Mission, R. Pierce Beaver
Concordia Theological Monthly
"The Readiness of the World for the Mission" or "for the Gospel" has been a favorite argument in the promotion of the mission in Protestant churches for at least a century and a half. Thus John M. Mason, preaching in 1797, exulted in the fact that by the providence of God the most formidable obstacles to the spread of the faith, such as travel, language, manners, had already been overcome by those persons who were primarily serving science, wealth, and fame.