Mapping Missions and Easy Odyssey with Web Resources
The world is rediscovering geography, to the delight of many in international missions.
Incarnational Learners
Any reference to incarnation must, of course, take into account the miraculous taking-on of human flesh by the Divine.
Some Thoughts on Missionary Burnout
I am a pleasure seeker seeking the joy of the Lord. I resonate with George Muller, who said that the first and primary business which he ought to attend to everyday was to have his soul happy in the Lord.
Ripe for a Global Harvest—But is the Church Ready?
Despite significant dangers of our current culture shift, we can still discern and act on distinct opportunities for mission within postmodern cultures.
Postmodernism: An Evangelical Blind Spot?
I believe that postmodern thinking is totally non-Christian, but I also believe in the power of the gospel.
Postmodernism, the Western Church, and Missions
Why does the evangelical church and missions community find ministry so challenging at the end of the 20th century? In a word, the answer is postmodernism.
Nomadic Peoples: Why They’re So Hard to Reach
Reasons nomadic peoples have been neglected by Christian missions, and suggestions to help change that.
Peoples on the Move
Missionaries today can focus their energies on all kinds of needy peoples or special ministries, such as tribal work, urban evangelism, street children, radio work, or Jewish and Muslim evangelism. Left out, however, has been a type of people among whom God’s work of blessing the nations first began—the nomads.
Ruts
Ruts. They’re predictable. They’re comfortable. And they’re deadly. Combining as they do, peaceful repose with minimal achievement, they have been compared to a grave with the ends kicked out.
Global Report: Sticks and Stones
But the death of Graham Staines has become a cause celebre in India, forcing a secular, democratic, and yet largely Hindu nation to confront difficult questions about the kind of society it wants to be.