Medical missions has understandably become the subject of careful reappraisal for many mission agencies.
All missionaries can be thankful for the research Larry Keyes had done on the exploding growth of the Third World missionary force (see pp. 216-224). We now have adequate documentation for a most significant trend in the missionary advance of the church worldwide.
C. Peter Wagner responds to George Harper’s article “How Valid Is Receptivity in Determining Mission Strategy?”
It has long been the conviction of some missiologists that the recruitment and deployment of missionaries is growing at least as fast in the Third World as it is in North America.
Church growth theory, as elaborated by some of its proponents, has continued to arouse opposition.
Singapore’s vibrant political, social, and economic climate has nurtured an ever increasing number of Christians over the past decades.
Here are good ideas to get you over the hump.
If revival movements have often led the way to missionary advance, philosophical and theological speculation have too frequently cut the nerve of biblical evangelism and contributed to missionary retrenchment.
Response to the Article: Mission to Muslims: Cutting the Nerve? by Richard Hildenbrand, July 1982 issue of EMQ.
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