Translating the Bible in Action: How the Bible Can Be Relevant in All Languages and Cultures
Dr. Harriet Hill and Margaret Hill have prepared this book based upon their experiences leading and training leaders of scripture engagement seminars.
Dr. Harriet Hill and Margaret Hill have prepared this book based upon their experiences leading and training leaders of scripture engagement seminars.
“It seemed good,” is a little phrase in Acts 15 which can have profound implications on missionary call.
The author discusses the benefits of a church moving from singular people adoption toward a multiple people group advocacy model.
Four lessons emerged as national co-workers talked about their primary desires for partnership.
The internet allows people to engage in the secret sin of pornography, and it is not until marriages and families are destroyed, jobs are lost, and friendships suffer that people begin to see its ugly consequences.

The danger is that easily measured outcomes will be measured while others remain unmeasured, leading to misallocated resources and superficial benefits.
In this installment of Missions on the Web we look at networks, fellowships, and associations of mission agencies around the world.
Visser brings clarity to a statistical “mess” with what is surely the most comprehensive and rigorous statistical study of the Thai Church ever.
How families and organizations can build a foundation of knowledge about language acquisition and its relationship to academic learning—especially as it relates to missionary kids.
by Charles H. Kraft William Carey Library, 1605 E. Elizabeth St., Pasadena, CA 91104, 2008, 547 pages, $29.99. —Reviewed by Brian M. Howell, associate professor of anthropology, Wheaton College,
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