Building Strategic Relationships: A Practical Guide to Partnering with Non-Western Missions
Daniel Rickett examines partnerships between Western churches and their international counterparts.
Daniel Rickett examines partnerships between Western churches and their international counterparts.
The late Lesslie Newbigin (1909-1998) was one of the most important and influential missionary-theologians of the twentieth century. We are grateful to Wainwright and his publishers for bringing to light these lectures and doing such a fine job of introduction, redaction, and publication.
The book will be of help to a wide range of people working cross-culturally, as well as within their own culture.
Several years ago I sat in a class taught by Paul Hiebert as he pled for missionaries in a global era to recognize that emerging churches around the world should not just be self-governing, self-supporting, and self-propagating, but should also be self-theologizing.
The state of missions engagement among evangelical churches in North America is changing.
The Back to Jerusalem Movement is the vision of the Chinese underground house church leaders to train, send, and support physically and spiritually thousands of Chinese missionaries to Buddhists, Hindus, and especially Muslims, thus bringing the gospel full circle to Jerusalem in anticipation of Christ’s return to and reign from the Holy City.
We focus our attention on short-term-related Web pages in this installment of Missions on the Web.
A collection of nine essays, coming out of the 4th SEANET forum held in Thailand in March 2002.
You are pioneering the growth of an exciting ministry. You have dreams and plans and a commitment to do things right. But your partner doesn’t share your way of doing things. It has reached the point where you are frustrated and unclear about where it is all going.
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