Results for 'Iberian missionaries'

981 found
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  1.  12
    Iberian missionaries in God’s vineyard: Enlarging humankind and encompassing the globe in the Renaissance.Antonella Romano - 2019 - History of the Human Sciences 32 (4):8-27.
    During the century of colonial expansion by the Iberian monarchies, the presence of the Church alongside the colonizers was not just a logical continuation of the medieval idea of the good prince who was advised and accompanied by men of faith. It also underlined the political dimension of the ‘spiritual conquest’ and the equally political dimension of the cultural practices accompanying it. There are numerous works that have emphasized this with regard to the American continents in particular, where the (...)
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  2.  5
    The Intellectual Construction of the Fifth Empire: Legitimating the Braganza Restoration.Lauri Tähtinen - 2012 - History of European Ideas 38 (3):413-425.
    Summary Under the Iberian Union, the Portuguese discourse on empire had been both relatively muted and intertwined with Spanish debates. The Braganza Restoration presented a radical break from this tradition. A new network of preachers, theologians and jurists from the four corners of the Portuguese empire made the case for the recovery of independence. Instead of buttressing a common moral universe and the old pan-Iberian network of higher learning, the new network focused its energies on the establishment of (...)
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  3.  11
    Western Legal Imperialism: Thinking About the Deep Historical Roots.James Q. Whitman - 2009 - Theoretical Inquiries in Law 10 (2):305-332.
    We live in an age of massive efforts to transplant Western institutions. Some of those efforts have involved the so-called "Washington Consensus"; some have involved International Human Rights; but all of them have brought the West to the rest of the world, and all of them reflect a kind of missionary drive. What are the historical sources of this legal missionizing? This Article argues that those sources long predate the twentieth century, and indeed long predate the colonial adventures that began (...)
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  4.  3
    Varieties of Amazonian Shamanism.Jean-Pierre Chaumeil - 1992 - Diogenes 40 (158):101-113.
    The penetration of the Amazon region by the great religious movements of Europe and Africa began with the first phases of colonial domination, in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The initial influence to be felt was Iberian Catholicism (the religion of the conquerors), which spread along the rivers as missions sprang up here and there. This period of missionary activity continued for over a century, bringing with it a host of consequences, most notably waves of epidemics that killed millions (...)
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  5.  1
    Varieties of Amazonian Shamanism.Jean-Pierre Chaumeil - 1992 - Diogenes 40 (158):101-113.
    The penetration of the Amazon region by the great religious movements of Europe and Africa began with the first phases of colonial domination, in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The initial influence to be felt was Iberian Catholicism (the religion of the conquerors), which spread along the rivers as missions sprang up here and there. This period of missionary activity continued for over a century, bringing with it a host of consequences, most notably waves of epidemics that killed millions (...)
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  6.  11
    mirada al Japón de principios del siglo XVII a través de los manuscritos de Rodrigo de Vivero y Sebastián Vizcaíno.Adolfo Jesús Martínez Roy - 2020 - Studium 25.
    Durante la presencia española en el sudeste asiático se mantuvieron contactos con otros países de su entorno. Uno de ellos fue Japón. El archipiélago nipón cambió de dirigente tras la batalla de Sekigahara, estableciéndose tras ella una nueva dinastía que dirigiría al país hasta 1868, la familia Tokugawa. En los primeros años de este gobierno las relaciones con los españoles fueron cambiantes, pasando de una situación favorable a terminar rompiéndose. Es en esos primeros años se hallan Rodrigo de Vivero y (...)
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  7.  1
    A Protestant or Catholic Atlantic World? Confessional Divisions and the Writing of Natural History.Nicholas Canny - 2012 - In Canny Nicholas (ed.), Proceedings of the British Academy Volume 181, 2010-2011 Lectures. pp. 83.
    Some competition was associated with all European voyages of discovery, whether considered in an intellectual or a nautical sense, but the character of the competition became confessional as the contest between states over resources to be exploited gave way to disputation between denominations over how souls might best be saved. This happened when, in the late sixteenth century, Protestant publicists began to disparage the colonial endeavours that the Spanish and Portuguese authorities had been engaged upon for more than a century, (...)
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  8.  5
    Iberian Theories of Empire in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries.Giuseppe Marcocci - 2022 - Journal of the History of Ideas 83 (4):671-683.
    Abstract:Starting from the Iberian reaction to Machiavelli's ideas about religion and war, this article compares and connects Spanish and Portuguese theories of empire in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Writings by Francisco de Vitoria, Martín de Azpilcueta, and Juan de Solórzano Pereira, as well as by less well-known thinkers, are used to trace the main legal and theological debates over empire that developed across the Iberian world. It is argued that the exchange of ideas about war and religion (...)
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  9.  7
    From Missionary Tradition to Liberal Leadership: Robert College, 1918–1970.Ali Erken - 2023 - British Journal of Educational Studies 71 (4):439-458.
    This article analyses the transformation of Robert College, the first American college founded abroad, from 1923 to 1970. Based on a careful investigation of Robert College archives and personal accounts of the College staff, it contends that the school’s missionary character acquired a new identity after the foundation of Republican Turkey. Robert College gradually abandoned its missionary tradition to become an institution of liberal learning in the service of westernizing Turkey. The College presidency and trustees have long elaborated on the (...)
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  10.  4
    The Missionary Housemother and Her ‘Daughters’: Voice and agency in female subaltern spaces in 19th Century Malabar.Amritha Koiloth Ramath & Shashikantha Koudur - 2023 - Journal for Cultural Research 27 (1):85-104.
    The paper attempts to explore notions of public-private dichotomy with reference to collective agency and inclusion. It looks at a women’s shelter run by a missionary wife Julie Gundert of the Basel Mission in nineteenth-century Malabar. The missionaries played a key role in the introduction of printing and the development of a modern public sphere in the region: a space, nevertheless, restricted to men from the educated elite classes. Julie’s shelter, meanwhile, provides an alternate cultural space where women, especially (...)
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  11.  1
    Missionary Positions.Ann E. Cudd - 2005 - Hypatia 20 (4):164-182.
    Postcolonial feminist scholars have described some Western feminist activism as imperialistic, drawing a comparison to the work of Christian missionaries from the West, who aided in the project of colonization and assimilation of non-Western cultures to Western ideas and practices. This comparison challenges feminists who advocate global human rights ideals or objective appraisals of social practices, in effect charging them with neocolonialism. This essay defends work on behalf of universal human rights, while granting that activists should recognize their limitations (...)
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  12.  6
    Missionary Positions.Ann E. Cudd - 2000 - Hypatia 20 (4):164-182.
    Postcolonial feminist scholars have described some Western feminist activism as imperialistic, drawing a comparison to the work of Christian missionaries from the West, who aided in the project of colonization and assimilation of non-Western cultures to Western ideas and practices. This comparison challenges feminists who advocate global human rights ideals or objective appraisals of social practices, in effect charging them with neocolonialism. This essay defends work on behalf of universal human rights, while granting that activists should recognize their limitations (...)
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  13.  4
    Iberian Science in the Renaissance: Ignored How Much Longer?Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra - 2004 - Perspectives on Science 12 (1):86-124.
    The contributions of Portuguese and Spanish sixteenth century science and technology in fields such as metallurgy, medicine, agriculture, surgery, meteorology, cosmography, cartography, navigation, military technology, and urban engineering, by and large, have been excluded in most accounts of the Scientific Revolution. I review several recent studies in English on sixteenth and seventeenth century natural history and natural philosophy to demonstrate how difficult it has become for Anglo-American scholarship to bring Iberia back into narratives on the origins of "modernity." The roots (...)
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  14.  14
    Foreign Missionary Activity Prior to and During the Armenian Genocide.Paul Ara Haidostian - 2022 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 39 (1):10-20.
    This article discusses how pre-Genocide foreign missionary activity prepared the way for relief and existential support during and after the Armenian Genocide of 1915–1921. Examples are drawn from American, British, and German Protestant missionary organisations, especially the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, the Turkish Missions Aid Society or Bible Lands Missions Aid Society, and the Christlicher Hilfsbund im Orient. These agencies developed missionary and relief methods and transnational networks which were utilised by the Action Chrétienne en Orient and (...)
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  15.  4
    From Missionary Incarnate to Incarnational Guest: A Critical Reflection on Incarnation as a Model for Missionary Presence.Benno van den Toren & Berdine van den Toren-Lekkerkerker - 2015 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 32 (2):81-96.
    In the post-colonial era, the incarnation has become an important model for cross-cultural missionary presence. Though this model improves on Eurocentric and colonial models, it is deficient because it is unrealistic, potentially paternalistic, inappropriate in the light of globalization and post-modern understandings of culture, and because it doesn’t sufficiently respect the particularity of the incarnation of Christ. This article proposes an alternative model of the role of the cross-cultural missionary as a guest and argues that it is more appropriate on (...)
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  16. A missionary impulse capable of transforming everything.Therese D'Orsa - 2020 - The Australasian Catholic Record 97 (3):259.
    I dream of a 'missionary option', that is, a 'missionary impulse capable of transforming everything', so that the Church's customs, ways of doing things, times and schedules, language and structures 'can be suitably channeled for the evangelization of today's world rather than for her self-preservation'. The renewal of structures demanded by pastoral conversion can only be understood in this light: as part of an effort to make them more mission-oriented, to make ordinary pastoral activity on every level more inclusive and (...)
     
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  17.  9
    Western missionaries on the Ukrainian territory in middle ages: religious, cultural and diplomatic contacts.Bogdan Bodnaryuk - 2015 - Ukrainian Religious Studies 73:91-98.
    A Ukrainian historian of Canadian origin, Yuriy Tys-Krokhmalyuk, highlighting the pages of the early missionary history of the Irish monasticism, states that about 600 g. They from the territory of Western Europe went further to the East, reaching the land of the Antes and Kiev. In this regard, the researcher expresses the following opinion: "It is not known whether the Irish monks were the first on our land. Apparently not, because they were not the first either in Burgundy, nor in (...)
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  18. The Missionary, the Catechist and the Hunter: Foucault, Protestantism, and Colonialism.Christina Petterson - 2014
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  19.  4
    Missionary Consciousness and Doctrine of International Law in the United States of America.Fritz Wagner - 1969 - Philosophy and History 2 (2):224-224.
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  20.  6
    The Missionary Formation in the Eastern Orthodox Theological Education in Present Day Romania.Cristian Sonea - 2018 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 35 (3):146-155.
    The article presents the current missionary formation in the Romanian Orthodox Church. I evaluated the national curricula from the faculties of Orthodox Theology, following the missionary orientated topics in each subject, and I analyzed the curricula of Missiology taught in the faculties.The article underlines the relation between the content of the Missiology curriculum and the historical context in which the Orthodox Church in Romania developed, and it explains why there are both innovative and conservative themes within the curriculum. Finally, the (...)
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  21.  1
    Iberian Fingerprints on the Doctrine of Signs.John N. Deely - 2004 - American Journal of Semiotics 20 (1-4):93-156.
    This essay focuses on the development of Latin semiotics from Ockham to Poinsot as it took place mainly in the Iberian university world, with a discussion of the consequences of that development for logic and philosophy today.
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  22.  18
    The missionary journey of Mark 6 and the experience of ministry in today’s world: An empirical study in biblical hermeneutics among Anglican clergy.Leslie J. Francis, Greg Smith & Guli Francis-Dehqani - 2017 - HTS Theological Studies 73 (3).
    This study explores the connection between dominant psychological type preferences and reader interpretations of biblical texts. Working in type-alike groups, a group of 40 Anglican clergy were invited to employ their strongest function to engage conversation between Mark’s account of Jesus sending out the disciples and the experience of ministry in today’s world. The data supported the hermeneutical theory proposed by the SIFT approach to biblical interpretation and liturgical preaching by demonstrating the four clear and distinctive voices of sensing, intuition, (...)
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  23.  5
    Iberian Colonial Science.Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra - 2005 - Isis 96 (1):64-70.
    ABSTRACT The Portuguese and Spanish empires were both global and long lasting. This essay focuses on colonial Spanish America, particularly on the practices of natural history. It also suggests that chivalric‐epic ideologies permeated early modern epistemologies, including those of the French and the British. The essay criticizes the application of nineteenth‐century models of empire to the understanding of the early modern composite monarchies in the New World. Finally, it explores the ways metropolitan natural philosophy was transformed in the New World (...)
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  24. The Missionaries of God's Love.Ken Barker - 2015 - The Australasian Catholic Record 92 (2):161.
    Barker, Ken The Missionaries of God's Love was erected by the Archbishop of Canberra and Goulburn as a clerical religious institute of diocesan right on 8 February 2014. As we increase in numbers and spread further internationally, we aim to eventually become an institute of pontifical right. We also have MGL sisters, who have the same charism. They are applying to be recognised as a public association of Christ's faithful, with a view towards, somewhere in the future, becoming a (...)
     
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  25.  2
    The missionary role of mainstream Christianity: Towards a narrative paradigm for social integration of minorities in pluralistic post-apartheid South Africa.John S. Klaasen - 2015 - HTS Theological Studies 71 (2):01-09.
    This article attempts to add to the existing approaches of practical theology and specifically to the missionary approaches of mainline churches towards immigrants. This is an attempt to enhance the mission amongst immigrants by critically engaging with the two approaches, namely: mainstream and margins and pillarization. Notwithstanding the important contributions that these two approaches make to tolerance, integration and cohesion of differences I seek to point out some serious limitations of the two approaches. These limitations include social coercion, co-option, relativism (...)
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  26. The missionaries of god's love: A new expression of consecrated life in a new ecclesial context.Ken Barker - 2012 - The Australasian Catholic Record 89 (2):208.
    Barker, Ken One of the lasting fruits of the wide-spread experience of the renewal in the Catholic Church since the Second Vatican Council has been the surprising emergence of new expressions of consecrated life. The Missionaries of God's Love (MGL) is an Australian example of this renaissance. Founded in Canberra in 1986 as a small fraternity of young men around a priest, the MGL brothers have now grown to more than twenty in final vows and more than thirty in (...)
     
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  27.  12
    Iberian Influences on Pan-American Bioethics: Bringing Don Quixote to Our Shores.Pablo Rodríguez Del Pozo & Joseph J. Fins - 2006 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 15 (3):225-238.
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  28.  15
    Missionary positions.Ann E. Cudd - 2000 - Hypatia 20 (4):164-182.
    : Postcolonial feminist scholars have described some Western feminist activism as imperialistic, drawing a comparison to the work of Christian missionaries from the West, who aided in the project of colonization and assimilation of non-Western cultures to Western ideas and practices. This comparison challenges feminists who advocate global human rights ideals or objective appraisals of social practices, in effect charging them with neocolonialism. This essay defends work on behalf of universal human rights, while granting that activists should recognize their (...)
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  29.  7
    Missionary in the context of religious realities of Ukraine.Anatolii M. Kolodnyi - 1997 - Ukrainian Religious Studies 5:57-58.
    May 19-20, this year a scientific conference on religious missionary issues in Ukraine took place in Kyiv. Co-organizers of the conference were the International Academy of Religious Freedom, the State Committee of Ukraine for Religious Affairs, the Department of Religious Studies at the Institute of Philosophy of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine. In addition to Ukrainian scholars, religious scholars from the United States, K. Dyurm and D. Little, already known in Ukraine, took part in her work.
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  30.  16
    American missionaries transmitting science in early twentieth‐century eastern tibet.Zhao Aidong - 2016 - Zygon 51 (1):113-127.
    This article is based on the author's extensive research on the missionaries to Tibet from the Disciples of Christ USA, and discusses various missionary efforts to transmit scientific and practical knowledge such as medicine, building, and agriculture in Eastern Tibet from 1904–1919. It shows that American missionaries played a prominent and distinctive role in the dissemination of scientific and practical knowledge as a result of their hard work and wisdom. In this sense, they made an important contribution to (...)
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  31.  13
    Missionary Self-Perception and Meaning-Making in Cross-Cultural Mission: A Cultural Psychological Analysis of the Narrative Identity of German Protestants.Maik Arnold - 2015 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 32 (4):240-255.
    The purpose of this article is to outline the missionary self-perception that is mediated in meaningful stories about activities and experiences of Protestants while serving as missionaries abroad. Research is based on a model of narrative identity that aids for understanding the dilemmatic aspects of identity: continuity/change, sameness/difference, agency/non-agency. Findings of a cultural psychological analysis of missionaries’ autobiographical narratives are presented in form of these three types of identity dilemmas and discussed with respect to their implications for cultural (...)
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  32. Iberian Science in the Renaissance: Ignored How Much Longer?Andrew Mellon - 2004 - Perspectives on Science 12 (1).
  33.  3
    Missionary Publishing in South Africa.Smangele Mathebula - 2013 - Logos 24 (1):41-46.
  34.  7
    Missionary ecclesiology in the early Pentecostal years.M. Mokienko - 2013 - Ukrainian Religious Studies 67:83-92.
    The most dynamic segment of the Protestant enclave of the twentieth century. consider the Pentecostal movement. His limits and variability have greatly corrected the global religious atlas. By some estimates, the number of followers of various Pentecostal communities reached the limit of millenia from 400 to 600 million followers75. Despite the doubts that may arise in the predictions of D. Barrett and others, it is difficult to deny that the success of Pentecostal / charismatic missionary activity in the second half (...)
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  35.  13
    Phoenicians in the Iberian Peninsula and the Matter of Tartessos.Gonzalo Rubio - 2022 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 140 (1):219.
    In Greek and Roman sources, Tartessos designates a geographical area and a legendary kingdom that flourished in the southwest of the Iberian Peninsula between the eighth and seventh centuries BCE. For decades, much research on pre-Roman Iberia has gravitated around the nature of Tartessos as an historical or mythical polity, its possible location, and the archaeological identification of Tartessic material culture. It seems now increasingly clear that what the Greeks called Tartessos was inextricably linked to the presence of Phoenician (...)
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  36.  6
    The Missionary Enterprise in China and America.Charles W. Hayford & John K. Fairbank - 1980 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 100 (2):207.
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  37.  18
    Artisanal culture in early modern Iberian and Atlantic worlds.Antonio Sánchez & Henrique Leitão - 2018 - Centaurus 60 (3):135-140.
    For several decades, historians have realized the limitations of analysing the historical past of science as a mere succession of theories. One of the most stimulating messages that the reinvention of the discipline has launched is that although there are obvious intellectual elements that promote the development and progress of science, there are also social, economic, and institutional aspects to consider. The history of science is no longer just a history of scientific ideas and theories, but also a history of (...)
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  38. Missionary Conquest: The Gospel and Native American Cultural Genocide.George E. Tinker - 1993
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  39.  5
    The 19th-century missionary literature: Biculturality and bi-religiosity, a reflection from the perspective of the wretched.Itumeleng D. Mothoagae & Themba Shingange - 2024 - HTS Theological Studies 80 (1):8.
    The 19th-century missionary literary genre provides us with a window into how the missionaries viewed African cultural systems, such as polygamy. In their minds, polygamy was one of the obstacles to converting Africans to Christianity. Baptism functioned as a theatre of power and submission. To access baptism, a convert had to abandon and strip themselves of that which made them Africans and adopt Western colonial Christian norms and principles. In this article, we argue that the condemnation of polygamy by (...)
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  40.  12
    A Missionary in Japan, 1910-1911.Mary Matteson Wilbur - 1999 - Chinese Studies in History 32 (3):35-59.
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  41. Popular science as knowledge: early modern Iberian-American repertorios de los tiempos.S. Orozco-Echeverri - 2023 - Galilaeana 20 (1):34-61.
    Iberian repertorios de los tiempos stemmed from Medieval almanacs and calendars. During the sixteenth century significant editorial, conceptual and material changes in repertorios incorporated astronomy, geography, chronology and natural philosophy. From De Li’s Repertorio (1492) to Zamorano’s Cronología (1585), the genre evolved from simple almanacs to more complex cosmological works which circulated throughout the Iberian-American world. This article claims that repertorios are a form of syncretic knowledge rather than “popular science” by relying on the concept of “knowledge in (...)
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  42.  4
    Essential Alternatives to Contemporary Missionary Training: For the Sake of Vulnerability to the Majority World.Jim Harries - 2019 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 36 (4):266-279.
    When the only advice on offer is unhelpful, a potential missionary might need to be advised to seek an alternative. Jesus, we take it, was not building a worldly empire. Christian mission has become associated with colonialism. Dominant advice often pushes Western missionaries to positions of strength. In order to be vulnerable, one needs an alternative to such advice. Economic domination of Africa by the West makes it hard to know when Africa’s people, long engrossed in patron/client relationships, are (...)
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  43.  9
    The Missionary Strategy of the Didache.Thomas O'Loughlin - 2011 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 28 (2):77-92.
    The Didache is a short text, which was likely intended to be committed to memory, offering training in ‘The Way’ of the Lord, the practices of the churches, and in the community’s hope for the future. Dating from the first century, and quite plausible from before 70 AD, it offers us a unique vantage point into the concerns, attitudes, and praxis of the communities who would have heard our gospels from the lips of the evangelists. The purpose of this paper (...)
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  44.  5
    A Missionary Social Worker in India: J. B. Hoffmann, the Chota Nagpur Tenancy Act and the Catholic Co-Operatives 1893-1928.Richard Fox Young & Peter Tete - 1987 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 107 (4):840.
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  45.  10
    Missionary Ethics in Q 10:2−12.Dieter T. Roth - 2012 - HTS Theological Studies 68 (1).
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  46. Letters from the marist missionaries in Oceania 1836-1854 [Book Review].Mary Roddy - 2017 - The Australasian Catholic Record 94 (1):124.
    Roddy, Mary Review of: Letters from the marist missionaries in Oceania 1836-1854, by ed. Charles Girard, Adelaide: ATF, 2015, pp. 753, hardback, $105.00; paperback, $79.95; pdf, $50.00.
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  47. American Missionaries and the Middle East: Foundational Encounters.[author unknown] - 2011
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  48.  4
    Missionary institutes in the missionary church.L. Kaufmann - 1968 - Heythrop Journal 9 (3):290-305.
  49. Missionary expansion of Islam in india.G. Koovackal - 1981 - Journal of Dharma 6 (2):197-214.
     
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  50.  6
    " Ongoing Missionary Labor": Building, Maintaining, and Expanding Chicana Studies/History an Interview with Vicki L. Ruiz.Vicki L. Ruiz & Leisa D. Meyer - 2008 - Feminist Studies 34 (1-2):23-45.
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