Results 221 to 230 of about 1,823 (274)
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Healing, Healthcare, Missions, and the Church
Journal of Christian Nursing, 2014Churches throughout history have modeled ministry on Jesus' life of reaching out, teaching, preaching, and healing. Kampala Baptist Church (KBC) in Uganda is one such church that works to care spiritually and physically for their community. Partnering with local healthcare providers and short- and long-term healthcare missionaries, the church is ...
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Mission to Church – Church to Mission: The First Ten Years, 1923–33
2022The first ten years of the BPCSA’s life was marked by internal organisation rather than missionary outreach. Despite being an independent denomination, the BPCSA continued to be dominated by mission council activity which hampered outreach activity. It remained dependent despite its autonomy.
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Reformulating the Mission of the Church
Missiology: An International Review, 1980It is time for the church to contextualize its mission in the world, says Professor Reuteler, who uses insights of political and liberation theology to suggest new emphases for the church. He takes the dialectic a step further to ask Third World theologians to question some of their own assumptions.
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Mission Theology of the Church
International Review of Mission, 2010AbstractThis article on the mission theology of the church, a personal perspective by the vice‐moderator of CWME, draws on documentation produced by the commission and also responds to the Faith and Order document, The Nature and Mission of the Church.
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2001
AbstractBritish and French missions and colonization were closely related. The pace of Christianization varied, for Pacific Islanders and Aborigines were not just passive recipients, but actively sought advantages from conversion and formed adjustment cults. As migration increased, settler churches were formed.
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AbstractBritish and French missions and colonization were closely related. The pace of Christianization varied, for Pacific Islanders and Aborigines were not just passive recipients, but actively sought advantages from conversion and formed adjustment cults. As migration increased, settler churches were formed.
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From Mission to Church: The Heritage of the Church Mission Society
International Bulletin of Missionary Research, 1999openaire +1 more source

