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	<title>The Pneuma Review &#187; good news</title>
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		<title>Good News for Body and Soul</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Mar 2022 19:18:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Woodrow Walton]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Church History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spring 2021]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[A. W. Tozer]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[A.B. Simpson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Andrew Walls]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[body]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[China Inland Mission]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Clapham]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Comenius]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[good news]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hawaii]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kathryn Long]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[London Missionary Society]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[papua]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ruth Tucker]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[soul]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[three-self]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Christian historian Woodrow Walton continues his series on how the good news of what Jesus had done has spread around the world. In Part 4, we read how his followers made the love of God more real in England and the USA as they immersed themselves in charitable work. The Great Commission was being realized [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="padding-left: 40px;"><em>Christian historian Woodrow Walton continues his series on how the good news of what Jesus had done has spread around the world. In <a href="/the-making-of-the-christian-global-mission-part-4-charity-invites-change/">Part 4</a>, we read how his followers made the love of God more real in England and the USA as they immersed themselves in charitable work. The Great Commission was being realized as a missionary mandate because it was recognized to be more than just proclamation. The missionary mandate included healing the sick, discipleship, releasing the imprisoned, the afflicted, the haunted, the down-trodden, and penetrating the darkness of the world with the light of a kingdom not of this world but of the one who is King of Kings and Lord of Lords.</em> <!-- wp:paragraph --></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>The Making of the Christian Global Mission, Part 5: Good News for Body and Soul</strong></p>
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<div style="width: 360px" class="wp-caption alignright"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/City_of_Manokwari.jpg" alt="" width="350" height="233" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Manokwari, the capital of West Papua, Indonesia (formerly known as Irian Jaya). <small>Image: David Worabay / Wikimedia Commons</small></p></div>
<p><!-- wp:paragraph -->Another situation began arising toward the end of the eighteenth century and within the first eight to nine years of the nineteenth was the extension of English missionaries into China, partly due to Sir Francis Drake’s circumnavigation of the globe. Drake’s presence in the western Pacific was critical for England to begin with as the merchant ships of the Netherlands were also present especially in the vicinity of the Spice Islands now known as Indonesia while eastward toward the central Pacific the Spanish Galleons docking and disembarking from Manila in the Philippines. Robert Morrison arrived in China in 1807 from England, three years before Adoniram Judson and his wife arrived in Burma as missionaries representing the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. The English missionaries concentrated on inland China and besides preaching the gospel established schools and medical facilities. This concentration culminated in the formation of what became known as the China Inland Mission founded by Hudson Taylor and his wife in 1865. A faith mission, the China Inland Mission operated on the basis that one went without financial support and with trust in God for provision. There were also no stipulation as to the gender of the missionary. Of the fifteen missionaries on Taylor’s initial journey into inland China, seven were seven single women. This pattern would remain not only for the China Inland Mission, now known as Operation Mobilization, but was adopted by other mission societies clear into the twentieth century and into the twenty-first.</p>
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<p>By the turn of the 19<sup>th</sup> century into the 20<sup>th</sup> there were forty women’s mission organizations, and more women were serving in American missions than men. Both Ruth A. Tucker’s <em><a href="https://amzn.to/3w2edQL">From Jerusalem to Irian Jaya</a> </em>(Zondervan, 1983, p. 288) and Andrew Walls’ <em><a href="https://amzn.to/3iool2g">The Cross-Cultural Process in Christian History</a> </em>(Maryknoll, NY; Orbis Books, 2002, p. 231) attest to this figure.</p>
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<p>The end result of England’s entry into organized mission societies having a thought-out mission agenda involving evangelism, education, medicine, and outreach to those in direst need had a direct effect upon the whole Christian spectrum with Presbyterians, Methodists, Anglicans, Catholics, Baptists, and others imitating the China Inland Mission. It began the process that was to eventuate in breaking down the walls among Christians on the mission field and at home.</p>
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<p>It also redesigned the character of the Christian world as it fostered and gave birth to the indigenization of the Christian message in which the various congregations birthed in each country took initiatives in leadership, mission outreach, and self-funding. It was in the late nineteenth century, about 1895, when Roland Allen, sent out from England by the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel, advised missionaries to found their work on the idea of the Three Selfs–self-governing, self-funding, and self-propagating.”</p>
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<p>One can trace the origin of the “three-self” movement and the spread of each body of Christians indigenous to the country in which the gospel took hold back to the years that the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions sent out Adoniram Judson and his wife and family in the early 1800s and the China Inland Mission and the London Missionary Society later. Between 1807 and ending in 1953 with the departure of Arthur Matthews and Dr. Rupert Clark of the China Inland Mission, thousands of foreign Protestant missionaries and their families lived and worked in China alone not to mention southeast Asia and the sub-continent of India. At the time of the Treaty of Paris in 1763 which ended the French and Indian War which ensured British dominance in Canada and India and the independence of what came to be known as the United States of America, the way was made for the furtherance of the gospel within the British-held lands from Canada, Barbados in the Caribbean, India, Australia, New Zealand, and eastern Africa.</p>
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<p>The Mission Covenant Church of Sweden extended itself from Sweden into its settlement which later became known as Delaware and then spread its congregations across the American Midwest and the northern plains states. The Netherlands swapped possessions with England. England gained New York and the Netherlands gained the Spice Islands later re-named Indonesia. During the Dutch period, the Marble Collegiate Church of New York City was built as a congregation of the Dutch Reformed Church. The Christian Reformed Church also from the Netherlands spread across the American northern states, established congregations, schools and Christian publishing houses all across the northern Midwest. Into China went the American Presbyterian Mission, the American Southern Baptist Mission, the English Presbyterian Mission, the Protestant Episcopal Mission, and the English Baptist Missionary Society, to name a few.<br />
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<div style="width: 360px" class="wp-caption alignleft"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/MustangNepal.jpg" alt="" width="350" height="263" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Mustang, Nepal. The name &#8220;Mustang&#8221; comes from the Tibetan language and means, &#8220;Plain of Aspiration.&#8221;<br /><small>Image: Anup Raj Rai / Wikimedia Commons</small></p></div>
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<p>There were problems to contend with when the missionaries entered areas of central Asia and even China. One of the problems was the presence of Islam in western, central, and southern Asia. Another was the prominence of Hinduism and a multiplicity of differing people groups in India and in the Himalayan mountain chain where lived the inhabitants of Bhutan, Tibet, and Mustang, Nepal, to name a few. Still another was that of unfamiliarity with the remnants of Eastern Christians long isolated from those of the Mediterranean world and of Europe by the westward advance of Arabic, Mongols, and Turkic peoples into the Mediterranean and Eastern European lands. The Church of the East, erroneously called Nestorians by the Greek Orthodox Church, had adherents in northwestern India and held to the Syriac translation of the Bible while the Europeans had the King James Version, the Geneva Bible, or the translation into German by Luther. It took a number of years for acceptance of each other as fellow Christians in a common gospel mission. In time that acceptance came.</p>
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<p><img class="alignright" src="/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/KLong-GodInTheRainforest.jpg" alt="" width="160" height="243" />At the same time the sense of a fuller Christian mission emerged beyond that of evangelism as the missionaries from England, America, and Europe included nurses, schools, hospitals. In fact, the evangelical churches as the Methodists, Baptists, Lutherans, and the Cumberland Presbyterians had more women missionaries than men. This became increasingly so with the passage of the nineteenth century that by the early 20<sup>th</sup> century “Among the personnel of conservative faith missions, women outnumbered men nearly two to one,” wrote Kathryn T. Long in her recent book <em><a href="https://amzn.to/3gixMyL">God in the Rain Forest</a> (</em>New York: Oxford University Press, 2019, p.28). Leading in this trend were the “Brethren” such as the Plymouth Brethren, the Church of the Brethren to name and the Christian and Missionary Alliance.</p>
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<p>The American origin arose with a Presbyterian Minister, Rev. John J. Shepherd and a missionary Philo P. Stewart in the summer of 1832. These two men became friends in Elyria, Ohio. The two were concerned with what they discerned to be the lack of strong Christian principles among the settlers of the American west. The two decided to establish a college where they would “train teachers and Christian leaders for the boundless most desolate fields in the West.” They found support from Albert Finney, a circuit-riding Presbyterian evangelist. They adopted the some of the ideas of an Alsatian pastor John Frederick Oberlin, who introduced educational programs throughout the Alsace and Lorraine areas of France. Oberlin’s programs not only included biblical and Christian studies but courses in the manual trades as blacksmithing, masonry, and road construction. In the spring of 1833, with faith in their project and their labor, combined with funding from several wealthy and sources, and promotion from Rev. Finney, Shepherd and Stewart established the town of Oberlin, Ohio and Oberlin College. It was a high-water moment. In December 1832, 29 men and 15 women began classes of the Oberlin Collegiate Institute. It was the first school in America to welcome into its program African Americans. It was critical for those who would be ministers of the Gospel in the developing American West and important for co-educational higher education in America.<br />
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<p>Oberlin was not the only important school of higher education established in the opening of the American mid-west. Seven years after the founding of Oberlin College, Bethany College was founded in the foothills of the Allegheny Mountains, one mile from Pennsylvania and five miles from Ohio in the neck of what is now known as West Virginia, in 1840, by anti-burgher seceder Presbyterian preacher Alexander Campbell, one of the participants in the Second Great Awakening of the 1820s and who in 1832 in Lexington, Kentucky, along with Barton Warren Stone, a New Light Presbyterian, formed the Christian Churches (Disciples of Christ). Each believed in opening the celebration of the Lord’s Last Supper to the new frontiersmen and settlers of the Midwestern lands irrespective of their past church affiliations be they Methodist, Baptist, Quaker, Mennonite, Catholic, or Moravian. In fact, Campbell had high regard for Comenius, the Czech Brethren minister, who had one time was invited by the founders of Harvard University to be its first President [Editor&#8217;s note: see Further Reading at the end of this article]. Comenius declined the offer but did encourage the founding of America’s first primary schools for children. Campbell adopted a statement made by Comenius as the hallmark of the Christian Churches (Disciples of Christ): “In faith, Unity; in opinion, Liberty; and in all things, Brotherly Love.”</p>
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<p>This regard for open communion among the churches foreshadowed what we now call the Christian ecumenical movement of the late 1890s and the early 1900s. Another step that Campbell took thirteen years later in 1845 was the creation of the United Christian Missionary Society through which congregations could co-operatively support missionaries wherever they went whether Africa, India, South America, Asia, or elsewhere.</p>
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<p>At the same time by the 1830s the Midwestern lands were progressively being welcomed into the union as new states, beginning with Ohio Kentucky, and later Indiana. The expansion westward required something more than pastors. The need for traveling evangelists, preachers, and teachers became increasingly important and men like Francis Asbury, Thomas Coke, and Peter Cartwright for the Methodists went as circuit preachers and evangelists. Asbury and Coke became the makers of the Methodist Church in America more so than Wesley who retained his identity as an Anglican evangelist. Walter Scott was the outstanding evangelist for the Christian Churches (Disciples of Christ). Other Christian bodies followed suit in sending out circuit riding pastors who served more than one congregation. The evangelists sought any potential setting outdoors or meeting house. Cartwright once held an evangelistic meeting in a frontier dance-hall.</p>
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<p>At the time of the settling of the American Midwest, Great Britain was forging ahead in foreign missions. England, having lost out in gaining ground in what became known as the United States of America concentrated on developing what became known as Canada and its growing influence in East Africa, India, and the Pacific.<br />
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<p>The evangelical presence in England occasioned by the preaching of John Wesley occasioned the establishment of a society made up of Church of England laymen and their wives and single women based in Clapham, London, at the beginning of the 1800’s. Historian Stephen Michael Tomkins described the society as “a network of friends and families in England, with William Wilberforce as its centre of gravity, who were powerfully bound together by their shared moral and spiritual values. They were noted for their social activism, by their love for each other, and for taking the gospel throughout the world.” The Clapham Society focused on the abolition of slavery. It initially gathered at the church of John Venn, rector of the evangelical Anglican Church in the Clapham neighbor- hood in south London. Its membership not only included Wilbur Wilberforce, but also Henry Thornton, and John Newton, rector of an evangelical Anglican church in Olney, who gained fame as lyricist of the hymn “Amazing Grace” in memory of his conversion to Christ Jesus and put to music later in 1831 to a traditional American melody by Edwin O. Excell to appear in Carrell and Clayton’s <em>Virginia Harmony.</em></p>
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<p>As intimated in the foregoing, the Clapham Sect had an influence far beyond England and had set a precedent for American, as well as British, evangelical Christianity, as well as India and the rest of the English-speaking world. The Clapham Group also had clout politically, economically, and socially as Wilberforce and Newton and the others brought an end to African slavery throughout the British sphere of influence by 1831, and in a round-about way had an impact on the American abolition movement. The Clapham sect, as it came to be called, also had direct impact upon “foreign” missions as the participants practically underwrote the entire missionary enterprise outside of the British isles. Among the evangelicals were Henry Thornton, the English financier and Zachary Macauley, sometime Governor of Sierra Leone, and Lord Teigmouth formerly Governor-General of India. The term “Clapham Sect” was a later description given to the group by James Stephen in an article of 1844 which uplifted the work of the membership. They were among the founders of the Church Mission Society, the Anti-Slavery Society, the Free Church of England and other Christian-related outreaches.</p>
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<p>England also set a precedent worth noting as affecting the later course of action within its overseas “possessions.” England set up a political infrastructure which allowed a stable representative government should they seek independence from the “Mother Country.” This transition differed radically from that of Spanish, Belgic, and French policies, and most likely furthered by the Clapham Sect whose membership was characterized by individuals prominent in both the House of Commons and the House of Lords in the British Parliament.</p>
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<p>The consequence of such was a great interest in sending missionaries into India not only as evangelists but also as educators. India, however, was not solely the mission field for the British. About the same time it attracted missionaries from the United States of America at an early date and simultaneous with the westward movement. The apparent earliest American missionary to India was Dr. John Scudder, Sr., and his wife, Elizabeth. Their story is unique in the history of missionary outreach as their children, and grandchildren, and great-grandchildren carried out their parents and grandparents for four or more generations.</p>
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<div class="simplePullQuote"><p><b style="mso-bidi-font-weight: normal;"><i style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal;">Between the 1840s and 1900 there were dramatic changes in missionary outreach through Europe, America, and elsewhere.</i></b></p>
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<p>Born in Freehold Township, New Jersey, September 3, 1793, Rev. Dr. John Scudder, Sr., was the first medical missionary in Ceylon and India. He graduated from Princeton University, a school of the Reformed Church in America in 1811, and went on to study at the New York College of Physicians and Surgeons and graduated from there in 1813. After experiencing success as a Physician in New York City, he felt God’s call to be a missionary. He and Elizabeth founded the first American medical facility in Asia in Ceylon and later became the first American medical missionary in India. The succeeding four generations of children, grand-children, and great-grandchildren, carried on that mission. Dr. Ida Sophia Scudder, born on December 9, 1870, of the third generation, a great-granddaughter, carried on her great grandfather’s legacy. In 1918, she started one of Asia’s finest teaching hospitals, the Christian Medical College &amp; Hospital in Vellore, India. She served her whole life in India dedicating herself to the health of Indian women in the fight against cholera, leprosy, and the bubonic plague. She was back in the United States of America for a brief period to study at Dwight L. Moody’s Northfield Seminary in Massachusetts but returned to Madras in India to help her father, Rev. Dr. John Scudder, Jr., when her mother was ill at the mission bungalow at Tindivanam, Madras Province in India. Ida Scudder lived to be nearly 90 in 1970. She died at the age of 89 in her home in India. One of her noted students who studied under her and worked with her was the noted Dr. Paul Brand, who did most of his work as a leprosy researcher.</p>
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<p>Between the 1840s and 1900 there were dramatic changes in missionary outreach through Europe, America, and elsewhere. Among the changes were growing co-operation among the churches of differing Reformation traditions. Another was the creation of Wheaton College in Illinois in 1860 which became a school for missionaries and evangelists and which at its time of formation, a haven for African-Americans, as a way station of the Underground Railroad. In 1877, the inner-city mission field opened up in Chicago, Illinois, when Colonel George and Sarah Dunn Clarke opened a ministry in a tiny storefront at 386 South Clark Street. The Pacific Garden Mission still operates after 140 years as the oldest inner-urban rescue mission in the United States of America, and today has a nation-wide broadcast.</p>
<div style="width: 158px" class="wp-caption alignleft"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/ABSimpson.png" alt="" width="148" height="149" /><p class="wp-caption-text">A. B. Simpson (1843-1919)</p></div>
<p>In 1870 A.B. Simpson left a successful pastorate in New York City when he had the call to reach the lost and forgotten within the urban areas of both the United States of America and of the global world. He established the New York Gospel Tabernacle and set up a Missionary Training Institute to provide training for men and women to take the gospel to the urban centers of the world. In 1884, he sent out the first team of missionaries to Lusaka in the Congo. Not long after another team was sent to Tokyo in Japan. The Christian and Missionary Alliance was formed as a missionary society. The earliest congregations were known as branches which were made up of members from the major denominations. In 1919, Simpson died and Dr. Paul Rader was chosen to lead the Christian and Missionary Alliance. One of the most well-known C &amp; MA spokesmen was A.W. Tozer.</p>
<div style="width: 130px" class="wp-caption alignright"><a href="https://amzn.to/3xjGJOi"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/AWTozer-CrucifiedLife.jpg" alt="" width="120" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text"><em><a href="https://amzn.to/3xjGJOi">The Crucified Life: How To Live Out A Deeper Christian Experience</a></em></p></div>
<div style="width: 130px" class="wp-caption alignright"><a href="https://amzn.to/3xjGJOi"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/AWTozer-ExperiencingPresenceGod.jpg" alt="" width="120" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text"><em><a href="https://amzn.to/3wompeo">Experiencing the Presence of God: Teachings from the Book of Hebrews</a></em></p></div>
<div style="width: 130px" class="wp-caption alignright"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/AWTozer-GodsPursuitMan.jpg" alt="" width="120" /><p class="wp-caption-text"><em><a href="https://amzn.to/3cCFVMn">God&#8217;s Pursuit of Man</a></em></p></div>
<div style="width: 140px" class="wp-caption alignright"><img class="" src="/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/AWTozer.jpg" alt="" width="130" height="130" /><p class="wp-caption-text">A. W. Tozer (1897-1963)</p></div>
<p>Within the time frame of the 1860s and the 1880s the spread of the Christian missionary endeavor was more and more a global endeavor and much organized beyond that of the individual workers in the field and much more in line with Jesus’ total vision as outlined in Luke 10:1-12 and much more organized both within the different church groups and in some instances co-operative one with the other in a common endeavor. By 1868, the London Missionary Society sent out Griffith John into China where he labored at Sichuau. In 1881, Samuel R. Clark of the China Inland Mission was the first to rent a home in Chengchu and was one of the responsible individuals in establishing Huafi Hospital.</p>
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<p>In the same year the West China Union University, now Sichuan University was established and a Foundling Hospital founded. Today Christianity is part of the mainstream of China’s landscape due to the English and American missionary endeavor and has been able to weather the abuse by the Communist takeover under Mao Tse Tung. Islam is dominant only among non-Chinese ethnic groups on China’s outer margins. Christians make up the third largest grouping after Buddhism and those who practice folk religions. More important the Christian faith is strongest within the countryside and mostly away from Beijing and the seats of political power. This is due to the fact that the missionaries of the late 18<sup>th</sup> and the major part of the 19<sup>th</sup> majored on inland China. To relate the conditions of the 20<sup>th</sup> century or even the present is getting ahead of this narrative.</p>
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<p><div class="simplePullQuote"><p><b>“True and absolute freedom is only found in the presence of God.” – A.W. Tozer</b></p>
</div>There is yet another feature of the late 18<sup>th</sup> century and the first seventy years of the 19<sup>th</sup> not yet touched especially with regards to the spread of the gospel across the trans-Mississippi west of an “adolescent” United States and of that sector of the world referred to as Oceania and consists of diverse people groups and cultures living in four major clusters of islands, Melanesia, Polynesia, Micronesia, and in the larger land masses of Australia and New Zealand though the later two could qualify as continents or “over-sized Islands.” There are thousands of smaller islands in the Pacific ocean. The first narrative of the missionary enterprise within the southern Pacific was written by John Williams in 1837 who wote <em>A Narrative of Missionary Enterprise in the South Sea Islands </em>(London: J. Snow &amp; J.R. Leifchild, p. 8). The Hawaii Islands barely makes it in as they are north of the equator by 25 or 24 degrees and yet are considered to be part of the triangle which has New Zealand and Australia to the southwest and Easter Island to the southeast along the 30 degree south of the equator, west of Chile in South America.</p>
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<p>The earliest known contact is recorded on a plaque worked into a wall of rectangular platform built of close fitting stones, and given the Hawaiian title of <em>Hikiau Heiau</em>. On the front side was an obelisk built of the same lava rock but secured in a very non-Polynesian way. The obelisk stood twelve feet high and was mounted with a <a href="https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2400318/hikiau-heiau-sacred-temple">bronze commemorative plaque</a> that read:</p>
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<div style="width: 261px" class="wp-caption alignright"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/wikimedia-Kealakekua_Bay_in_the_morning.jpg" alt="" width="251" height="167" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Kealakekua Bay in the morning.<br /> <small>Image: Wikimedia Commons</small></p></div>
<p class="has-text-align-center" style="text-align: center;">In this Heiau,<br />
January 28, 1779,<br />
Captain James Cook R.N.<br />
read the English burial service over<br />
William Watman, Seaman.<br />
The first recorded<br />
Christian Service<br />
in the Hawaiian Islands.<br />
Erected by the Kona Civic Club, 1928</p>
<p>Here was a far different record from the one the <em>heiau </em>actually told. This was a record of an accidental arrival of the Christian gospel. However, this record is more like a record of the coming of Englishmen in the South Pacific, more specifically that part to the east and southeast of Indonesia, New Guinea and Sumatra and southeast of the Philippines and including to that part of the Pacific referred to as the Coral Sea. Oceania includes the Solomon Islands, Tahiti, and a large number of small islands and an island group known as the Marquesas. The Pacific as a whole is a little over 12,000 miles (180 degrees ) across. North to south, from the Aleutian Islands off the coast of Alaska to the Antarctic , the ocean stretches nearly 10,000 miles. Magellan entered into Oceania in the 1500s but that was all he did as he sailed northward along the western coast of South America until he came out of Oceania by turning westward from coastal Peru and sailed westward until his ship entered into the area of the Philippine Islands.</p>
<p>Spanish, British, and Dutch ships entered the far western edge of Oceania where the Indian Ocean ends and the Pacific begins and skirted northeastward to the Malay peninsula and the coastal waters of southeast Asia, China, Indonesia, to Where the South China Sea meets the Pacific. This vast area so described by The European navigators became the last frontier of Christian mission. It started not by Christians from either North America or South America but by English, Portuguese, Dutch, and Americans already present in Calcutta, Thailand, the islands of Macao, Hong Kong, Singapore, the Spice Islands, and Sumatra. Western New Guinea, later known as Irian Jaya, lay within this part of the Pacific while the larger landmass of New Guinea lay within the sea lanes of Oceania which stretched toward New Zealand and Easter Island some ten thousand miles or more. The first Christian missionaries who entered western New Guinea came with the Dutch merchantmen who entered the waters of the Spice Islands.</p>
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<p>About the same time that England, The Netherlands, Portuguese, the Spanish and French were plying the inner seas washing the shores of North America, South America, Africa, India, and Southeast Asia, turmoil was seething back in Europe, mainly France and especially central and eastern Europe. In 1685, King Louis XIV issued the Edict of Fontainebleau which ordered that Huguenot [French Reformed] Church buildings and schools be closed. The state-sanctioned suppression of all non-Catholics moved to a new stage.</p>
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<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>PR</strong></p>
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<p><strong>Further Reading:</strong></p>
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<p>For more on Comenius, the father of modern education, see: <a href="/global-pentecostal-renaissance-jhittenberger/">Global Pentecostal Renaissance? Reflections on Pentecostalism, Culture, and Higher Education</a>, by Jeff Hittenberger</p>
<p><a href="/author/bernieavandewalle/">Bernie Van De Walle</a> reviews: <a href="/michael-yount-a-b-simpson/">Michael G. Yount, <em>A. B. Simpson: His Message and Impact on the Third Great Awakening</em></a> (2016)</p>
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		<title>The Making of the Christian Global Mission, Part 3: Setting a Better Example</title>
		<link>https://pneumareview.com/the-making-of-the-christian-global-mission-part-3-setting-a-better-example/</link>
		<comments>https://pneumareview.com/the-making-of-the-christian-global-mission-part-3-setting-a-better-example/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 07 Nov 2020 21:38:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Woodrow Walton]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Church History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fall 2020]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Adoniram Judson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Barton Warren Stone]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[camp meeting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[campbell]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[christian]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[evangelism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[George Fox]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[global]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[good news]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[making]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mission]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[quakers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Richard Foster]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Second Great Awakening]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[setting]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Christian historian Woodrow Walton continues his investigation into the origins of the modern movements that inspired Christians to go and share the mission and message of Jesus throughout the world. In Part 3, he invites us to learn more about the Quakers and other marginalized groups whose convictions had them following God on paths often [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="aligncenter" src="http://pneumareview.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/WWalton-SettingBetterExample.jpg" alt="" width="499" height="331" /></p>
<blockquote><p><em>Christian historian Woodrow Walton continues his investigation into the origins of the modern movements that inspired Christians to go and share the mission and message of Jesus throughout the world. In Part 3, he invites us to learn more about the Quakers and other marginalized groups whose convictions had them following God on paths often disdained by other Christians.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>In the 17<sup>th</sup> and 18<sup>th</sup> centuries, events were unfolding in England, Europe and North America that would change how the gospel message was being proclaimed. Although little was being done in the strict evangelical sense of proclaiming the message (<em>kerygma</em>), much was done in the area of the living out of the Christian message and in the complexion or appearance of the total church in Europe and especially in North America.</p>
<p>During this time, Southern Europe, especially along the Mediterranean coastline, remained dominantly Roman Catholic, from Portugal all the way to the Balkans and no further. The Balkans were strongly Orthodox within a growing Islamic presence. Slavic Europe, outside of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, was also Orthodox. Austria-Hungary and the Czech and Slovak areas remained Catholic but were quickly experiencing the effects of the Protestant Reformation and the Anabaptist Radical Reformation. The Hussite Brethren, better known as the Moravians, were leaving for western Europe and then continuing to go overseas. However, similar Brethren bodies, such as the Mennonites, the Amish, and the Hutterian Brethren, remained. These had a significant impact on the Christian complexion of Eastern Europe outside of Russia.</p>
<p>To see the unfolding of the worldwide Christian mission, let us look at England and Germany in particular. First, there are two Englishmen worthy of attention, George Fox and William Penn.</p>
<p>George Fox was born on July 1624 in Drayton-in-the-Clay, Leicester, England, and is credited with being the founder of the Society of Friends, now known as the Quakers. By the time that he turned 19 years of age, he was conscious of an “inner voice” which evangelicals and Pentecostals would identify as the leading of the Holy Spirit. Fox became an assiduous student of the Bible. He was the first person on record to argue for the equality of women with men in the propagation of the gospel. In 1647, Fox began preaching publicly. He preached in fields and markets. He attracted gatherings of people who flocked to listen to his messages. At times, they gathered in houses after the services. Originally, the new believers referred to themselves as “Children of the Light” or “Friends of the Truth” and later still “Friends,” a term which continued to be in use along with “Quaker.” Fox became a public figure, but not of his own making. Officials were suspicious of him because of the stands he took on military service, the place of women in home and in public, and how the incarcerated and children should be treated.</p>
<div style="width: 510px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img src="http://pneumareview.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/1024px-FoxRefusingOath.jpg" alt="" width="500" /><p class="wp-caption-text">George Fox refusing to take the oath at Houlker Hall, 1663. From a painting by John Pettie (1839-1893).<br /><small>Image: Wikimedia Commons</small></p></div>
<p>At the same time, he gained approval from people in prominent positions: James Naylor, a prominent preacher in London, became one of Fox’s first converts to the Quaker position. By the end of the 1650s, the Society of Friends became more organized. The British Commonwealth under Cromwell in the 1650s was also the Friends’ most creative period. Even though the restoration of the monarchy was threatening for the Friends, now characterized as Quakers, it became the era when believers migrated to North America and settled in Puritan New England. The revolt in 1661 by the Fifth Monarchists led to the suppression of the Quakers and the repression of other dissenters, instigating an exodus. It was in the aftermath of the Fifth Monarchist coup that Fox and eleven other leaders among the Friends issued a statement which became known as “the peace testimony” from which stems their stand against military conscription.</p>
<div style="width: 330px" class="wp-caption alignright"><img src="http://pneumareview.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/AssemblyOfQuakers-460x333.jpg" alt="" width="320" height="232" /><p class="wp-caption-text">A woman preaches during a Quaker Meeting in London (<em>circa</em> 1723), engraving by Bernard Picard (1673-1733).<br /><small>Image: Wikimedia Commons</small></p></div>
<p>Their stand against military conscription and for equality of rights between men and women in both civil matters and the ministry of the church. This did not sit well with many in either England or Puritan New England. When some of the New England Quakers came to London to plead their case, Fox met with them. After his release from prison in 1666 for refusing to swear the oath of allegiance to the existing political regime in England, Fox set about normalizing a system of monthly and quarterly meetings throughout Great Britain, extending to Ireland’s Quaker population, a system which has persisted to this day. In 1669, Fox married a widow with eight children, Margaret, at a Quaker meeting in Bristol. They shared together in the administration the Society of Friends. In 1671, George and Margaret Fox embarked on a voyage to the West Indies and North America where they visited groups of Quakers who had earlier left England for Barbados, Jamaica, Maryland, and North Carolina. After the travels abroad, the Foxes returned to England. It was there that George and Margaret met with William Penn and Robert Barclay, men of wealth and position who became allied with the Friends.</p>
<p>In 1683, Penn, who had been granted land in North America, turned 1,000 acres of land in the colony of Pennsylvania to Fox and the Quakers. Although Fox was never able to visit for himself the Quaker colony in Pennsylvania, he was overjoyed with what was granted. Penn, himself a Quaker, furthered the ministry within Pennsylvania. The Act of Toleration of 1689 put an end to the uniformity law under which the Friends and other dissenting Christians had been discriminated against and persecuted. It was a great day for Fox and the expanding Quaker movement, both within what would later become the United States of America, and in the Netherlands, Poland, Denmark and Germany. Fox died in January 13, 1691, soon after preaching at the Gracechurch Meeting House in London. He left a journal and letters and other writings which were subsequently published after his death. His name is immortalized at the prestigious George Fox University with campuses in Portland, Salem, Newberg, and Redmond, Oregon.</p>
<p><div class="simplePullQuote"><p><strong><em>The Quaker emphasis on the leading of God’s Holy Spirit became apparent in how they lived, their total Christian witness.</em></strong></p>
</div>What the Quakers added to the global world mission was based in large part on Luke 9:1-6 and 10:1-20, and similar passages in which Jesus not only commissioned his apostles to preach the kingdom of God but to also heal the sick. They also noted that Mary, who had gone to the Garden tomb and seen the risen Jesus, was sent by Jesus to tell the eleven apostles: “He is Risen.” The Quakers scoured the New Testament, recognizing the total ministry of Jesus beyond that of preaching the good news. Quakers in the infant United States, for a while, faced discrimination, for not taking up arms against Great Britain during the Revolutionary War against England. That ended, however, when the colonial government observed that the Quakers specialized in healing wounded soldiers. They, along with the Mennonites, were in the forefront of creating a corps of medical personnel for the colonial military. They cared for the wounded and dying and also furnished programs for soldiers returning home from battle. They also brought the good news of the gospel to the incarcerated.</p>
<p>Of equal importance was the Quaker emphasis on the leading of God’s Holy Spirit in a person’s life and, thereby, an increase of Christian witness. The spiritual health of the witness is as important as the sermon that is preached. Walt Whitman, who was raised by parents inspired by Quaker principles, wrote of George Fox: “George Fox stands for something too—a thought—the thought that wakes in silent hours—perhaps the deepest, most eternal thought latent in the human soul. This is the thought of God, merged in the thoughts of moral right and the immortality of identity” (<em>Prose Works</em>, Philadelphia, David McKay, 1892). Modern Christians have taken seriously the writings of Elton Trueblood, who for years taught at Earlham University in Indiana, on how Christians are yoke-fellows in Christ’s work of outreach and ministry. This writer has met Dr. Trueblood in person at a meeting in Fort Worth, Texas, around 1956, at the Texas Christian University.</p>
<div style="width: 170px" class="wp-caption alignright"><a href="http://pneumareview.com/the-gospel-in-history-series"><img src="http://pneumareview.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/4Evangelists-BookOfKells-Fol027v.jpg" alt="" width="160" height="211" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">This article is part of <a href="http://pneumareview.com/the-gospel-in-history-series/">The Gospel in History</a> series by <a href="http://pneumareview.com/author/woodrowewalton/">Woodrow Walton</a>.<br /> Image: <em>The Books of Kells</em> by way of Wikimedia Commons.</p></div>
<p>The work of Richard Foster, who inspired the Renovaré moment and the <em><a href="https://amzn.to/3p0wtH0">Renovaré Spiritual Formation Study Bible</a></em>, is another example of Quaker influence. The Renovaré Study Bible is an inter-denominational venture that seeks to plumb the spiritual depths of the Scriptures using quotations of Christians from the past with the intent of deepening the devotional life of the believer and consequently improve the quality of Christian witness.</p>
<p>A side effect of Penn’s donation of land to the Quakers was to encourage the settlement of the same area by other dissident Christian groups, particularly those with pacifist leanings such as the Mennonites of the Netherlands and the Amish of Switzerland. The designated land was composed of what is now known as Lancaster County, which historians consider the birthplace of American agriculture. The new Mennonite and Amish immigrants were principally farmers and agriculturists. Their children would later migrate into the American Midwest, during James Monroe’s presidency in the early 1820s, taking their agricultural skills with them. These migrations saw the development of farmlands in Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, and Iowa. Cedar Rapids, Iowa, proudly displays a billboard advertising Quaker Oats as you enter the city. These families also displayed a quality of Christian life that enabled them to relate to the Native Americans of that section of our country. One of the earliest of these was the family of Daniel Boone. His earliest portrait identified him, by way of personal adornment and headwear, as a Quaker, a portrait that dispels the myth built around him by the Motion Picture industry and modern television frontier drama. Boone and his family of six children were able to balance the scales between the way of life of Native Americans and that of the immigrant settlers coming from the East.</p>
<p>What this did was to give a larger scope to the mission of the church beyond the preaching and purely evangelical to include the presentation of the Christian life lived out beyond that of preaching. The role of the church is not only that of the kerygma (proclamation) and the didactic (teaching) but the presentation of a kind of communal life which reaches outward beyond itself to reconcile, heal, extend mercy, befriend, encourage, and inspire.</p>
<p><div class="simplePullQuote"><p><strong><em>The USA’s first foreign mission board was formed when churches were able to set aside their extreme congregationalism.</em></strong></p>
</div>Not just the Quakers, Mennonites, and Amish were encourage by William Penn to settle the Penn’s Woods (Pennsylvania). In 1734, a large number of Salzburg Brethren from Bavaria came into Oglethorpe’s colony of Georgia and settled an area twenty-five miles south of Savannah, a settlement that became known as Ebenezer, Georgia.</p>
<p>What would become the United States of America was not merely a haven for different Christian groups from England and Europe. For many colonial American Christian leaders, it was also a model of what was envisioned by Peter the apostle when he spoke at the festival of the Pentecost a short time after Jesus’ ascension and by John, years later, when, banished to the island of Patmos, he envisioned those who were redeemed “out of every tribe and tongue and people and nation” (Revelation 5:9-10). It is important to note that within that vision, the redeemed were not identified by their church polity, interpretive stance, racial or ethnic origin, but having come from every tribe, tongue, people and nation whether Slavic, Germanic, Scandinavian, African, Asian, or whatever. It would take another century for some incoming church groups to set aside prejudices and begin to co-operate in both evangelism and outreach and in some cases merge.</p>
<div style="width: 212px" class="wp-caption alignright"><img src="http://pneumareview.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/AdoniramJudson_1846.jpg" alt="" width="202" height="240" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Adoniram Judson in 1846.<br /><small>Image: Wikimedia Commons</small></p></div>
<p>In the young USA, only sixteen years old, a meeting occurred near the newly formed Williams College that sparked America’s initial entry into the Christian world mission. This event is referred to in American history as the Haystack Meeting in August of 1806. Several students of Williams College at Williamstown, Massachusetts, gathered for prayer in the shadow of a haystack close to the school. Among the students were Samuel Mills, James Richards, Adoniram Judson, Robert Robbins, Harvey Loomis, and Bryan Green. The news of Carey, his wife, and family departing from England to spread the gospel in India and translating the Scripture into the language spoken near Calcutta reached America and spread to Williams College. The news lit a fire in the hearts of the six young men. Of the six of them, Adoniram Judson decided to meet William Carey in India.</p>
<p>The Haystack Prayer Meeting of 1806 has been considered the beginning of America’s entry into the Christian world mission. It was, however, in 1810, that the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions was formed by Baptist churches who set aside their extreme congregationalism to in order to have a General Convention the purpose of which was to enable and support Baptist missionaries around the world. It was under this Board that Adoniram Judson and his wife were able to make contact with William Carey in Calcutta and then go on to southeast Asia.</p>
<p><div class="simplePullQuote"><p><strong><em>The Second Great Awakening was a sudden earnestness in Christian devotion and discipleship.</em></strong></p>
</div>Six years later, in 1816, the American Bible Society was formed for making the Bible and the Gospel contained therein known throughout the world. Two of the founders were America’s first Supreme Court Chief Justice, John Jay, and Francis Scott Key, the lyricist of America’s national anthem, “The Star-Spangled Banner.” The young United States of America was quick in establishing new initiatives in spreading the gospel. Methodists and some other groups organized circuit riders who not only served scattered nearly isolated congregations across mid-America but who also served as evangelists and developed the open-air gatherings which came to be called “the Camp Meeting.” This was also picked up by the “New Light” Presbyterians, some independent Methodist groups, and the Anti-Burger Seceder Presbyterians in far western Pennsylvania under the leadership of Thomas Campbell, who immigrated to young America from Northern Ireland. A short-time later, his son, Alexander Campbell, left Scotland and northern Ireland for the American frontier.</p>
<p>The evangelistic outburst in mid-America, often referred to as the Second Great Awakening, was not an altogether novel idea. It was a sudden earnestness in Christian devotion and discipleship. It made headway from the leadership of Timothy Dwight, president of Yale University, grandson of Jonathan Edwards. As it spread into the trans-Appalachian west, two of the leading figures were Thomas and Alexander Campbell in Pennsylvania, Barton Warren Stone, a New Light Presbyterian, in Kentucky, and Peter Cartwright, a Methodist Circuit Rider who once took evangelism into a dance hall. He later served in the United States Congress as a representative from Illinois.</p>
<p><strong>PR</strong></p>
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		<title>The Global Christian Mission: The Maritime Global Expansion</title>
		<link>https://pneumareview.com/the-global-christian-mission-the-maritime-global-expansion/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 10 Jan 2020 22:58:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Woodrow Walton]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Church History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Winter 2020]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[christian]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[evangelism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[expansion]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[global]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[good news]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[maritime]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mission]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[silk road]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Christian historian Woodrow Walton takes another look at the causes and effects of global navigation by ships sailing from Europe and how the mission and message of Jesus was carried throughout the world. &#160; The Maritime Global Expansion: End of the Fifteenth Century to the Present A few year prior to the fall of Constantinople [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="aligncenter" src="http://pneumareview.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/WWalton-MaritimeGlobalExp.jpg" alt="" width="500" /></p>
<blockquote><p><em>Christian historian Woodrow Walton takes another look at the causes and effects of global navigation by ships sailing from Europe and how the mission and message of Jesus was carried throughout the world. </em></p></blockquote>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>The Maritime Global Expansion: End of the Fifteenth Century to the Present</strong></p>
<p>A few year prior to the fall of Constantinople in 1452 to the military prowess of the Ottoman Turks, a Norwegian long boat arrived back in Norway after a lengthy voyage across the north Atlantic from the Davis Strait separating the southwestern shoreline of Greenland from northeastern Canada. It was the first known crossing of the North Atlantic. The long boat carried marketable goods for Norway and its neighbors as Denmark and Sweden and other countries facing both the North Sea and is neighboring Baltic Sea.</p>
<div style="width: 331px" class="wp-caption alignleft"><img src="http://pneumareview.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/GreenlandFaroeDenmark.png" alt="" width="321" height="321" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Denmark, the Faero islands (circled), and Greenland are highlighted in red.<br /><small>Image: Wikimedia Commons.</small></p></div>
<p>Unlike the expansive Atlantic Ocean, the North Sea is squeezed between Great Britain and Denmark and the Baltic flowing between the shorelines of Sweden, Poland, Prussia the Slavic lands and northeastward along the shorelines of Finland.</p>
<p>In a way, it was not an extraordinary feat of seamanship because the voyage to Greenland involved landfalls at the Shetland and Faero Islands and Iceland, making the distance between that Scandinavian settlement and Greenland feasible. By the late 1400s, there were settlements on those islands, and an occasional influx of Christians. Nonetheless, the voyage was an important one as far as negotiating an extremely wide expanse of ocean.</p>
<p>Before 1452, Europeans confined their sea voyages to the Mediterranean squeezed between the shorelines of southern Europe and North Africa, the Arabian Sea between the horn of Africa and the shorelines of Iran and northeastern India. There were also smaller bodies of water that were navigated such as the Adriatic and the Aegean, both inlet extensions of the Mediterranean. The Adriatic separates the eastern shorelines of the Italian peninsula, from the western shorelines of Illyria and Greece. The Aegean Sea flows between the eastern shorelines of Greece and Macedonia from the shorelines of what we know now as Turkey. The tiny and narrow Sea of Marmara is actually not a sea as it is squeezed in by Macedonia and northwestern Turkey and becomes the Bosporus, a strait that almost trickles into the Black Sea. Where the Marmara flows into the Black Sea is the City of Byzantium, later re-named Constantinople, and after 1453, became known as Istanbul.</p>
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		<title>The Resurgence of the Gospel, Part Five: Glimpses of the Work of God</title>
		<link>https://pneumareview.com/the-resurgence-of-the-gospel-part-five-glimpses-of-the-work-of-god/</link>
		<comments>https://pneumareview.com/the-resurgence-of-the-gospel-part-five-glimpses-of-the-work-of-god/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 13 Aug 2019 21:49:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Woodrow Walton]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Church History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Summer 2019]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[glimpses]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[god]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[good news]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gospel]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[migration]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://pneumareview.com/?p=15560</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Historian Woodrow Walton helps us look back over the big events and movement of history to see how God was working to make the story of Jesus known throughout the world. In this postscript to the Resurgence of the Gospel series, he ties together what the challenge of the Turkic-Moslem curtain meant and how it [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<blockquote><p><em>Historian Woodrow Walton helps us look back over the big events and movement of history to see how God was working to make the story of Jesus known throughout the world. In this postscript to the Resurgence of the Gospel series, he ties together what the challenge of the Turkic-Moslem curtain meant and how it affected the people of Europe and the global mission of Christianity. Part of <a href="http://pneumareview.com/the-gospel-in-history-series/">The Gospel in History</a> series.<br />
</em></p></blockquote>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><strong>Part 1: “<a href="http://pneumareview.com/the-resurgence-of-the-gospel-part-one-the-medieval-prologue-and-the-remapping-of-the-world/">The Medieval Prologue and the Remapping of the World</a>”</strong></p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><strong>Part 2: “<a href="http://pneumareview.com/the-resurgence-of-the-gospel-part-two-recharting-the-christian-world-mission/">Recharting the Christian World Mission</a>”</strong></p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><strong>Part 3: “<a href="http://pneumareview.com/the-resurgence-of-the-gospel-part-three-the-challenge-of-the-muslim-curtain/">The Challenge of the Muslim Curtain</a>”</strong></p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><strong>Part 4: “<a href="http://pneumareview.com/the-resurgence-of-the-gospel-part-four-the-reconversion-of-europe/">The Reconversion of Europe</a>”</strong></p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><strong>This postscript and bibliography is Part 5 of the “Resurgence of the Gospel” series.</strong></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<div style="width: 210px" class="wp-caption alignright"><img class="" src="http://pneumareview.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Europe_crop-300x254.png" alt="" width="200" height="169" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Part of Eurasia and Africa, with Europe highlighted in green.<br /><small>Image: Wikimedia Commons</small></p></div>
<p>What has been offered in the “Resurgence of the Gospel” series is an overview of Eurasian and African Christian mission leading up to the time of the Ottoman takeover of Asia Minor and the capture of Constantinople, an action which prompted both recovery of the water route and overland roads to central and east Africa and initiation of deep-water navigation. Not only was Europe re-connected with Asia through this process, but this also opened a never-before meeting of Europe with southern Africa and the Asian countries bordering the Indian and Pacific oceans.</p>
<div style="width: 114px" class="wp-caption alignleft"><img src="http://pneumareview.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/OlafTryggvason-Trondheim.jpg" alt="" width="104" height="193" /><p class="wp-caption-text">A statue of Olaf Tryggvason stands in Trondheim, Norway.<br /><small>Image: Wikimedia Commons</small></p></div>
<p>Global navigation also brought about the happy accident of connection with the Americas. Olaf Tryggvason, king of Norway and a convert to Christ several years before 1452, was influential in the baptism of the first European discoverer of North America, Leif Ericson, as well as Hallfred, the Scandinavian poet of skaldic verse. About thirty years before 1452, there was a contact with Greenland in the Atlantic, northeast of Canada. Greenland became Scandinavian property. The last Norwegian shipment of Cod and timber left Greenland approximately ten years before the fall of Constantinople.</p>
<div style="width: 130px" class="wp-caption alignright"><img src="http://pneumareview.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Matthew-BristolHarbour.jpg" alt="" width="120" height="179" /><p class="wp-caption-text">A replica of John Cabot&#8217;s ship.<br /><small>Image: Wikimedia Commons</small></p></div>
<p>Portuguese fisherman also had contact with the North Atlantic. On one Portuguese fishing operation there was a visiting sailor from Venice, Italy, by the name of Cristobal Colombo, known better by the English rendition of his name, Christopher Columbus. In the early 1490s, both Columbus and another Italian made attempts to reach Asia by turning west beyond the Gibraltar into the Atlantic. Columbus made landfall in what is now known as the Dominican Republic on a Sunday. He named the bay, Santo Domingo, “Holy Sunday.”</p>
<p>Columbus sailed under the auspices of Spain. Another Italian sailed under the auspices of England. He reached what is now known as Nova Scotia. His name was Giovanni Caboto, better known in North America as John Cabot.</p>
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		<title>The Resurgence of the Gospel, Part Three: The Challenge of the Muslim Curtain</title>
		<link>https://pneumareview.com/the-resurgence-of-the-gospel-part-three-the-challenge-of-the-muslim-curtain/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 21 Jan 2019 22:50:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Woodrow Walton]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Church History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Winter 2019]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[challenge]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[curtain]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[gospel]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[islam]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[The Resurgence of the Gospel and the Flowering of the Global Christian Message Part Three: The Challenge of the Muslim Curtain Introduction Through upheaval and suppression, being despised by civil governments and facing outright persecution, Christians survived on the other side of the Muslim Curtain. This is part of their story. “The Turkic-Moslem Curtain” is [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="aligncenter" src="http://pneumareview.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/WWalton-ChallengeMuslimCurtain.jpg" alt="" width="500" /></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><strong>The Resurgence of the Gospel and the Flowering of the Global Christian Message</strong></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><strong>Part Three: The Challenge of the Muslim Curtain</strong> <strong>Introduction</strong></p>
<blockquote><p><em>Through upheaval and suppression, being despised by civil governments and facing outright persecution, Christians survived on the other side of the Muslim Curtain. This is part of their story.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>“The Turkic-Moslem Curtain” is the more appropriate explanation for what “shut-off” for an untold breadth of time any social intercourse between the East and West. It also deals more realistically with the relationship between the Arabic speaking Moslems and the increasingly Christian West. As terrible as the militancy of the Arab Conquests were, they never cut-off contact between Europe and Asia. Under the Arabic umbrella, Christians were consider <em>dhimmi </em>[under-class] by the Arabic-speaking Moslem rulers. At the same time, the Christians were admired for their talents, skills, and abilities and utilized according to their particular talents. Even the Jews were so treated. Some were physicians to the caliphs. It was also dependent upon the origin of the Arabic speaking Moslems.</p>
<div style="width: 170px" class="wp-caption alignright"><a href="http://pneumareview.com/the-gospel-in-history-series"><img src="http://pneumareview.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/4Evangelists-BookOfKells-Fol027v.jpg" alt="" width="160" height="211" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">This article is part of <a href="http://pneumareview.com/the-gospel-in-history-series/">The Gospel in History</a> series by <a href="http://pneumareview.com/author/woodrowewalton/">Woodrow Walton</a>.<br /> Image: <em>The Books of Kells</em> by way of Wikimedia Commons.</p></div>
<p>Islam is not a monolithic religion. Historically, there are two distinct political practices. The Shi’a combine religion and political into a single system with their religious leaders doing the governing. The Shi’a also believe they are the legitimate descendants of Mohammed. The Sunni and Alawite Moslems separate Mosque from the body politic. Islam is sectarian. The Sufi are the Moslem mystics and are off in another direction and sometimes fade in and out.</p>
<p>Before Mohammed and his hegira (flight) to Medina, Christians from Antioch and from Egypt came into upper Arabia and down the western coast along the Red Sea. Most of the Arab Christians in southwestern Arabia were the product of Coptic missionaries out of Egypt and shared the Coptic understanding of the Trinity. Those who lived just east of the mountains east of the Dead Sea and northward toward Damascus came out of Antioch and shared the Nestorian understanding which stressed the humanity of Jesus. Mary was not a <em>thetokos, but the mother of Jesus the man </em>in whom dwelt the fullness of God.</p>
<p>The best reading on the Arab Christians are the books of Kenneth Cragg, an Anglican missionary and scholar from Great Britain who wrote such works as <em><a href="https://amzn.to/2sClaZC">The Arab Christian: A History in the Middle East</a> </em>(Louisville, KY: Westminster/Joh Knox, 1991) and <em><a href="https://amzn.to/2RTHnAF">The Call of the Minaret</a> </em>(New York: Oxford University Press, 1956). In 2008, Sidney H. Griffith published a study entitled <em><a href="https://amzn.to/2AQXoh2">The Church in the Shadow of the Mosque</a> </em>(Princeton and Oxford, Princeton University Press).</p>
<p><div class="simplePullQuote"><p><em><strong>How did the curtain fall?</strong></em></p>
</div>What really lowered a curtain between Asia and the Christian West was a series of events. The Arabic invasion of North Africa from Egypt to Morocco and into southern Spain was followed by the onslaught of a Mongol-Turkic group. This later group was converted to Islam by way of the Shi’ite defeat of the Persian armies and then turned their attention to Syria and Palestine followed by a Seljuk Turkic takeover of Palestine. This conquest roused the fears of the Eastern Mediterranean Christians, fears which reverberated all the way to Rome and into the western Mediterranean, fueling the Crusades. Almost simultaneously, a Fatimid Turkic Moslem army invaded, putting the whole Mediterranean world on alert. Stories and legends about Christians held hostage in the East and about a Christian presbyter, “Prester John,” somewhere in the heart of Ethiopia stirred the desire to rescue Jerusalem and the Middle East.</p>
<p>Even then, there was no let-up of interchange between Asia and Europe until 1452 when Ottoman Turks invaded Anatolia, known variously as Asia Minor (geographically) or Turkey (geopolitically). While there was no direct west-to-east route going through either Antioch or Caesarea on the Mediterranean eastern seaboard travel, travel was possible from points north and northeast of Antioch.</p>
<p>One could also travel east from Alexandria to the Red Sea and travel it to where it empties into the Arabian Sea and thence to the Malabar Coast of India. Another point of departure was by way of the southern coastline of the Euxine Sea (Black Sea). One could board ship from Chalcedon, Amastris, and Sinope, all port cities in the Roman provinces of Bithynia and Pontus and to the Ukraine, one of the sources of grain for first Rome and then Constantinople. One could sail east along the coastline to Armenia and Georgia.</p>
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		<title>The Resurgence of the Gospel, Part Two: Recharting the Christian World Mission</title>
		<link>https://pneumareview.com/the-resurgence-of-the-gospel-part-two-recharting-the-christian-world-mission/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 18 Oct 2018 23:54:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Woodrow Walton]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Church History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fall 2018]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[christian]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Council of Chalcedon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ephesus]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[The Resurgence of the Gospel and the Flowering of the Global Christian Message Part Two: Recharting the Christian World Mission Church councils, a changing geo-political landscape, invasion and upheavals had a radical impact on how followers of Jesus participated in the Christian mission. It may seem strange but it is from Ephesus that the re-charting [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="aligncenter" src="http://pneumareview.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/WWalton-Resurgence-P2.jpg" alt="" width="500" /></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><strong>The Resurgence of the Gospel and the Flowering of the Global Christian Message</strong></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><strong>Part Two: Recharting the Christian World Mission</strong></p>
<blockquote>
<p style="text-align: left;"><em>Church councils, a changing geo-political landscape, invasion and upheavals had a radical impact on how followers of Jesus participated in the Christian mission.</em></p>
</blockquote>
<div style="width: 170px" class="wp-caption alignright"><a href="http://pneumareview.com/the-gospel-in-history-series"><img src="http://pneumareview.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/4Evangelists-BookOfKells-Fol027v.jpg" alt="" width="160" height="211" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">This article is part of <a href="http://pneumareview.com/the-gospel-in-history-series/">The Gospel in History</a> series by <a href="http://pneumareview.com/author/woodrowewalton/">Woodrow Walton</a>.<br /> Image: <em>The Books of Kells</em> by way of Wikimedia Commons.</p></div>
<p>It may seem strange but it is from Ephesus that the re-charting of the Christian world mission takes place. It is, however, not as strange when one considers the fact that Ephesus, situated in Asia province of the Graeco-Roman world and facing the Aegean Sea and looking westward is the western entrepot of a vast East-to-West commerce where goods from oriental sources were readied for trans-shipment either into Europe or into Africa. There had a been long history of commercial intercourse between East and West.</p>
<p>The other factor is that Ephesus, like Antioch-on-the Orontes, is an important Christian Center where Paul the Apostle once preached. Ephesus lies south of Nicaea and of Troas, also crossroads, between East and West. From Troas, Paul and Silas took voyage toward Philippi and Thessalonica. On the other side of the Aegean from Ephesus stood Athens and Corinth.</p>
<p>As a result, Ephesus became an eminent Christian Center and by the late 300’s and early 400’s, and became the host for conciliar meetings of Christian leaders from places in Europe, North Africa, and the Near East. In A.D. 431, a council was held in Ephesus to clarify, for the sake of evangelism and Christian instruction, the meaning of the Trinity particularly with attention on the Person of Christ Jesus. There were three eminent Christians who differed over what to stress. One was Cyril of Alexandria who was strong on the redeeming work of Jesus and on the divinity of Jesus. The second was Theodore of Mopsuestia who was as strong on the humanity of Jesus as Cyril on the divinity of Jesus as Son of God. The third part was Nestorius from Antioch who was made Patriarch in Constantinople. Nestorius differed on referring to Mary, the mother of Jesus, as a <em>theotokos, mother of God.</em></p>
<div style="width: 264px" class="wp-caption alignright"><img src="http://pneumareview.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/1024px-Ephesos_amphitheatre.jpg" alt="" width="254" height="191" /><p class="wp-caption-text">The amphitheater of Ephesus.<br /> <small>Image: Jordan Klein / Wikimedia Commons</small></p></div>
<p>The Council of Ephesus in A.D. 431 came out in Cyril’s favor putting both Theodore and Nestorius in an unfavorable light. A second Council was held in A.D. 449 which amended the verdict but did not exonerate either Theodore or Nestorius. The controversy simmered for twelve long years. Then in A.D. 461, a greater number of Christian leaders gathered from all over the then Christian world, from York in Roman Britain, to John, a Bishop in western Persia. The Council at Chalcedon came down hard on the Second Council of Ephesus and called it a “Robber” Council. It was a partial victory for both Nestorius and Cyril and for the Apostle Paul’s statement found in his second letter to the Corinthians: “God was in Christ” reconciling the world to himself (II Corinthians 5:18-19ff). Though neither Cyril nor Nestorius was fully satisfied, it did free both of them to go back to Egypt and to Antioch to do that which was most important, to preach the gospel as each understood the gospel. In the years between A.D. 431 and A.D. 461, Nestorius wrote a defense, first done in Greek, then translated into Syriac between A.D. 525 and 533. <em>The Bazaar of Heracleides </em>must have been written between A.D. 451 or 452, as he mentions the death of Emperor Theodosius in A.D. 450.</p>
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		<title>The Resurgence of the Gospel, Part One: The Medieval Prologue and the Remapping of the World</title>
		<link>https://pneumareview.com/the-resurgence-of-the-gospel-part-one-the-medieval-prologue-and-the-remapping-of-the-world/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 27 Jul 2018 21:49:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Woodrow Walton]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Church History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Summer 2018]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[creed]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dhimmi]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[good news]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gospel]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[medieval]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nestorians]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Peshitta]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[prologue]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[remapping]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Rodney Stark]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[world]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The Resurgence of the Gospel and the Flowering of the Global Christian Message Part One: The Medieval Prologue &#38; the Remapping of the World   In Retrospect By looking backwards to the beginning of the spread of the Gospel that Jesus is both Lord and Christ and considering the results of both the life, death [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="aligncenter" src="http://pneumareview.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/WWalton-Resurgence-P1.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="292" /></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><strong>The Resurgence of the Gospel and the Flowering of the Global Christian Message</strong></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><strong>Part One: The Medieval Prologue &amp; the Remapping of the World</strong> <strong> </strong></p>
<div style="width: 170px" class="wp-caption alignright"><a href="http://pneumareview.com/the-gospel-in-history-series"><img src="http://pneumareview.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/4Evangelists-BookOfKells-Fol027v.jpg" alt="" width="160" height="211" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">This article is part of <a href="http://pneumareview.com/the-gospel-in-history-series/">The Gospel in History</a> series by <a href="http://pneumareview.com/author/woodrowewalton/">Woodrow Walton</a>.<br /> Image: <em>The Books of Kells</em> by way of Wikimedia Commons.</p></div>
<p><strong>In Retrospect</strong></p>
<p>By looking backwards to the beginning of the spread of the Gospel that Jesus is both Lord and Christ and considering the results of both the life, death and resurrection of Jesus and the message that Peter spoke at the Feast of the Pentecost, we are struck by the Power of the Holy Spirit to change lives and change the course of history and why, no matter the opposition and oppression, that gospel continued to spread. Other things factor in. The first factor is that of those who heard.</p>
<p>Those who heard Jesus were the Jews of the circle of the Gentiles (Galilee), the Jews of Judaea, and a mixture of peoples, Jew, Greek, Syro-Phoenician, and Samaritans to begin with, and a centurion or two within the Roman military system and stationed within Galilee and Judaea. There was a mixture of peoples and a mixture of social classes ranging from shepherds, to high status people, including a rich young ruler. The Gospel reached from those at the bottom to those at the top and officials as tax-gatherers. The news spread horizontally and vertically from among those who heard.</p>
<p><div class="simplePullQuote"><p><strong><em>The visitors who were present when the Church began returned home and told of what they heard.</em></strong></p>
</div>Second is to notice the origin of those who heard Peter during the feast of the Pentecost. A large number of the hearers were diasporan Jews, meaning those Jews who lived outside the homeland traveled and whose homes were in what we now know as Libya, Egypt, Rome in Italy, Pontus, Asia, Cappadocia, Phrygia and Pamphylia (modern Turkey). There were also diasporan Jews from the Mediterranean island of Crete. There were also present visiting Jews who had for a long time lived along the edges of Arabia, Parthia, Medea, and Elam (now known as Iran). The significance of this listing as the hearers were from both the Mediterranean world and the countries east of Syria and bordering the Persian Gulf. After the feast of the First Fruits, also known as Pentecost, all went back to their places of origin.</p>
<p>The visitors who were present when the Church began returned home and told of what they heard. When Peter, John, Philip the Deacon, and later Paul, started their missionary journeys, they were simply following up where these visitors came from: The Mediterranean world and its northern, southern, southeastern shorelines, up the Nile and the Gulf of Suez as well as northeast to the valley of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers and following their courses toward the Arabian Sea. The significance of this spread west and east is in the mode of travel. The early Christians traveled the waterways more so than by way of roads which were few and dangerous to travel. Even the Roman-built roads were not all that good across Anatolia [Asia Minor/modern Turkey], going from Antioch to Ephesus facing the Aegean Sea.</p>
<div style="width: 150px" class="wp-caption alignright"><a href="http://amzn.to/2ObfrDZ"><img src="http://pneumareview.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/RStark-CitiesOfGod.jpg" alt="" width="140" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Rodney Stark, <em><a href="https://amzn.to/2ObfrDZ">Cities of God: The Real Story of How Christianity Became an Urban Movement and Conquered Rome</a></em>.</p></div>
<p>Most travelers went by ship, boat, or along the shores of rivers. As a result, most Christian communities were found in port cities such as Antioch, Caesarea, Troas, Ephesus, Corinth, Alexandria going west in the Mediterranean. The Roman military road from Capernaum and the upper shore line of the Sea of Galilee took one up to Damascus, Dura-Europos, and the towns along the Euphrates-Tigris waterways. Seldom were Christian churches found in the hinterlands. Most were found in shoreline cities. It was Wayne Meeks who first noticed that the earliest Christian churches were in urban areas; then it was Rodney Stark who wrote of how Christianity became an urban movement in his <em><a href="https://amzn.to/2ObfrDZ">Cities of God</a> </em>(Harper San Francisco, 2006).</p>
<p>This was the situation of the resurgence of the gospel throughout the following centuries when persecution or invasions occurred. The Christians took to the sea or the waterways to spread the gospel to more distant lands. When persecution broke out in Jerusalem, Acts 8: 25-49 tells of Philip the Deacon’s ministry with a Treasurer of the Candace of Ethiopia (Roman name for modern Sudan). The roadway he traveled goes along the southeastern coast of the Mediterranean to the Nile river and then up the Nile to the city of Meroe, the capital of Ethiopia. The Angel of the Lord then turned Philip around and had him introduce the gospel along the Eastern Coast of the Mediterranean from Azotus to Caesarea, a major port for ships from Rome and the Aegean Sea. Acts 11:19 to 30 informs the reader that Christians from the Island of Cyprus and from Cyrene, the main port city of what is now Modern Libya in Northern Africa, were among the forerunners of the church in Antioch (modern Antakya), another major port city. This is but the start of the story.</p>
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		<title>The Spread of the Gospel in Hindsight: The Church’s First 1452 Years</title>
		<link>https://pneumareview.com/the-spread-of-the-gospel-in-hindsight-the-churchs-first-1452-years/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 12 Dec 2017 17:30:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Woodrow Walton]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Church History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fall 2017]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[1452]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[churchs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[featured]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[hindsight]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Justin Martyr]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[persecution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[spread]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[years]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[What can Christians today learn from the successes and failures of Christians in the first fifteen centuries of the breaking out of the Good News of Jesus the Christ? This article by historian Woodrow Walton is an Epilogue to The Gospel In History series. With apologies to the Gregorian Calendar, A.D. 28 is selected as [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<blockquote><p><em>What can Christians today learn from the successes and failures of Christians in the first fifteen centuries of the breaking out of the Good News of Jesus the Christ? This article by historian Woodrow Walton is an Epilogue to </em><a href="http://pneumareview.com/the-gospel-in-history-series/"><strong>The Gospel In History</strong></a> <em>series</em>.</p></blockquote>
<p><img class="aligncenter" src="http://pneumareview.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/WWalton-SpreadGospelHindsight.jpg" alt="" width="358" height="264" /></p>
<p>With apologies to the Gregorian Calendar, A.D. 28 is selected as the date of the Resurrection of our Lord. Fifty days after the Resurrection, at the time of the festival of First Fruits, also known as Pentecost, the power of the Holy Spirit fell upon Jesus’ disciples. They were now His apostles and Peter became the lead spokesman. When Peter proclaimed Jesus as both “Lord and Christ,” there were among his audience visitors from countries bordering the Persian Gulf, lands approximate to the Caucasian and Kurdistan mountains, westward to Libya in northern Africa, and from what is now Turkey onward along the northern Mediterranean coast to Rome and beyond.</p>
<div style="width: 170px" class="wp-caption alignright"><a href="http://pneumareview.com/the-gospel-in-history-series"><img src="http://pneumareview.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/4Evangelists-BookOfKells-Fol027v.jpg" alt="" width="160" height="211" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">This article is part of <a href="http://pneumareview.com/the-gospel-in-history-series/">The Gospel in History</a> series by <a href="http://pneumareview.com/author/woodrowewalton/">Woodrow Walton</a>.<br /> Image: <em>The Books of Kells</em> by way of Wikimedia Commons.</p></div>
<p>The Gospel spread quickly into the Mesopotamian-Tigris plains, northward beyond Antioch, and crossed the Aegean Sea into the Balkans and on to the Italian peninsula. It went westward across the whole extent of the North African coast fronting the Mediterranean. Acts 2:9-11 enumerated thirteen different geographical locales from Elam, bordering Iran, to Cyrene close to present day Benghazi, Libya.</p>
<p>This expansive geography from the Persian Gulf to the western edges of Africa indicates the eventual spread of the gospel from western Asia to the western edges of the Roman empire. The early Christians spread across this expanse within a matter of seventy-two years. The flourishing of individual Christian communities from east to west within a relatively short time occurred without benefit of motorized conveyances. The initial thrust was from Jerusalem to Damascus in western Syria and then along the Tigris-Euphrates valley. The martyrdom of Stephen initiated a spread northward. The ministry of Philip the deacon spearheaded the thrust into the upper reaches of the Nile Valley, Egypt. Out of Libya and Cyprus were the initiators of the church in Antioch, and out of Antioch into what is now Turkey. Who are these travelers who speak of Jesus who is said to be “Lord and Savior?”</p>
<p>That the Christians presented a gospel, not a religion, was a novelty and went against the grain of the dominant cultural mentality who adhered to a belief in gods and different philosophies of life. Who is this Jesus?</p>
<p>The fact that the Christian communities or groupings did not frequent the public baths and other major public arenas of activity raised suspicions as to who they are and what they represented. To use a phrase coined by the late John Stott, these Christians were counter-cultural and represented another way of life by their exclusiveness from the rest of society.</p>
<p><div class="simplePullQuote"><p><strong><em>Persecution is self-defeating. Instead of stamping out, it only spreads the flames of the gospel message wherever it goes.</em></strong></p>
</div>From this arose the first suspicions and first antagonisms which eventually boiled over into arguments and then persecutions. This opposition was at first sporadic then open attacks which, on occasion, boiled over into institutionalized persecution. Here is a salient point to consider. Attacks have a way of occasioning the rise of the “defense” of the Christian way. The defense came quickly, first with Stephen, then Apollos, then Paul, Peter, and others. Before the end of the century, a Roman from Samaria was converted to the gospel. His name was Justin. He is remembered as Justin Martyr.</p>
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		<title>Darrell Bock&#8217;s Recovering the Real Lost Gospel, Reviewed by Matthew Jones</title>
		<link>https://pneumareview.com/dbock-recovering-real-lost-gospel/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 25 Apr 2013 10:10:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Matthew Jones]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Biblical Studies]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spring 2013]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Darrell Bock]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[good news]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gospel]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Darrell L. Bock, Recovering the Real Lost Gospel: Reclaiming the Gospel as Good News (Nashville: B &#38; H Academic, 2010), 146 pages, ISBN 9780805464658. In a postmodern era engaged in endless speculation and thought provoking possibilities, Dr. Darrell Bock, Senior Research Professor of New Testament Studies at Dallas Theological Seminary (DTS), offers a return to [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: center"><span class="bk-button-wrapper"><a href="http://pneumareview.com/category/spring-2013/" target="_self" class="bk-button yellow center rounded small">Pneuma Review Spring 2013</a></span></p>
<p style="text-align: left">
<img class="alignright" alt="Darrell Bock, Recovering the Real Lost Gospel" src="http://pneumareview.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/DBock-RecoveringRealLostGospel.png" width="120" height="187" /><b>Darrell L. Bock, <i>Recovering the Real Lost Gospel: Reclaiming the Gospel as Good News</i> (Nashville: B &amp; H Academic, 2010), 146 pages, ISBN 9780805464658.</b></p>
<p>In a postmodern era engaged in endless speculation and thought provoking possibilities, Dr. Darrell Bock, Senior Research Professor of New Testament Studies at Dallas Theological Seminary (DTS), offers a return to the basics of the Gospel. Bock accurately perceives that the message of the Gospel has, at best, become “cloudy.” The messages of promised prosperity, political progress, personal protection or providential piety cloud the clarity of the good news. The purpose of the good news becomes lost in the midst of a world clamoring for something opposed to what they observe on a regular basis. Consequently, Bock attempts to clear the murky waters that have diminished the power of the good news and diluted the message of the Gospel. The author recovers what has been lost in regard to the Gospel so that the reader can experience the transformation available by the act and grace of God through the cross and made possible by the Holy Spirit so that one might know the presence of God.</p>
<p>Experiencing the presence of God involves more than the pneumatic fervor associated with Holy Spirit baptism. Bock, while initiating the discussion of the promise of a relationship with the Holy Spirit, effectively addresses other components essential to experiencing God’s presence. For the primary audience of <i>The Pneuma Review</i>, Bock’s text may not sufficiently emphasize the charismatic nature of the relationship between the Holy Spirit and the believer. In spite of this, <i>Recovering the Real Lost Gospel </i>deserves attention from all ministers of the Gospel. The Gospel serves as the core of not only what we are communicating to those willing to hear but also the foundation by which we build upon our relationship with God so we might experience his presence. Bock’s text might further benefit from a greater emphasis upon the charismatic component of experiencing the presence of God. In spite of this, his text acknowledges the significance of the Holy Spirit in relationship to the Gospel.</p>
<p>Methodically utilizing practical and usable illustrations throughout the text, Bock addresses the Gospel and the import of the sacraments, the cross, and the gift of God’s grace. Thankfully, Bock’s text also addresses the reality of sin. He reminds the reader that sin still exists but the beauty of the Gospel woos the follower of Jesus Christ to live in right relationship with God and his creation. Acknowledging and addressing this vital component of the Gospel, Bock jogs the memory of his readers regarding the power of God’s salvation. The Gospel paves the way for repentance, faith, reconciliation and restoration whereby each individual possesses the potential to experience a relationship with God through the Holy Spirit. While Bock acknowledges the believer’s relationship with the Holy Spirit, he indicates that recovering the lost Gospel embraces a much more comprehensive understanding of the presence of God.</p>
<p>As a former pastor, I read this text with the pastor and lay leader in mind. I can confidently say that Bock’s text accomplishes its goal to assist in rescuing the Gospel as good news. Even though his emphasis is not upon the charismatic component consequent to the spread of the Gospel, he acknowledges the value and role of the Holy Spirit in experiencing the presence of God. In spite of this lack of emphasis upon the pneumatic nature of our experience with God, reading this text can cause its reader to consider whether the Gospel needs reclamation in one’s personal life and in the life of her or his congregation. I agree that the message of the Gospel has been lost, and thankfully, Darrell Bock helps his readers to reclaim the beauty of the Gospel so that those who lead, teach or interact with this text can assist in rediscovering the beauty of the Gospel.</p>
<p><i>Reviewed by Matthew Jones</i></p>
<p>Preview: <a href="http://books.google.com/books?id=UwG9bK4-RekC">http://books.google.com/books?id=UwG9bK4-RekC</a></p>
<p><i>About the Author</i><br />
<img class="alignright" alt="Matthew Jones" src="http://pneumareview.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/MatthewJones201301.jpg" width="94" height="94" /><b>Matthew Jones</b>, Th.M., is currently pursuing a Ph.D. through Regent University in Renewal Studies with a concentration in Biblical Studies while serving as an Advisor and Affiliate Professor at Colorado Christian University. Matt is married to Cathy Jones and loves hanging out with his three children, Hannah, Tyler and Kenzie.</p>
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