The Missionary Outreach of the West Indian Church
Jamaican Baptist Missions to West Africa in the Nineteenth Century
©2000
Textbook
XX,
324 Pages
Series:
Research in Religion and Family, Volume 3
Summary
The Missionary Outreach of the West Indian Church is the story of Jamaican Baptists, ex-slaves who, four years after Emancipation (1838), established a witness in the Cameroons (West Africa) in cooperation with their British pastors and with the reluctant aid of the Baptist Missionary Society of London. Professor Russell analyzes the relationship between the undertaking of the mission and the new self-awareness of a freed people. The institutions created to achieve their aims are discussed and their fortunes are followed amid the chaotic ecclesiastical, economic, and political happenings consequent upon the Anglo/Hispanic rivalry at the time. The book is also a study of what happens when a mission-field becomes a mission agency with missionaries of its own.
Details
- Pages
- XX, 324
- Publication Year
- 2000
- ISBN (Softcover)
- 9780820430638
- Language
- English
- Keywords
- Emancipation self-awareness freed people
- Published
- New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., Oxford, Wien, 2000. XX, 323 pp., 7 ill.
- Product Safety
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