Missionary Families Find a Sense of Place and Identity


Book Description

Missionary Families Find a Sense of Place and Identity is a community history of members of nineteen Lutheran missionary families who served in Tanzania. Based on over ninety interviews and John Benson’s extensive knowledge of cultural geography, he compares the lives of the missionary generation who grew up in the United States and went to Tanzania as missionaries to those of their children who grew up in Africa but settled in the United States as adults. Benson blends his personal experiences as a child of missionaries in Tanzania to tell the story of both generations. Missionary Families is centered on the themes of connection to place and religious development and will appeal to scholars of geography, cultural studies and religion.




The Missionary Family


Book Description




The Missionary Family


Book Description

The title of this book points to a feature—the missionary family—often considered to be a distinctive of the Protestant missionary movement. Certainly the presence of missionary families in the field has been a central factor in enabling, configuring, and restricting Protestant missionary outreach. What special concerns does sending missionary families raise for the conduct of mission? What means are available for extending care and support to missionary families? These issues are the focus of the chapters in part 1 of this book. In recent years an increasing number of reports have surfaced of sexual abuse in mission settings. Some reports have been based on “recovered memories,” the assessment of which raises difficult questions. Clearly sexual abuse in mission settings and how to understand allegations of abuse based on recovered memories are matters of grave concern to mission agencies and mission supporters as well as to missionary families. Part 2 serves the mission community by scrutinizing such matters, offering legal, historical, and psychological perspectives on the topic. In a new feature, “Forum on Sexual Orientation and Mission: An Evangelical Discussion,” the Evangelical Missiological Society takes up a pressing issue of our day. Fourteen evangelical scholars participate in the discussion found in part 3. Far from being the final word, this forum is presented with the prayer that it will serve as an opening to and basis for ongoing missiological conversation about an urgent and timely topic.




Parents of Missionaries


Book Description

Whether you're the parent of a missionary recruit or a parent of an experienced missionary, this resource will help you thrive and stay connected with your children and grandchildren serving cross-culturally. Combining a counselor's professional insight and a parent's personal journey, the authors help you understand missionary life, grandparent long-distance and say good-bye well.




The Mission-minded Family


Book Description

In a mission-minded family, there’s a God-infused energy. There’s a focus on God’s worldwide purpose and there’s a passion for the lost. There’s a spiritual depth and hunger that reaches beyond the maintenance mode of cultural Christianity. A mission-minded family emphasizes leadership, calling and destiny. There’s a prevailing attitude of self-sacrifice and an emphasis on total submission to God’s will. There’s an unmistakable and contagious joy. Dunagan, who wrote The Mission Minded Child, brings the same perspective to what it means to be a mission-minded family. This book includes suggested activities for families to participate in together as well as resources to help families develop the desire to be more missions-focused. She discusses the need for families to balance and prioritize their everyday lives and delves into what a family’s finances would look like if they were focused on missions. This practical book is the perfect companion to The Mission Minded Child. Families who read and practice principles from this book will receive a rekindled closeness as they participate in ministry together.




Missionary Stories with the Millers


Book Description

Experience thrilling adventure as the Christian missionaries on these pages meet witch doctors, disease, drought, hate-filled guerillas, a Bible thief, and killer cats. Each story is based on actual happenings from the lives of real people.




Myth and reality of the missionary family


Book Description

Isobel Reid offers a concise account of the origins, establishment, and some internal dynamics of the Livingstonia Mission, in particular those impacting missionary families as seen through the eyes of a young missionary couple at its Bandawe station. This study not only demonstrates a general awareness of the roie and initiative of the people of Northern Malawi, among whom and with whom the Scottish missionaries lived and worked, but also of the specific importance of interpersonal relationships between Scottish and Malawian women - as in the case of Marie Martin and her Tonga women friends. Race as the primary dividing line was thus subverted by mutual gender awareness. From 1978 Isobel Reid, a qualified nurse/midwife, with her doctor husband and young family lived for 18 months on Ekwendeni CCPA Mission Station before transferring to Mzuzu where Dr. Reid was in charge of St John's Roman Catholic Mission Hospital for four further years. A consequent academic interest in mission history resulted in an MTh (Edinburgh 1999) which provided the basis for this book.




Mission-Minded Families


Book Description

Get equipped for the Gospel and God's Great Commission as you learn, "God's mission is for your family to expand His family!" This 480-page resource is packed with practical ideas and inspiration for mission-minded parenting, no matter where God has called you to live, for "Missions is not just for missionaries; God's call is for all.". In a mission-minded family, there's a God-infused energy. There's a focus on God's worldwide purpose and there's a passion for the lost. There's a spiritual depth and hunger that reaches beyond the maintenance mode of cultural Christianity. A mission-minded family emphasizes leadership, calling and destiny. There's a prevailing attitude of self-sacrifice, an emphasis on total submission to God's will, and an unmistakable and contagious joy. In this updated two-in-one resource (combining The Mission-Minded Child and The Mission-Minded Family), Christian parents will be encouraged to seek God's potential for their family, and to raise each child to fulfill God's specific mission. PART 1: Discovering the "Why" of world missions, while making disciples at home PART 2: Balancing the "How" of world missions, while prioritizing your family This special edition includes: practical teaching ideas, stories, poems, hymns and excerpts, mini-mission biographies, international holiday ideas, tips for travel and ministry with children, and helpful encouragement from decades of global experience. David Livingstone once said, "This generation can only reach this generation." The Dunagan's ask, "Will we raise our children to effectively reach their generation for Jesus Christ?" Jon & Ann Dunagan founded Harvest Ministry in 1987. They are international mission leaders, convention speakers, and veteran homeschooling parents of seven grown children (born in 1986 to 2000, with an increasing number of graduates, married-in-spouses and grandchildren). Collectively, the Dunagan's and their family have shared the love of Jesus in over 100 nations on every continent, including Antarctica - focused on winning souls, equipping nations, loving orphans, serving churches, and mobilizing Christian families for God's Great Commission. You can find the Dunagan's on: Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn, Pinterest, Facebook, and iTunes. HarvestMinistry.org MissionMindedWomen.org MissionMindedFamilies.org




The Missionary Family


Book Description




The Missionary


Book Description

David Eller is an American missionary in Venezuela, married to missionary nurse, Christie. Together they rescue homeless children in Caracas. But for David, that isn't enough. The supply of homeless children is endless because of massive poverty and the oppressive policies of the Venezuelan government, led by the Hugo Chavez- like Armando Guzman. In a moment of anger, David publicly rails against the government, unaware that someone dangerous might be listening- a revolutionary looking for recruits. David falls into an unimaginable nightmare of espionage, ending in a desperate, life-or-death gamble to flee the country with his wife and son, with all the resources of a corrupt dictatorship at their heels.