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Bestsellers
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Select Theologians
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Top Commentaries
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In The Mission of God's People, Wright shows how God's big-picture plan of mission directs the purpose of God's people, the church. In doing so, Wright outlines the basic underlying biblical justification and strategy for missions while expanding the scope of that endeavor.
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This long overdue book avoids an over-emphasis on particular models or methods, Patrick lays out biblical principles and sound wisdom urging the church to return to biblical criteria for determining the man, the message, and the mission God uses to build his church.
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Hudson Taylor (1832-1905) founded the China Inland Mission and was China's most influential missionary. Biographer Vance Christie in Hudson Taylor documents Taylor's remarkable life with, his dramatic conversion, mission philosophy, and five decades of missions service with effortless prose.
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Veteran missionary David Hesselgrave and rising missional expert Ed Stetzer edit this engaging set of conversational essays addressing global mission issues in the third millennium. Issues include contextualization, anthropological and sociological concerns, and the future of the evangelical world wide missions.
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This book presents a "philosophical defense of ethical evangelism". In the late modern context in which we live, the activity of proselytizing is often viewed as violent at worst, and at best coercive. But is it? Thiessen responds to questions like these in an effort to provide a philosophical defense of proselytism and mission.
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Let the Nations Be Glad! is a modern classic in missiology now in its 3rd edition. A trusted guide for thousands of missionaries, pastors, churches leaders, and laity, it provides a biblical basis for missions, the expansion of the Gospel, and for worship while critiquing the prosperity gospel and its presence in missions.
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The New Shape of World Christianity compellingly assesses global Christianity in light of American experience. Surveying the changes in the worldwide body of Christ over the past century, Noll examines the influence of evangelical identity, political power, and culture.
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