History of Christian missions


According to the documents of the Lausanne Committee for World
Evangelization, the Biblical authority for missions begins quite early in
Genesis 12:1-3, in which Abraham is blessed so that through him and his
descendants, all the "peoples" of the world would be blessed. Others point
to God's wish, often expressed in the Bible, that all peoples of the earth
would worship Him. Therefore, Christian missions go where worship is not, in
order to bring worship to God.



In this view, the early historical Jewish mission is that of being a people
placed in the midst of the other nations, situated so that they could
proclaim the Creator God that blessed them. This view is confirmed in many
OT scriptures, (cf. Exodus 19:4-6, Psalm 67) as well as the nature of the
temple (its outer court was "the court of the gentiles").



Several teachers including John R. W. Stott believe that a prominent
prophecy in the Old Testament often unfolds continually and is certainly
manifested in three situations, an immediate historical situation following
the prophecy, a church-based intermediate situation, and an eschatological,
end-of-time situation. Of course, Gen. 12:1-3 is such a prominent passage.



The first, and most famous missionary was St. Paul. He contextualized the
Gospel for the Greek and Roman cultures, permitting it to reach beyond its
Hebrew and Jewish context.



In the early Christian era, most missions were by monks. Monasteries
followed disciplines and supported missions, libraries and practical
research, all of which were perceived as works to reduce human misery and
suffering, thus enhancing the reputation of God. For example, Nestorian
communities evangelized much of N. Africa before Muhammad. Cistercians
evangelized much of Northern Europe, as well as developing most of European
agriculture's classic techniques.



In the 16th century the proselyization of Asia was linked to the Portuguese
colonial policy. With the Papal bull Romanus Pontifex the patronage for the
propagation of the Christian faith in Asia was given to the Portuguese, who
were rewarded with the right of conquest. The Portuguese trade with Asia was
profitable and as Jesuits came to India around 1540, the colonial government
in Goa supported the mission with incentives for baptized Christians.[1]
Later, Jesuits were sent to China and further countries in Asia. With the
decline of the Portuguese power other colonial powers and Christian
organisations gain influence.



After the Reformation, for nearly a hundred years, occupied by their
struggle with the Roman Catholic Church, the Protestant churches were not
missionary-sending churches. But in the centuries that followed, the
Protestant churches began sending missionaries in increasing numbers,
spreading the proclamation of the Christian message to previously unreached
people. In North America, missionaries to the native Americans included
Jonathan Edwards, the well known preacher of the Great Awakening, who in his
later years retired from the very public life of his early career. He became
a missionary to the Housatonic Native Americans and a staunch advocate for
them against cultural imperialism.



As European culture has been established in the midst of indigenous peoples,
the cultural distance between Christians of differing cultures has been
difficult to overcome. One early solution was the creation of segregated
"praying towns" of Christian natives. This pattern of grudging acceptance of
converts was repeated in Hawaii later when missionaries from that same New
England culture went there. In Spanish colonization of the Americas, the
Catholic missionaries selected and learned among the languages of the
Amerindians and devised writing systems for them. Then they preached to them
in those languages (Quechua, Guarani, Nahuatl) instead of Spanish, to keep
Indians away from "sinful" whites. An extreme case were the Guarani
Reductions, a theocratic semiindependent region established by the Jesuits.



Around 1780, an indigent Baptist cobbler named William Carey began reading
about James Cook's Polynesian journeys. His interest grew to a furious sort
of "backwards homesickness," inspiring him to obtain Baptist orders, and
eventually write his famous 1792 pamphlet, "An Enquiry into the Obligation
of Christians to use Means for the Conversion of Heathen." Far from a dry
book of theology, Carey's work used the best available geographic and
ethnographic data to map and count the number of people who had never heard
the Gospel. It formed a movement that has grown with increasing speed from
his day to ours.



Carey's example was followed by a number of missions to sea-side and port
cities. The China Overseas Missionaries and Moravian Church are two of the
more famous.



Thomas Coke, the first bishop of the American Methodists, has been called
"the Father of Methodist Missions". After spending time in the young
American republic strengthening the infant Methodist Church alongside
episcopal colleague Francis Asbury, the British-born Coke left for mission
work. During his time in America, Coke worked vigorously to increase
Methodist support of Christian missions and raising up mission workers. Coke
died while on a mission trip to India, but his legacy among Methodists - his
passion for missions – continues



The next wave of missions, starting in the early 1850s, was to inland areas,
led by Hudson Taylor with his China Inland Mission. Taylor was later
supported by Henry Grattan Guinness who founded Cliff College which exists
today for the purpose of training and equipping local and global mission.



The new wave of missions inspired by Taylor and Guinness have collectively
been called "faith missions" and owe much to the ideas and example of
Anthony Norris Groves. Taylor was a thorough-going nativist, offending the
missionaries of his era by wearing Chinese clothing and speaking Chinese at
home. His books, speaking and examples led to the formation of numerous
inland missions, and the Student Volunteer Movement (SVM), which from 1850
to about 1950 sent nearly 10,000 missionaries to inland areas, often at
great personal sacrifice. Many early SVM missionaries to areas with endemic
tropical diseases left with their belongings packed in a coffin, aware that
80% of them would die within two years.



In 1910, the Edinburgh Missionary Conference was held in Scotland. Presided
over by active SVM leader (and future Nobel Peace Prize recipient) John R.
Mott, an American Methodist layperson, the conference reviewed the state of
evangelism, Bible translation, mobilization of church support, and the
training of indigenous leadership. Looking to the future, conferees worked
on strategies for worldwide evangelism and cooperation. The conference not
only established greater ecumenical cooperation in missions, but also
essentially launched the modern ecumenical movement.



The next wave of missions was started by two missionaries, Cameron Townsend
and Donald McGavran, around 1935. These men realized that although earlier
missionaries had reached geographic areas, there were numerous ethnographic
groups that were isolated by language, or class from the groups that
missionaries had reached. Cameron formed Wycliffe Bible Translators to
translate the Bible into native languages. McGavran concentrated on finding
bridges to cross the class and cultural barriers in places like India, which
has upwards of 4,600 peoples, separated by a combination of language,
culture and caste. Despite democratic reforms, caste and class differences
are still fundamental in many cultures.



An equally important dimension of missions strategy is the indigenous method
of nationals reaching their own people. In Asia this wave of missions was
pioneered by men like Dr G D James of Singapore, Rev Theodore Williams of
India and Dr David Cho of Korea. The "two thirds Missions Movement" as it is
referred to, is today a major force in missions.



Most modern missionaries and missionary societies have repudiated cultural
imperialism, and elected to focus on spreading the Gospel and translating
the Bible. Sometimes, missionaries have been vital in preserving and
documenting the culture of the peoples among whom they live.



Often, missionaries provide welfare and health services, as a good deed or
to make friends with the locals. Thousands of schools, orphanages, and
hospitals have been established by missions. One of the quietest, yet most
far-reaching services provided by missionaries started with the Each one,
teach one literacy program begun by Dr. Frank Laubach in the Philippines in
1935. The program has since spread around the world and brought literacy to
the least enabled members of many societies.



The word "mission" was historically often applied to the building, the
"mission station" in which the missionary lives or works. In some colonies,
these mission stations became a focus of settlement of displaced or formerly
nomadic people. Particularly in rural Australia, missions have become
localities or ghettoes on the edges of towns which are home to many
Indigenous Australians. The word may be seen as derogatory when used in this
context in a derogatory or racist way.





Modern missionary methods and doctrines

A Christian missionary's objective is to give an understandable presentation
of their beliefs with the hope that people will choose to convert from other
faiths to Christianity. As a matter of strategy, many evangelical Christians
in Europe and North America now focus on what they call the "10/40 window,"
a band of countries between 10 and 40 degrees north latitude and reaching
from western Africa through Asia. Christian missions strategist Luis Bush
pinpointed the need for a major focus of evangelism in the "10/40 Window," a
phrase he coined in his presentation at the missionary conference Lausanne
1989 in Manila. Sometimes referred to as the "Resistant Belt," it is an area
that includes 35% of the world's land mass, 90% of the world's poorest
peoples and 95% of those who have yet to hear anything about Christianity.



In modern missionary strategy, mission stations are deprecated, because they
were historically ineffective. Mission stations normally created disaffected
individual converts, often seen as an outcast by their family and culture.
In many cases, the only source of converts to a mission station were the
orphans raised in the station's orphanage. Also, many mission station's
converts were so alienated from surrounding cultures that they were unable
to get work outside the mission station, let alone act as cultural
ambassadors for Christianity. In some cases, these paid "rice bowl
Christians" actively impeded Christian conversion in the mission's schools
and orphanages so that their own incomes would not be reduced as more
Christians came to depend on the mission station.



Modern pioneering missionary doctrines now focus on inserting a culturally
adapted seed of Christian doctrines into a self-selected, self-motivated
group of native believers, without removing the natives from their culture
in any way.



Modern mission techniques are sufficiently refined that within ten to
fifteen years, most native churches are natively pastored, managed, taught,
self-supporting and evangelizing. The process can be substantially faster if
a preexisting translation of the Bible and higher pastoral education are
already available, perhaps left-over from earlier, less effective missions.



A key approach is to let native cultural groups decide to adopt Christian
doctrines and benefits, when (as in most cultures) such major decisions are
normally made by groups. In this way, opinion leaders in the groups can
persuade much or most of the groups to convert. When combined with training
in church planting and other modern missionary doctrine, the result is an
accelerating, self-propelled conversion of large portions of the culture.



A typical modern mission is a co-operative effort by many different
ministries, often including several coordinating ministries, often with
separate funding sources. One typical effort proceeded as follows:



A missionary radio group recruits, trains and broadcasts in the main dialect
of the target culture's language. Broadcast content is carefully adapted to
avoid syncretism yet help the Christian Gospel seem like a native, normal
part of the target culture. Broadcast content often includes news, music,
entertainment and education in the language, as well as purely Christian
items.

Broadcasts might advertise programs, inexpensive radios (possibly
spring-wound), and a literature ministry that sells a Christian mail-order
correspondence course at nominal costs. The literature ministry is key, and
is normally a separate organization from the radio ministry. Modern
literature missions are shifting to web-based content where it makes sense
(as in Western Europe and Japan).

When a person or group completes a correspondence course, they are invited
to contact a church-planting missionary group from (if possible) a related
cultural group. The church-planting ministry is usually a different ministry
from either the literature or radio ministries. The church-planting ministry
usually requires its missionaries to be fluent in the target language, and
trained in modern church-planting techniques.

The missionary then leads the group to start a church. Churches planted by
these groups are usually a group that meets in a house. The object is the
minimum organization that can perform the required character development and
spiritual growth. Buildings, complex ministries and other expensive items
are mentioned, but deprecated until the group naturally achieves the size
and budget to afford them. The crucial training is how to set up a church
(meet to study the Bible, and perform communion and worship), and how to
become a Christian (the finer points of obeying God), usually in that order.




A new generation of churches is created, and the growth begins to accelerate
geometrically. Frequently, daughter churches are created only a few months
after a church's creation. In the fastest-growing Christian movements, the
pastoral education is "pipelined", flowing in a just-in-time fashion from
the central churches to daughter churches. That is, planting of churches
does not wait for the complete training of pastors.

The most crucial part of church planting is selection and training of
leadership. Classically, leadership training required an expensive stay at a
seminary, a Bible college. Modern church planters deprecate this because it
substantially slows the growth of the church without much immediate benefit.
Modern mission doctrines replace the seminary with programmed curricula or
(even less expensive) books of discussion questions, and access to real
theological books. The materials are usually made available in a major
trading language in which most native leaders are likely to be fluent. In
some cases, the materials can be adapted for oral use.



It turns out that new pastors' practical needs for theology are well
addressed by a combination of practical procedures for church planting,
discussion in small groups, and motivated Bible-based study from diverse
theological texts. As a culture's church's wealth increases, it will
naturally form classic seminaries on its own.



Another related mission is Bible translation. The above-mentioned literature
has to be translated. Missionaries actively experiment with advanced
linguistic techniques to speed translation and literacy. Bible translation
not only speeds a church's growth by aiding self-training, but it also
assures that Christian information becomes a permanent part of the native
culture and literature. Some ministries also use modern recording techniques
to reach groups with audio that could not be soon reached with literature.



Recently, there has been a movement in the United States called home school
mission in which a Christian is encouraged to train their children in the
faith. This has arisen in the development of secular education that has
increasingly excluded the Christian message. As a result many groups have
focused missionary effort within the home to ensure that the children remain
Christian rather than becoming secular as a result of daily training in
secular schools.





Controversy and Christian missionaries

Some governments (such as Islamic nations, Communist China and Russia),
secular anthropologists and sociologists object to missionary work among
isolated indigenous populations. Some consequences are claimed to have been
apostasy from Islam, disloyalty to the Communist Party, cultural
assimulation, reduction of native language speakers, and loss of native
culture. In fact, Christian missionaries have been criticised for having a
general lack of respect for native cultures throughout history, even
actively working to undermine the religious customs and beliefs of many
non-Christian countries. This has been called Ethnocide and Cultural
genocide and Cultural Imperialism.



The Christian missionary mindset is generally depicted as that of simple
religious folk with a pure desire to peacefully spread their gospel and
message of love. In reality, their methods of propagation are often anything
but peaceful and usually leave behind a native population stripped of their
culture and often decimated…. In the words of one resident of Thailand,
"They [Christian missionaries] seemed that they did not show any interest
for our culture. Why? They are just eager to build big churches in every
village. It seems that they are having two faces; under the title of help
they suppress us. To the world, they gained their reputations as benefactors
of disappearing tribes. They built their reputations on us for many years.
The way they behaved with us seemed as if we did not know about god before
they arrived here. Why do missionaries think they are the only ones who can
perceive God?"[2]



In India, it is charged by some that publicized persecution of Christians
is, in fact, incited by the exclusivity and exceptionalism of Christian
missionaries. These tensions have boiled over into violence. The governments
of the affected states assert that most conversions undertaken by zealous
evangelicals occur due to compulsion, inducement or fraud.[3][4] In the
Indian state of Tripura, the government has alleged financial and
weapons-smuggling connections between Baptist missionaries and Christian
terrorist groups like the Nagaland Rebels and the National Liberation Front
of Tripura.[5] Hindus have claimed that these organizations persecute[6] and
slaughter Hindus by the thousands.[7] See also National Liberation Front of
Tripura and [1].



You are probably wondering what is the aggression caused by Christians in
India. You may wonder how can a minority religion that is only 3% of the
population cause aggression in a nation of over 1,000,000,000 people. In the
press, the aggression and "persecution" of Christians is often publicized.
However, it is never publicized how Christian Fundamentalists often incite
this cycle of violence and aggression…. Christians believe that they have
been commanded by Christ to go and "save" (convert) the people of this
world. This is also supposed to give them special merit when it comes to the
day of final judgment. While there are many Christians who today do not
believe in this exclusivity, there are a still large number of misguided
Christians who still believe in the exclusivity of Christianity and the
concept of saving souls. It is this misguided belief that breeds a hatred
and intolerance for other religions. and from this hatred, these Christian
Fundamentalists begin their aggression to convert. And often they will go to
any means to convert even if it means violence. This website seeks to
educate the world about the atrocities that conversions bring and to bring
this aggressive nature of Christianity to an end.[8]



Often, some assert, coercion comes in the form of a pressure to convert
through the injecting of fear of dire consequences if they don't.
"Missionaries are actually in essence terrorists. Why? They come to us and
say, 'If you don't do as we say, you are going to hell! You will die! You
will be judged! You are not part of us! You are children of the Satan!'
etc.etc. Aren't these sentences terrorising?"[9]



The Vatican, of late, is taking a somewhat different view toward
proselytizing.



"In mid-May, the Vatican was also co-sponsoring a meeting about how some
religious groups abuse liberties by proselytizing, or by evangelizing in
aggressive or deceptive ways. Iraq … has become an open field for foreigners
looking for fresh converts. Some Catholic Church leaders and aid
organizations have expressed concern about new Christian groups coming in
and luring Iraqis to their churches with offers of cash, clothing, food or
jobs…. Reports of aggressive proselytism and reportedly forced conversions
in mostly Hindu India have fueled religious tensions and violence there and
have prompted some regional governments to pass laws banning proselytism or
religious conversion…. Sadhvi Vrnda Chaitanya, a Hindu monk from southern
India, told CNS that India's poor and uneducated are especially vulnerable
to coercive or deceptive methods of evangelization…. Aid work must not hide
any ulterior motives and avoid exploiting vulnerable people like children
and the disabled, she said."[10]



In an interview with Outlook Magazine, Sadhvi Vrnda Chaitanya said "If the
Vatican could understand that every religious and spiritual tradition is as
sacred as Christianity, and that they have a right to exist without being
denigrated or extinguished, it will greatly serve the interests of dialogue,
mutual respect, and peaceful coexistence."[11]



The meeting of religious leaders from the Christian, Buddhist, Hindu, Islam,
Judaism and Yoruba faiths resulted in an agreement on ten points about
proseltyzation, notably that if done, it be with respect for other
cultures[12]



The fictional movie The Mosquito Coast with Harrison Ford depicts this
missionary mindset and the damage some feel it can wreak upon native
peoples. Another movie, The Journals of Knud Rasmussen, which is factually
based, tells of similar destruction brought upon the Inuit culture by
missionaries. See also Siqqitiq and these reference works on the subject.





Aid and Evangelism

Another source of conflict regarding missionaries in the third world is the
charge that the aid that comes in response to various world disasters comes
with a condition: that assistance requires conversion. While there is a
general agreement among most major aid organizations not to mix aid with
proseltyzing, others see disasters as a means to spread the word. Innovative
Minds, a Muslim software company "specialising in the application of
internet and multimedia technology for promoting a better understanding of
Islam in the west" has written a report[13] about just such an occurrence,
the tidal wave (tsunami) that devastated parts of Asia on December 26, 2004.



"This (disaster) is one of the greatest opportunities God has given us to
share his love with people," said K.P. Yohannan, president of the
Texas-based Gospel for Asia. In an interview, Yohannan said his 14,500
"native missionaries" in India, Sri Lanka and the Andaman Islands are giving
survivors Bibles and booklets about "how to find hope in this time through
the word of God." In Krabi, Thailand, a Southern Baptist church had been
"praying for a way to make inroads" with a particular ethnic group of
fishermen, according to Southern Baptist relief coordinator Pat Julian. Then
came the tsunami, "a phenomenal opportunity" to provide ministry and care,
Julian told the Baptist Press news service…. Not all evangelicals agree with
these tactics. "It's not appropriate in a crisis like this to take advantage
of people who are hurting and suffering," said the Rev. Franklin Graham,
head of Samaritan's Purse and son of evangelist Billy Graham.".[14]

See also A Dangerous mix: Religion & Development Aid.

The Christian Science Monitor echoes these concerns… "'I think evangelists
do this out of the best intentions, but there is a responsibility to try to
understand other faith groups and their culture,' says Vince Isner, director
of FaithfulAmerica.org, a program of the National Council of Churches
USA".[15]



The Bush administration has in fact recently made it easier for U.S. faith
based groups and missionary societies to tie aid and church together.



For decades, US policy has sought to avoid intermingling government programs
and religious proselytizing. The aim is both to abide by the Constitution's
prohibition against a state religion and to ensure that aid recipients don't
forgo assistance because they don't share the religion of the provider…. But
many of those restrictions were removed by Bush in a little-noticed series
of executive orders — a policy change that cleared the way for religious
groups to obtain hundreds of millions of dollars in additional government
funding. It also helped change the message American aid workers bring to
many corners of the world, from emphasizing religious neutrality to touting
the healing powers of the Christian God.[16]



Christian counter-claims

One Christian organization, Voice of the Martyrs, in contrast to reports of
Christian aggression in India, claims that Christians are also recipients of
violent aggression in India from "radical Hindus" (presumably Hindu
Nationalists). One example is the brutal murder of Australian Graham Staines
and his family who had been evangelizing and conducting aid work since 1965.
The perpetrators say that it was the disrespect of Hindu religious tradition
following such conversions, such as the eating of beef (cows are considered
sacred to Hindus) which set them off.



Missionaries, however, say that "false reports" of forced conversion are a
key weapon in the Hindu Nationalist fight against both Christian
missionaries and native-born Christian Indians (this despite the fact that
Hindu Nationalists such as the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh frequently
cooperate with Christian groups in times of natural disaster[17] and have a
good relationship with many Catholic organizations overall). The government
in India has passed anti-conversion laws in several states that are
supposedly meant to prevent conversions from "force or allurement", but are
primarily used, they say, to persecute and criminalize voluntary conversion
due to the government's broad definition of "force and allurement." Any gift
received from a Christian in exchange for, or with the intention of,
conversion is considered allurement. V.O.M. reports that aid-workers claim
that they are being hindered from reaching people with much needed services
as a result of this persecution.[18] Alan de Lastic, Roman Catholic
archbishop of New Delhi states that claims of forced conversion are
false[19]



"'There are attacks practically every week, maybe not resulting in death,
but still, violent attacks,' Richard Howell, general secretary of the
Evangelical Fellowship of India tells The Christian Science Monitor today.
'They [India's controlling BJP party] have created an atmosphere where
minorities do feel insecure.'"[20] According to Prakash Louis, director of
the secular Indian Social Institute in New Delhi, "We are seeing a broad
attempt to stifle religious minorities and their constitutional
rights…Today, they say you have no right to convert, Tomorrow you have no
right to worship in certain places."[21] Existing congregations, often
during times of worship, are being persecuted.[22] Properties are sometimes
destroyed and burnt to the ground, while native pastors are sometimes beaten
and left for dead.[23][24][25][26][27][28][29]







 Ref:



   1. *^<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mission_%28Christian%29#_ref-Daus_0>
   * Daus, Ronald (1983). Die Erfindung des Kolonialismus.
   Wuppertal/Germany: Peter Hammer Verlag, p.33, 61-66. ISBN
   
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conversion<http://www.hindunet.org/conversions/conversion/hindus_allege_forced_conversion.htm>.
   HinduNet.org. Retrieved on August 7, 2007.
   20. *^ <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mission_%28Christian%29#_ref-18>*Ted
Olsen (September 1, 2003). Weblog:
   Missionaries in India Concerned as Hindu Activists Break Up Prayer
Meeting<http://www.ctlibrary.com/ct/2003/septemberweb-only/9-15-51.0.html>.
   Christianity Today. Retrieved on August 7, 2007.
   21. *^ <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mission_%28Christian%29#_ref-19>*Ted
Olsen. Weblog:
   Missionaries in India Concerned as Hindu Activists Break Up Prayer Meeting
   date=September 1,
2003<http://www.ctlibrary.com/ct/2003/septemberweb-only/9-15-51.0.html>.
   Christianity Today. Retrieved on August 7, 2007.
   22. *^ <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mission_%28Christian%29#_ref-20>*
Christian
   murdered in 
Kerala<http://in.christiantoday.com/articles/Christian.Stanley.stabbed.CSI.WEA.RSS.BJP/1820.htm>.
   Christian Today - India Edition (February 14, 2007). Retrieved on August 7,
   2007.
   23. *^ <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mission_%28Christian%29#_ref-21>* Two
   Nuns accused and held for trying to "convert"
students<http://www.efionline.org/subsection/news/persecution.htm>.
   Evangelical Fellowship of India. Retrieved on August 7, 2007.
   24. *^ <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mission_%28Christian%29#_ref-22>* Five
   arrested for assaulting trainee priests in
Panvel<http://www.efionline.org/articles/785.htm>.
   Evangelical Fellowship of India (March 7, 2007). Retrieved on August 7,
   2007.
   25. *^ <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mission_%28Christian%29#_ref-23>*
Christians
   attacked in Jalampur, Dhamtari in
Chhattisgarh<http://www.efionline.org/articles/665.htm>.
   Evangelical Fellowship of India (January 10, 2006). Retrieved on August 7,
   2007.
   26. *^ <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mission_%28Christian%29#_ref-24>*Jacob
Chaterjee (February 12, 2007). Hindu
   radicals attack believers in
Karnataka<http://in.christiantoday.com/articles/RSS.Bajrang.Dal.Christian.pastor.forcible.conversion.Chickmangalore/1838.htm>.
   Christian Today - India Edition. Retrieved on August 7, 2007.
   27. *^ <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mission_%28Christian%29#_ref-25>*Jacob
Chaterjee (February 20, 2007). Hindu
   radicals attack Bible college students during outreach; two in critical
   
condition<http://in.christiantoday.com/articles/GFA.outreach.Bible.college.Jesus.Yohannan/1802.htm>.
   Christian Today - India Edition. Retrieved on August 7, 2007.
   28. *^ <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mission_%28Christian%29#_ref-26>*Jacob
Chaterjee (February 6, 2007). Hindu
   radicals attack Christian prayer meeting in
Bihar<http://in.christiantoday.com/articles/Bajrang.Dal.EFI.CLAI.Rev..Richard.Howell.Bihar/1738.htm>.
   Retrieved on August 7, 2007.
   29. *^ <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mission_%28Christian%29#_ref-27>*Jacob
Chaterjee (February 18, 2007). Hindu
   fanatics oppose Christian-run orphanage and Bible center in
Himachal 
Pradesh<http://in.christiantoday.com/articles/Shiv.Sena.VHP.pastor.Behal.Himachal.Pradesh.anti-conversion.law.conversion.Christian.orphanage.Bible/1848.htm>.
   Christian Today - India Edition. Retrieved on August 7, 2007.

Original Source url:
alfianpalarministries.wordpress.com/2008/01/14/history-of-christian-missions/
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