04-2008 | Lausanne World Pulse Archives

Kroo Bay, Sierra Leone  A theology of evangelism in the Global South    Southern Bible translation

We must integrate and incorporate the voices, thoughts, and ways of the Global South into our view of global missions and evangelism.Read more…

The author asks, “Are we right if we regard mission as the overriding interpretation of the Great Commission?”Read more…

By the 1960s, evangelical leaders in Africa, Asia, and Latin America started the quest for a theology of evangelism that would match their activism but also respond to the tremendous social tensions of that decade. This continues today.Read more…

Four ways in which our thinking must change in order to meet the challenges inherent in cross-cultural ministry.Read more…

The author discusses two spheres and stages of Pentecostal mission development.Read more…

Pentecostals need to be involved in mission engagement that aims at justice in social, economic, political, racial, and environmental areas.Read more…

The Evangelical Church in Latin America is experiencing a unique missionary awakening in Protestant history. The poor are engaged in missionary activity and are investing their potential, talents, and resources in fulfilling the universal missionary call of the Church.Read more…

Research from 2000-2005 reveals that Christianity continues to move southward at a steady pace.Read more…

In a little, broken-down, poor excuse of a church building at the bottom of the Kroo Bay slum in Sierra Leone is the Church. It is where God is.Read more…

A look at the life of Francis of Assisi, the saint who invested in the lives of the poor.Read more…

Europe today is remarkably similar to how it was when first-century Christians sought to reach their neighbors with the gospel.Read more…

There are three possible futures for evangelicalism in Europe.Read more…

God has charged the Churchí¢ä‰åäólocal, denominational, and universalí¢ä‰åäówith the responsibility to translate, teach, and reach all people with the Bible.Read more…