{"title":"Book Review: Advancing Models of Mission: Evaluating the Past and Looking to the Future","authors":"David Dwi Chrisna","doi":"10.1177/23969393221139221","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"migration and diasporas written by a wide range of scholars of Asian ancestry who explore the diasporic journey of people from their communities of origin. Regarding this book in the series, George states that it has a focus on “race, ethnicity, and community history” as it explores “the disparate sociocultural contexts and geopolitical locations of contemporary Asian migrants” (1). By this, George here means not only how Asian migrants have been categorized and treated in their new locations but also how their own racial and ethnic identities persist within the diaspora over time. Through its various contributors, the book does an excellent job of illustrating the “symphony of eclectic voices that accentuates the diversity found within Asian Christianity and demonstrates how Asian diaspora communities create surprising new varieties and new momentum for the diffusion of Christianity in the twenty-first century” (2). The various chapters include such diverse diaspora communities and topics as the impact of colonialism on Indian dispersion (ch. 2), Korean Christians in Latin America (ch. 4), Hmong Christianity and Bhutanese Nepali refugees in North America (chs. 7 and 8), diaspora Christians in the Gulf region (ch. 10), and Muslims in Europe (ch. 11). As can be seen from this sample, the case studies cover a wide array of peoples, places, times (i.e., both long-standing and recent migrations), and issues related to Christianity and the Asian diaspora. My one criticism is that, like much of the literature in diaspora missiology, most of the authors do not draw on the rich social-scientific literature on migration and settlement patterns in the host societies. In general, their conversation partners tend to be other missiologists, theologians, and Christian scholars. This one criticism aside, George has produced a book that serves very well the global church in general and missiologists in particular as it illustrates how God continues to use migration as a way to fulfill his mission of reaching all peoples throughout the world with the good news. The volume contains excellent case studies of how the Asian diaspora is participating in that mission.","PeriodicalId":43117,"journal":{"name":"International Bulletin of Mission Research","volume":"47 1","pages":"446 - 447"},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2023-06-22","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"International Bulletin of Mission Research","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1177/23969393221139221","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"RELIGION","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
migration and diasporas written by a wide range of scholars of Asian ancestry who explore the diasporic journey of people from their communities of origin. Regarding this book in the series, George states that it has a focus on “race, ethnicity, and community history” as it explores “the disparate sociocultural contexts and geopolitical locations of contemporary Asian migrants” (1). By this, George here means not only how Asian migrants have been categorized and treated in their new locations but also how their own racial and ethnic identities persist within the diaspora over time. Through its various contributors, the book does an excellent job of illustrating the “symphony of eclectic voices that accentuates the diversity found within Asian Christianity and demonstrates how Asian diaspora communities create surprising new varieties and new momentum for the diffusion of Christianity in the twenty-first century” (2). The various chapters include such diverse diaspora communities and topics as the impact of colonialism on Indian dispersion (ch. 2), Korean Christians in Latin America (ch. 4), Hmong Christianity and Bhutanese Nepali refugees in North America (chs. 7 and 8), diaspora Christians in the Gulf region (ch. 10), and Muslims in Europe (ch. 11). As can be seen from this sample, the case studies cover a wide array of peoples, places, times (i.e., both long-standing and recent migrations), and issues related to Christianity and the Asian diaspora. My one criticism is that, like much of the literature in diaspora missiology, most of the authors do not draw on the rich social-scientific literature on migration and settlement patterns in the host societies. In general, their conversation partners tend to be other missiologists, theologians, and Christian scholars. This one criticism aside, George has produced a book that serves very well the global church in general and missiologists in particular as it illustrates how God continues to use migration as a way to fulfill his mission of reaching all peoples throughout the world with the good news. The volume contains excellent case studies of how the Asian diaspora is participating in that mission.
期刊介绍:
With in-depth analyses of worldwide Christianity and mission-focused book reviews, the International Bulletin of Mission Research is an unparalleled source of information on the world church in mission. The editors are committed to maintaining the highest possible academic editorial standards. IBMR provides an editorial voice that is dispassionate, analytical, fair minded, and nonpartisan. The IBMR includes: Feature articles and book reviews written by leading specialists on Christian mission from around the world—scholars from varied academic disciplines and theological perspectives The “Legacy” series with engaging accounts of pivotal mission leaders of the last two centuries and the equally engaging “My Pilgrimage in Mission” series that provides intimate insight into the lives of some of today’s most distinguished mission scholars and practitioners. Regional surveys and analyses of important mission documents and consultations. A “Noteworthy” news column that keeps you up to date on today’s mission leaders, conferences, and study opportunities. A listing of academic dissertations on mission and world Christianity. This dissertation list is online in our “Researching World Christianity: Doctoral Dissertations on Mission Since 1900” database. The feature “Ten Outstanding Books for Mission Studies” appears each April.