God is doing amazing things. The iron curtain has been raised. The
Berlin wall has come down. Marxist-Leninist ideology is being repudiated.
Countries long considered closed are slowly opening.
These are exciting developments. More are likely to surface
tomorrow!
The church is poised for a fresh burst of evangelistic enthusiasm.
Money is being raised to support mission efforts that until recently seemed
impossible. People are volunteering to go where few if any have gone
during this century.
Indeed, these are exciting times. Yet, more than excitement is needed
to generate and sustain mission efforts that will glorify God with souls
converted and churches planted.
"It is not good to have zeal without knowledge, nor to be hasty and
miss the way" (Proverbs 19:2).
Hence, as never before, those interested in missions need sound
missiological moorings for the work ahead. The Journal of Applied
Missiology speaks to this need. Each issue will contain current
principles of cross cultural evangelism that have been developed by the
best thinkers in the business.
The Journal of Applied Missiology will inform present and
potential missionaries and their supporters of contemporary strategies for
successful mission work. The academic discipline called MISSIOLOGY
gathers the thinking of theology, history, church growth,
anthropology, evangelism, psychology, and research into a body of effective
cross cultural principles. The Journal of Applied Missiology will
encourage the application of these principles to the realities of the
mission field.
Those who believe that the Gospel must be preached to every creature,
who understand their task as completing what the Lord set out to do, will
find themselves encouraged, stimulated, challenged, and equipped by this
and subsequent issues of the Journal of Applied Missiology.
Your comments and questions are welcome. May God bless all of us in
finding and folding the lost for His sake.
EDITORIAL
by
APRIL, 1990
Ed Mathews, Editor
Mirrored by permission of ACU Missions Personnel
Direct questions and comments to Ed Mathews,
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