Saving sinners, even Moslems : the Arabian mission (1889-1973) and its intellectual roots /

Zdanowski, Jerzy,

Saving sinners, even Moslems : the Arabian mission (1889-1973) and its intellectual roots / by Jerzy Zdanowski. - Newcastle upon Tyne, UK : Cambridge Scholars Publishing, (c)2018. - 1 online resource (viii, 270 pages) : illustrations.

Includes bibliographies and index.

This book investigates the Mission of the Reformed Church in America sent to Arabia in 1889 to preach the Gospel, and which operated in the Persian Gulf until 1973. It also explores the various cultural encounters between missionaries and Muslims, and discusses conversion and the place of Islam in the Protestant eschatology. It maintains that John G. Lansing from the New Brunswick Theological Seminary, New Jersey, who founded the Arabian Mission, deliberately dedicated the Mission to "direct Muslim evangelism". In terms of premillennialism, Lansing "moved" Islam into the very centre of the theological discourse, and presented the evangelization of Muslims as critical for Christ's Second Coming. This made the Arabian Mission unique among the American Protestant Missions, and placed the Church and missionaries between religious pluralism and the obligations of the Great Commission. --



9781527518445


Arabian Mission--History.
Reformed Church in America--Missions--History.--Persian Gulf Region


Missions, American--History.--Persian Gulf Region


Electronic Books.

BV3210 / .S285 2018