Where is the Dube quote from? Interesting that she goes backward to Christ. I've been thinking about moving forward to the Spirit in Acts as the impetus for mission.
Thank you, Dr Harvey, for your availability to unfold the mysteries behind the concept of missions.
I love this quote from the above-mentioned submission as I access it; "The Spirit of the Lord which called Westerners to mission has been poured upon all flesh and is at work among Africans, Asians, and Latin Americans to do the mission work". How do we understand and perceived the spirit dimensions and strategies that are required for better mission fulfilment?
As a result, the idea of the mission henceforth must No longer be seen as one-mission mind-centeredness but has to be an all-around motive between both the global South and the North whereby self-mindedness will need to be stripped off and then lets us theologically accept one another whereby Westerners can be willing to know us(Africans) theologically as we have known westerners through the medium of their early root of missions.
Again going to the nation for missions as Jesus commanded must not lead to the neglect of our very homeland where salvation for mission is highly demanding. The Gospel of Mission must be a Life of encounter for our people(African soil) redeeming them from darkness to light with full substances for a great harvest of the mission agenda through systems and strategies for a sound doctrine of missiology
Finally, since "Exclusion leads to the diminishing of life, both the host and the guest" according to Dr Harvey's father then Westerners who were pioneers of the mission encountered first must be willing to stand with non-westerners so that both wouldn't lose their place of mission assignment as a "Divine Mandate".
Where is the Dube quote from? Interesting that she goes backward to Christ. I've been thinking about moving forward to the Spirit in Acts as the impetus for mission.
Have you seen the first MCU Dr Strange movie?
diff topic https://www.housechurchtheology.com/team
Thank you, Dr Harvey, for your availability to unfold the mysteries behind the concept of missions.
I love this quote from the above-mentioned submission as I access it; "The Spirit of the Lord which called Westerners to mission has been poured upon all flesh and is at work among Africans, Asians, and Latin Americans to do the mission work". How do we understand and perceived the spirit dimensions and strategies that are required for better mission fulfilment?
As a result, the idea of the mission henceforth must No longer be seen as one-mission mind-centeredness but has to be an all-around motive between both the global South and the North whereby self-mindedness will need to be stripped off and then lets us theologically accept one another whereby Westerners can be willing to know us(Africans) theologically as we have known westerners through the medium of their early root of missions.
Again going to the nation for missions as Jesus commanded must not lead to the neglect of our very homeland where salvation for mission is highly demanding. The Gospel of Mission must be a Life of encounter for our people(African soil) redeeming them from darkness to light with full substances for a great harvest of the mission agenda through systems and strategies for a sound doctrine of missiology
Finally, since "Exclusion leads to the diminishing of life, both the host and the guest" according to Dr Harvey's father then Westerners who were pioneers of the mission encountered first must be willing to stand with non-westerners so that both wouldn't lose their place of mission assignment as a "Divine Mandate".
Still thinking about "non-western missiologies" Thought Provoking