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Missionary

A missionary is a member of a religious group which is sent into an area in order to promote its faith or provide services to people, such as education, literacy, social justice, health care, and economic development.[1][2]

Catholic missionaries in Papua New Guinea

In the Latin translation of the Bible, Jesus Christ says the word when he sends the disciples into areas and commands them to preach the gospel in his name. The term is most commonly used in reference to Christian missions, but it can also be used in reference to any creed or ideology.[3]

The word mission originated in 1598 when Jesuits, the members of the Society of Jesus sent members abroad, derived from the Latin missionem (nom. missio), meaning 'act of sending' or mittere, meaning 'to send'.[4]

By religion

Buddhist missions

 
Buddhist proselytism at the time of king Ashoka (260–218 BCE), according to his Edicts
 
Central Asian Buddhist monk teaching a Chinese monk. Bezeklik, 9th-10th century; although Albert von Le Coq (1913) assumed the blue-eyed, red-haired monk was a Tocharian,[5] modern scholarship has identified similar Caucasian figures of the same cave temple (No. 9) as ethnic Sogdians,[6] an Eastern Iranian people who inhabited Turfan as an ethnic minority community during the phases of Tang Chinese (7th-8th century) and Uyghur rule (9th-13th century).[7]

The first Buddhist missionaries were called "Dharma Bhanaks", and some[who?] see a missionary charge in the symbolism behind the Buddhist wheel, which is said to travel all over the earth bringing Buddhism with it. The Emperor Ashoka was a significant early Buddhist missioner. In the 3rd century BCE, Dharmaraksita—among others—was sent out by emperor Ashoka to proselytize[8] the Buddhist tradition through the Indian Maurya Empire, but also into the Mediterranean as far as Greece. Gradually, all India and the neighboring island of Ceylon were converted. Then Buddhism spread eastward and southeastward to the present lands of Burma, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam, and Indonesia.[9]

Buddhism was spread among the Turkic people during the 2nd and 3rd centuries BCE into modern-day Pakistan, Kashmir, Afghanistan, eastern and coastal Iran, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, and Tajikistan. It was also taken into China brought by Kasyapa Matanga in the 2nd century CE, Lokaksema and An Shigao translated Buddhist sutras into Chinese. Dharmarakṣa was one of the greatest translators of Mahayana Buddhist scriptures into Chinese. Dharmaraksa came to the Chinese capital of Luoyang in 266 CE, where he made the first known translations of the Lotus Sutra and the Dasabhumika Sutra, which were to become some of the classic texts of Chinese Mahayana Buddhism. Altogether, Dharmaraksa translated around 154 Hīnayāna and Mahāyāna sutras, representing most of the important texts of Buddhism available in the Western Regions. His proselytizing is said to have converted many to Buddhism in China, and made Chang'an, present-day Xi'an, a major center of Buddhism. Buddhism expanded rapidly, especially among the common people, and by 381 most of the people of northwest China were Buddhist. Winning converts also among the rulers and scholars, by the end of the T'ang Dynasty Buddhism was found everywhere in China.[10]

Marananta brought Buddhism to the Korean Peninsula in the 4th century. Seong of Baekje, known as a great patron of Buddhism in Korea, built many temples and welcomed priests bringing Buddhist texts directly from India. In 528, Baekje officially adopted Buddhism as its state religion. He sent tribute missions to Liang in 534 and 541, on the second occasion requesting artisans as well as various Buddhist works and a teacher. According to Chinese records, all these requests were granted. A subsequent mission was sent in 549, only to find the Liang capital in the hands of the rebel Hou Jing, who threw them in prison for lamenting the fall of the capital. He is credited with having sent a mission in 538 to Japan that brought an image of Shakyamuni and several sutras to the Japanese court. This has traditionally been considered the official introduction of Buddhism to Japan. An account of this is given in Gangōji Garan Engi. First supported by the Soga clan, Buddhism rose over the objections of the pro-Shinto Mononobe[11] and Buddhism entrenched itself in Japan with the conversion of Prince Shotoku Taishi.[9] When in 710 Emperor Shomu established a new capital at Nara with urban grid plan modeled after the capital of China, Buddhism received official support and began to flourish.[11]

Padmasambhava, The Lotus Born, was a sage guru from Oḍḍiyāna who is said to have transmitted Vajrayana Buddhism to Bhutan and Tibet and neighbouring countries in the 8th century.

The use of missions, councils, and monastic institutions influenced the emergence of Christian missions and organizations, which developed similar structures in places that were formerly Buddhist missions.[12]

During the 19th and 20th centuries, Western intellectuals such as Schopenhauer, Henry David Thoreau, Max Müller, and esoteric societies such as the Theosophical Society of H.P. Blavatsky, The Buddhist Society of Great Britain and Ireland and the Buddhist Society, London spread interest in Buddhism. Writers such as Hermann Hesse and Jack Kerouac, in the West, and the hippie generation of the late 1960s and early 1970s led to a re-discovery of Buddhism. During the 20th and 21st centuries Buddhism has again been propagated by missionaries into the West such as Ananda Metteyya (Theravadha Buddhism),[13] Suzuki Daisetsu Teitarō (Zen Buddhism),[14] the Dalai Lama[15] and monks including Lama Surya Das (Tibetan Buddhism). Tibetan Buddhism has been significantly active and successful in the West since the Chinese takeover of Tibet in 1959. Today Buddhists make a decent proportion of several countries in the West such as New Zealand, Australia, Canada, the Netherlands, France, and the United States.

In Canada, the immense popularity and goodwill ushered in by Tibet's Dalai Lama (who has been made honorary Canadian citizen) put Buddhism in a favourable light in the country. Many non-Asian Canadians embraced Buddhism in various traditions and some have become leaders in their respective sanghas.

In the early 1990s, the French Buddhist Union (UBF, founded in 1986) estimated that there are 600,000 to 650,000 Buddhists in France, with 150,000 French converts among them.[16] In 1999, sociologist Frédéric Lenoir estimated there are 10,000 converts and up to 5 million "sympathizers", although other researchers have questioned these numbers.[17]

Taisen Deshimaru was a Japanese Zen Buddhist who founded numerous zendos in France. Thich Nhat Hanh, a Nobel Peace Prize-nominated, Vietnamese-born Zen Buddhist, founded the Unified Buddhist Church (Eglise Bouddhique Unifiée) in France in 1969. The Plum Village Monastery in the Dordogne in southern France was his residence and the headquarters of his international sangha.

In 1968 Leo Boer and Wener van de Wetering founded a Zen group, and through two books made Zen popular in the Netherlands.[18][19] The guidance of the group was taken over by Erik Bruijn,[20] who is still in charge of a flourishing community. The largest Zen group now is the Kanzeon Sangha, led by Nico Tydeman under the supervision of the American Zen master Dennis Genpo Merzel, Roshi, a former student of Maezumi Roshi in Los Angeles. This group has a relatively large centre where a teacher and some students live permanently. Many other groups are also represented in the Netherlands, like the Order of Buddhist Contemplatives in Apeldoorn, the Thich Nhat Hanh Order of Interbeing and the International Zen Institute Noorderpoort[21] monastery/retreat centre in Drenthe, led by Jiun Hogen Roshi.

Perhaps the most widely visible Buddhist leader in the world is Tenzin Gyatso, the current Dalai Lama, who first visited the United States in 1979. As the exiled political leader of Tibet, he has become a popular cause célèbre. His early life was depicted in Hollywood films such as Kundun and Seven Years in Tibet. He has attracted celebrity religious followers such as Richard Gere and Adam Yauch. The first Western-born Tibetan Buddhist monk was Robert A. F. Thurman, now an academic supporter of the Dalai Lama. The Dalai Lama maintains a North American headquarters at Namgyal Monastery in Ithaca, New York.

Lewis M. Hopfe in his "Religions of the World" suggested that "Buddhism is perhaps on the verge of another great missionary outreach" (1987:170).

Christian missions

 
Lähetyskirkko, a Christian mission church in Ullanlinna, Helsinki, Finland

A Christian missionary can be defined as "one who is to witness across cultures".[2] The Lausanne Congress of 1974, defined the term, related to Christian mission as, "to form a viable indigenous church-planting movement". Missionaries can be found in many countries around the world.

In the Bible, Jesus Christ is recorded as instructing the apostles to make disciples of all nations (Matthew 28:19–20, Mark 16:15–18). This verse is referred to by Christian missionaries as the Great Commission and inspires missionary work.

Historic

 
Village of Christianized Tapuyos Indians, Brazil c. 1820 CE

The Christian Church expanded throughout the Roman Empire already in New Testament times and is said by tradition to have reached even further, to Persia (Church of the East) and to India (Saint Thomas Christians). During the Middle Ages, the Christian monasteries and missionaries such as Saint Patrick (5th century), and Adalbert of Prague (ca 956–997) propagated learning and religion beyond the European boundaries of the old Roman Empire. In 596, Pope Gregory the Great (in office 590–604) sent the Gregorian Mission (including Augustine of Canterbury) into England. In their turn, Christians from Ireland (the Hiberno-Scottish mission) and from Britain (Saint Boniface (ca 675–754), and the Anglo-Saxon mission, for example) became prominent in converting the inhabitants of central Europe.

During the Age of Discovery, the Catholic Church established a number of missions in the Americas and in other Western colonies through the Augustinians, Franciscans, and Dominicans to spread Christianity in the New World and[22] to convert the Native Americans and other indigenous people. About the same time, missionaries such as Francis Xavier (1506–1552) as well as other Jesuits, Augustinians, Franciscans, and Dominicans reached Asia and the Far East, and the Portuguese sent missions into Africa. Emblematic in many respects is Matteo Ricci's Jesuit mission to China from 1582, which was totally peaceful and non-violent. These missionary movements should be distinguished from others, such as the Baltic Crusades of the 12th and 13th centuries, which were arguably compromised in their motivation by designs of military conquest.

 
English missionary John Williams, active in the South Pacific

Much contemporary Catholic missionary work has undergone profound change since the Second Vatican Council of 1962–1965, with an increased push for indigenization and inculturation, along with social justice issues as a constitutive part of preaching the Gospel.

As the Catholic Church normally organizes itself along territorial lines and had the human and material resources, religious orders, some even specializing in it, undertook most missionary work, especially in the era after the collapse of the Roman Empire in the West. Over time, the Holy See gradually established a normalized Church structure in the mission areas, often starting with special jurisdictions known as apostolic prefectures and apostolic vicariates. At a later stage of development these foundations are raised to regular diocesan status with a local bishops appointed. On a global front, these processes were often accelerated in the later 1960s, in part accompanying political decolonization. In some regions, however, they are still in course.

Just as the Bishop of Rome had jurisdiction also in territories later considered to be in the Eastern sphere, so the missionary efforts of the two 9th-century saints Cyril and Methodius were largely conducted in relation to the West rather than the East, though the field of activity was central Europe.

The Eastern Orthodox Church, under the Orthodox Church of Constantinople undertook vigorous missionary work under the Roman Empire and its successor the Byzantine Empire. This had lasting effects and in some sense is at the origin of the present relations of Constantinople with some sixteen Orthodox national churches including the Romanian Orthodox Church, the Georgian Orthodox and Apostolic Church, and the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (both traditionally said to have been founded by the missionary Apostle Andrew), the Bulgarian Orthodox Church (said to have been founded by the missionary Apostle Paul). The Byzantines expanded their missionary work in Ukraine after the mass baptism in Kiev in 988. The Serbian Orthodox Church had its origins in the conversion by Byzantine missionaries of the Serb tribes when they arrived in the Balkans in the 7th century. Orthodox missionaries also worked successfully among the Estonians from the 10th to the 12th centuries, founding the Estonian Orthodox Church.

 
Jesuits who were martyred by the Araucanian Indians in Elicura in 1612 CE

Under the Russian Empire of the 19th century, missionaries such as Nicholas Ilminsky (1822–1891) moved into the subject lands and propagated Orthodoxy, including through Belarus, Latvia, Moldova, Finland, Estonia, Ukraine, and China. The Russian St. Nicholas of Japan (1836–1912) took Eastern Orthodoxy to Japan in the 19th century. The Russian Orthodox Church also sent missionaries to Alaska beginning in the 18th century, including Saint Herman of Alaska (died 1836), to minister to the Natives. The Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia continued missionary work outside Russia after the 1917 Russian Revolution, resulting in the establishment of many new dioceses in the diaspora, from which numerous converts have been made in Eastern Europe, North America, and Oceania.

Early Protestant missionaries included John Eliot and contemporary ministers including John Cotton and Richard Bourne, who ministered to the Algonquin natives who lived in lands claimed by representatives of the Massachusetts Bay Colony in the early 17th century. Quaker "publishers of truth" visited Boston and other mid-17th century colonies, but were not always well received.[23]

The Danish government began the first organized Protestant mission work through its College of Missions, established in 1714. This funded and directed Lutheran missionaries such as Bartholomaeus Ziegenbalg in Tranquebar, India, and Hans Egede in Greenland. In 1732, while on a visit in 1732 to Copenhagen for the coronation of his cousin King Christian VI, the Moravian Church's patron Nicolas Ludwig, Count von Zinzendorf, was very struck by its effects, and particularly by two visiting Inuit children converted by Hans Egede. He also got to know a slave from the Danish colony in the West Indies. When he returned to Herrnhut in Saxony, he inspired the inhabitants of the village – it had fewer than thirty houses then – to send out "messengers" to the slaves in the West Indies and to the Moravian missions in Greenland. Within thirty years, Moravian missionaries had become active on every continent, and this at a time when there were fewer than three hundred people in Herrnhut. They are famous for their selfless work, living as slaves among the slaves and together with the Native Americans, the Delaware (i.e., Lenni Lenape) and Cherokee Indian tribes. Today, the work in the former mission provinces of the worldwide Moravian Church is carried on by native workers. The fastest-growing area of the work is in Tanzania in Eastern Africa. The Moravian work in South Africa inspired William Carey and the founders of the British Baptist missions. As of 2014, seven of every ten Moravians live in a former mission field and belong to a race other than Caucasian.

Much Anglican mission work came about under the auspices of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts (SPG, founded in 1701), the Church Missionary Society (CMS, founded 1799) and of the Intercontinental Church Society (formerly the Commonwealth and Continental Church Society, originating in 1823).

Modern

 
The first recorded baptism in Alta California
 
A Christian missionary of the Wisconsin Synod going to the Apache

With a dramatic increase in efforts since the 20th century, and a strong push since the Lausanne I: The International Congress on World Evangelization in Switzerland in 1974,[24] modern evangelical groups have focused efforts on sending missionaries to every ethnic group in the world. While this effort has not been completed, increased attention has brought larger numbers of people distributing Bibles, Jesus videos, and establishing evangelical churches in more remote areas.

Internationally, the focus for many years in the later 20th century was on reaching every "people group" with Christianity by 2000. Bill Bright's leadership with Campus Crusade, the Southern Baptist International Mission Board, The Joshua Project, and others brought about the need to know who these "unreached people groups" are and how those wanting to tell about the Christian God and share a Christian Bible could reach them. The focus for these organizations transitioned from a "country focus" to a "people group focus". (From "What is a People Group?" by Dr. Orville Boyd Jenkins: A "people group" is an ethnolinguistic group with a common self-identity that is shared by the various members. There are two parts to that word: ethno and linguistic. Language is a primary and dominant identifying factor of a people group. But there are other factors that determine or are associated with ethnicity.)

 
The missionary ship Duff arriving at Tahiti, c. 1797

What can be viewed as a success by those inside and outside the church from this focus is a higher level of cooperation and friendliness among churches and denominations. It is very common for those working on international fields to not only cooperate in efforts to share their gospel message, but view the work of their groups in a similar light. Also, with the increased study and awareness of different people groups, western mission efforts have become far more sensitive to the cultural nuances of those they are going to and those they are working with in the effort.

Over the years, as indigenous churches have matured, the church of the Global South (Africa, Asia, and Latin America) has become the driving force in missions. Korean and African missionaries can now be found all over the world. These missionaries represent a major shift in church history. Another major shift in the form of modern missionary work takes shape in the conflation of spiritualism with contemporary military metaphors and practices. Missionary work as spiritual warfare is the latest iteration in a long-standing relationship between Christian missions and militarization. Despite the seeming opposition between the submissive and morally upstanding associations with prayer and dominating violence associated with militarism, these two spheres interact in a dialectical way—they are entangled to produce one another.[25]

Nigeria, and other countries have had large numbers of their Christian adherents go to other countries and start churches. These non-western missionaries often have unparalleled success; because, they need few western resources and comforts to sustain their livelihood while doing the work they have chosen among a new culture and people.

 
David Livingstone preaching from a wagon

One of the first large-scale missionary endeavors of the British colonial age was the Baptist Missionary Society, founded in 1792 as the Particular Baptist Society for the Propagation of the Gospel Amongst the Heathen.

The London Missionary Society was an evangelical organisation, bringing together from its inception both Anglicans and Nonconformists; it was founded in England in 1795 with missions in Africa and the islands of the South Pacific. The Colonial Missionary Society was created in 1836, and directed its efforts towards promoting Congregationalist forms of Christianity among "British or other European settlers" rather than indigenous peoples.[26][27] Both of these merged in 1966, and the resultant organisation is now known as the Council for World Mission.

The Church Mission Society, first known as the Society for Missions to Africa and the East, was founded in 1799 by evangelical Anglicans centred around the anti-slavery activist William Wilberforce. It bent its efforts to the Coptic Church, the Ethiopian Church, and India, especially Kerala; it continues to this day. Many of the network of churches they established became the Anglican Communion.

In 1809, the London Society for Promoting Christianity Amongst the Jews was founded, which pioneered mission amongst the Jewish people; it continues today as the Church's Ministry Among Jewish People. In 1865, the China Inland Mission was founded, going well beyond British controlled areas; it continues as the OMF, working throughout East Asia.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) has an active missionary program. Young men between the ages of eighteen and twenty-five are encouraged to prepare themselves to serve a two-year, self-funded, full-time proselytizing mission. Young women who desire to serve as missionaries can serve starting at the age of nineteen, for one and a half years. Retired couples also have the option of serving a mission. Missionaries typically spend two weeks in a Missionary Training Center (or two to three months for those learning a new language) where they study the scriptures, learn new languages when applicable, prepare themselves to teach the Gospel of Jesus Christ, and learn more about the culture and the people they live among. As of December 2019, the LDS Church had over 67,000 full-time missionaries worldwide[28] and over 31,000 Service Missionaries.[29]

Maryknoll

In Montreal in 1910, Father James Anthony Walsh, a priest from Boston, met Father Thomas Frederick Price, from North Carolina. They agreed on the need to build a seminary for the training of young American men for the foreign Missions. Countering arguments that the Church needed workers here, Fathers Walsh and Price insisted the Church would not flourish until it sent missioners overseas.[30] Independently, the men had written extensively about the concept, Father Price in his magazine Truth, and Father Walsh in the pages of A Field Afar, an early incarnation of Maryknoll Magazine.[31] Winning the approval of the American hierarchy, the two priests traveled to Rome in June 1911 to receive final approval from Pope Pius X for the formation of the Catholic Foreign Mission Society of America, now better known as the Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers.[32]

Hindu missions

Hinduism was introduced into Java by travelers from India in ancient times. When the early Javanese princes accepted Hinduism, they did not give up all of their early animistic beliefs—they simply combined the new ideas with them. Several centuries ago, many Hindus left Java for Bali rather than convert to Islam. Hinduism has survived in Bali ever since.[33] Dang Hyang Nirartha was responsible for facilitating a refashioning of Balinese Hinduism. He was an important promoter of the idea of moksha in Indonesia. He founded the Shaivite priesthood that is now ubiquitous in Bali, and is now regarded as the ancestor of all Shaivite pandits.[34]

Shantidas Adhikari was a Hindu preacher from Sylhet who converted King Pamheiba of Manipur to Hinduism in 1717.[35]

Historically, Hinduism has only recently had a large influence in western countries such as the United Kingdom, New Zealand, and Canada. Since the 1960s, many westerners attracted by the world view presented in Asian religious systems have converted to Hinduism.[36] Many native-born Canadians of various ethnicities have converted during the last 50 years through the actions of the Ramakrishna Mission, ISKCON, Arya Samaj and other missionary organizations as well as due to the visits and guidance of Indian gurus such as Guru Maharaj, Sai Baba, and Rajneesh. The International Society for Krishna Consciousness has a presence in New Zealand, running temples in Auckland, Hamilton, Wellington and Christchurch.

Paramahansa Yogananda, an Indian yogi and guru, introduced many westerners to the teachings of meditation and Kriya Yoga through his book, Autobiography of a Yogi.[37]

Swami Vivekananda, the founder of the Ramakrishna Mission is one of the greatest Hindu missionaries to the West.

Ananda Marga missions

Ānanda Mārga, organizationally known as Ānanda Mārga Pracaraka Samgha (AMPS), meaning the samgha (organization) for the propagation of the marga (path) of ananda (bliss), is a social and spiritual movement[38][39] founded in Jamalpur, Bihar, India, in 1955 by Prabhat Ranjan Sarkar (1921–1990), also known by his spiritual name,[40] Shrii Shrii Ánandamúrti.[41] Ananda Marga counts hundreds of missions around the world through which its members carry out various forms of selfless service on Relief. (The social welfare and development organization under AMPS is Ananda Marga Universal Relief Team, or AMURT.)[42] Education and women's welfare The service activities of this section founded in 1963 are focused on:[43]

  • Education: creating and managing primary, post-primary, and higher schools, research institutes
  • Relief: creating and managing children's and students' homes for destitute children and for poor students, cheap hostels, retiring homes, academies of light for deaf dumb and crippled, invalid homes, refugee rehabilitation
  • Tribal: tribal welfare units, medical camps
  • Women's welfare: women welfare units, women's homes, nursing homes

Islamic missions

 
Mission Dawah is one of the largest contemporary Islamic missionary organizations.
 
The tombs of historic Islamic missionaries in China, Sa-Ke-Zu and Wu-Ko-Shun at Mount Lingshan, Quanzhou

Dawah means to "invite" (in Arabic, literally "calling") to Islam, which is the second largest religion with 1.6 billion members.[44] From the 7th century, it spread rapidly from the Arabian Peninsula to the rest of the world through the initial Muslim conquests and subsequently with traders and explorers after the death of Muhammad.

Initially, the spread of Islam came through the Dawah efforts of Muhammad and his followers. After his death in 632 CE, much of the expansion of the empire came through conquest such as that of North Africa and later Iberia (Al-Andalus). The Islamic conquest of Persia put an end to the Sassanid Empire and spread the reach of Islam to as far east as Khorasan, which would later become the cradle of Islamic civilization during the Islamic Golden Age (622–1258 CE) and a stepping-stone towards the introduction of Islam to the Turkic tribes living in and bordering the area.

The missionary movement peaked during the Islamic Golden Age, with the expansion of foreign trade routes, primarily into the Indo-Pacific and as far south as the isle of Zanzibar as well as the Southeastern shores of Africa.

With the coming of the Sufism tradition, Islamic missionary activities increased. Later, the Seljuk Turks' conquest of Anatolia made it easier for missionaries to go lands that formerly belonged to the Byzantine Empire. In the earlier stages of the Ottoman Empire, a Turkic form of Shamanism was still widely practiced in Anatolia, but soon lost ground to Sufism.

During the Ottoman presence in the Balkans, missionary movements were taken up by people from aristocratic families hailing from the region, who had been educated in Constantinople or other major city within the Empire such as the famed madrassahs and kulliyes. Primarily, individuals were sent back to the place of their origin and were appointed important positions in the local governing body. This approach often resulted in the building of mosques and local kulliyes for future generations to benefit from, as well as spreading the teachings of Islam.

 
The World Islamic Mission's mosque in Oslo, Norway

The spread of Islam towards Central and West Africa had until the early 19th century has been consistent but slow. Previously, the only connection was through Trans-Saharan trade routes. The Mali Empire, consisting predominantly of African and Berber tribes, stands as a strong example of the early Islamic conversion of the Sub-Saharan region. The gateways prominently expanded to include the aforementioned trade routes through the Eastern shores of the African continent. With the European colonization of Africa, missionaries were almost in competition with the European Christian missionaries operating in the colonies.

There is evidence of Arab Muslim traders entering Indonesia as early as the 8th century.[45] Indonesia's early people were animists, Hindus, and Buddhists.[46] However it was not until the end of the 13th century that the process of Islamization began to spread throughout the areas local communities and port towns.[45] The spread, although at first introduced through Arab Muslim traders, continued to saturate through the Indonesian people as local rulers and royalty began to adopt the religion subsequently leading their subjects to mirror their conversion.

Recently, Muslim groups have engaged in missionary work in Malawi. Much of this is performed by the African Muslim Agency based in Angola. The Kuwait-sponsored AMA has translated the Qur'an into Chichewa (Cinyanja),[47] one of the official languages of Malawi, and has engaged in other missionary work in the country. All of the major cities in the country have mosques and there are several Islamic schools.[48]

Several South African, Kuwaiti, and other Muslim agencies are active in Mozambique, with one important one being the African Muslim Agency. The spread of Islam into West Africa, beginning with ancient Ghana in the 9th century, was mainly the result of the commercial activities of North African Muslims. The empires of both Mali and Songhai that followed ancient Ghana in the Western Sudan adopted the religion. Islam made its entry into the northern territories of modern Ghana around the 15th century. Mande speakers (who in Ghana are known as Wangara) traders and clerics carried the religion into the area. The northeastern sector of the country was also influenced by an influx of Hausa Muslim traders from the 16th century onwards

Islamic influence first occurred in India in the early 7th century with the advent of Arab traders. Trade relations have existed between Arabia and the Indian subcontinent from ancient times. Even in the pre-Islamic era, Arab traders used to visit the Malabar region, which linked them with the ports of Southeast Asia. According to Historians Elliot and Dowson in their book The History of India as told by its own Historians, the first ship bearing Muslim travelers was seen on the Indian coast as early as 630 CE H. G. Rawlinson, in his book: Ancient and Medieval History of India claims the first Arab Muslims settled on the Indian coast in the last part of the 7th century.[49] Shaykh Zainuddin Makhdum's "Tuhfat al-Mujahidin" also is a reliable work.[50] This fact is corroborated, by J. Sturrock in his South Kanara and Madras Districts Manuals,[51] and also by Haridas Bhattacharya in Cultural Heritage of India Vol. IV.[52] It was with the advent of Islam that the Arabs became a prominent cultural force in the world. The Arab merchants and traders became the carriers of the new religion, and they propagated it wherever they went.[53]

Islam in Bulgaria can be traced back to the mid-ninth century when there were Islamic missionaries in Bulgaria, evidenced by a letter from Pope Nicholas to Boris of Bulgaria calling for the extirpation of Saracens.[54]

Pioneer Muslim missionaries to the Kenyan interior were largely Tanganyikan, who coupled their missionary work with trade, along the centres began along the railway line such as Kibwezi, Makindu, and Nairobi.

Outstanding among them was Maalim Mtondo Islam in Kenya, a Tanganyikan credited with being the first Muslim missionary to Nairobi. Reaching Nairobi at the close of the 19th century, he led a group of other Muslims, and enthusiastic missionaries from the coast to establish a "Swahili village" in present-day Pumwani. A small mosque was built to serve as a starting point and he began preaching Islam in earnest. He soon attracted several Kikuyus and Wakambas, who became his disciples.[55]

In 1380, Karim ul' Makhdum the first Arabian Islamic missionary reached the Sulu Archipelago and Jolo in the Philippines and established Islam in the country. In 1390, the Minangkabau's Prince Rajah Baguinda and his followers preached Islam on the islands.[56] The Sheik Karimal Makdum Mosque was the first mosque established in the Philippines on Simunul in Mindanao in the 14th century. Subsequent settlements by Arab missionaries traveling to Malaysia and Indonesia helped strengthen Islam in the Philippines and each settlement was governed by a Datu, Rajah, and a Sultan. Islamic provinces founded in the Philippines included the Sultanate of Maguindanao, Sultanate of Sulu, and other parts of the southern Philippines.

Modern missionary work in the United States has increased greatly in the last one hundred years, with much of the recent demographic growth driven by conversion.[57] Up to one-third of American Muslims are African Americans who have converted to Islam during the last seventy years. Conversion to Islam in prisons,[58] and in large urban areas[59] has also contributed to Islam's growth over the years.

An estimated US$45 billion has been spent by the Saudi Arabian government financing mosques and Islamic schools in foreign countries. Ain al-Yaqeen, a Saudi newspaper, reported in 2002 that Saudi funds may have contributed to building as many as 1,500 mosques and 2,000 other Islamic centers.[60]

Early Islamic missionaries during Muhammad's era

During the Expedition of Al Raji in 625,[61] the Islamic Prophet Muhammad sent some men as missionaries to various different tribes. Some men came to Muhammad and requested that Muhammad send instructors to teach them Islam,[61] but the men were bribed by the two tribes of Khuzaymah who wanted revenge for the assassination of Khalid bin Sufyan (Chief of the Banu Lahyan tribe) by Muhammad's followers[62] 8 Muslim Missionaires were killed in this expedition.,[61] another version says 10 Muslims were killed[63]

Then during the Expedition of Bir Maona in July 625[64] Muhammad sent some Missionaries at request of some men from the Banu Amir tribe,[65] but the Muslims were again killed as revenge for the assassination of Khalid bin Sufyan by Muhammad's followers[62] 70 Muslims were killed during this expedition[65]

During the Expedition of Khalid ibn al-Walid (Banu Jadhimah) in January 630,[66] Muhammad sent Khalid ibn Walid to invite the Banu Jadhimah tribe to Islam.[67] This is mentioned in the Sunni Hadith Sahih al-Bukhari, .[68]

Ahmadiyya Islam missions

 
Jamia Ahmadiyya, Ghana

Missionaries belonging to the Ahmadiyya thought of Islam often study at International Islamic seminaries and educational institutions, known as Jamia Ahmadiyya. Upon completion of their degrees, they are sent to various parts of the world including South America, Africa, North America, Europe, and the Far East as appointed by Mirza Masroor Ahmad, present head and Caliph of the worldwide Ahmadiyya Muslim community. Jamia students may be appointed by the Caliph either as Missionaries of the community (often called Murrabi, Imam, or Mawlana) or as Qadis or Muftis of the Ahmadiyya Muslim community with a specialisation in matters of fiqh (Islamic Jurisprudence). Some Jamia alumni have also become Islamic historians such as the late Dost Muhammad Shahid, former Official Historian of the Ahmadiyya Muslim community, with a specialisation in tarikh (Islamic historiography). Missionaries stay with their careers as appointed by the Caliph for the rest of their lives, as per their commitment to the community.

Jain missions

According to Jaina tradition, Mahavira's following had swelled to 14,000 monks and 36,000 nuns by the time of his death in 527 BCE[69] For some two centuries the Jains remained a small community of monks and followers. However, in the 4th century BCE, they gained strength and spread from Bihar to Orissa, then so South India and westwards to Gujarat and the Punjab, where Jain communities became firmly established, particularly among the mercantile classes.[70] The period of the Mauryan Dynasty to the 12th century was the period of Jainism's greatest growth and influence. Thereafter, the Jainas in the South and Central regions lost ground in face of rising Hindu devotional movements. Jainism retreated to the West and Northwest, which have remained its stronghold to the present.[71]

Emperor Samprati is regarded as the "Jain Ashoka" for his patronage and efforts to spreading Jainism in east India. Samprati, according to Jain historians, is considered more powerful and famous than Ashoka himself. Samprati built thousands of Jain Temples in India, many of which remain in use, such as the Jain temples at Viramgam and Palitana (Gujarat), Agar Malwa (Ujjain). Within three and a half years, he got one hundred and twenty-five thousand new temples built, thirty-six thousand repaired, twelve and a half million murtis, holy statues, consecrated and ninety-five thousand metal murtis prepared. Samprati is said to have erected Jain temples throughout his empire. He founded Jain monasteries even in non-Aryan territory, and almost all ancient Jain temples or monuments of unknown origin are popularly attributed to him. It may be noted that all the Jain monuments of Rajasthan and Gujarat, with unknown builders are also attributed to Emperor Samprati.

Virachand Gandhi (1864–1901) from Mahuva represented Jains at the first Parliament of the World's Religions in Chicago in 1893 and won a silver medal. Gandhi was most likely the first Jain and the first Gujarati to travel to the United States, and his statue still stands at the Jain temple in Chicago. In his time he was a world-famous personality. Gandhi represented Jains in Chicago because the Great Jain Saint Param Pujya Acharya Vijayanandsuri, also known as Acharya Atmaram, was invited to represent the Jain religion at the first World Parliament of Religions. As Jain monks do not travel overseas, he recommended the bright young scholar Virchand Gandhi to be the emissary for the religion. Today there are 100,000 Jains in the United States.[72]

There are also tens of thousands of Jains located in the UK and Canada.

Judaism

Historically, various Jewish sects and movements have been consistent in avoiding or even forbidding proselytization (religion-to-religion conversion propaganda) to convert gentiles (non-Jews). They believe that gentiles do not need to convert to Judaism, due to Abrahamic religions being already under the Seven Laws of Noah.

Chabad Lubavitch has a sub-sect that has engaged in an effort to spread Noahidism (Seven Laws of Noah) among non-Jews who follow none of the existing Abrahamic religions.

Orthodox Judaism outreach (kiruv) encourages non-practicing Jews to become more knowledgeable and observant of halakha (Jewish law). Outreach is done worldwide, by organizations such as Chabad Lubavitch, Aish HaTorah, Ohr Somayach, and Partners In Torah.

Members of Reform Judaism began a program to convert to their brand of Judaism the non-Jewish spouses of its intermarried members and non-Jews who have an interest in Reform Judaism. Their rationale is that so many Jews were lost during the Holocaust that newcomers must be sought out and welcomed.[73] This approach has been rejected by both Orthodox Judaism and Conservative Judaism[74] as unrealistic and posing a danger on the entire Jewish faith.

Sikh missions

According to Sikhs, when he was twenty-eight, Guru Nanak went as usual down to the river to bathe and meditate. It was said that he was gone for three days. When he reappeared, it is said he was "filled with the spirit of God". His first words after his re-emergence were: "there is no Hindu, there is no Muslim". With this secular principle he began his missionary work.[75] He made four distinct major journeys, in the four different directions, which are called Udasis, spanning many thousands of kilometres, preaching the message of God.[76]

Currently there are gurdwaras in over 50 countries.[77][78][79]

Of missionary organizations, the most famous is probably The Sikh Missionary Society UK. The aim of the Sikh Missionary Society is the Advancement of the Sikh faith in the U.K. and abroad, engages in various activities:[80][81][82][83]

  • Produce and distribute books on the Sikh faith in English and Panjabi, and other languages to enlighten the younger generation of Sikhs as well as non-Sikhs.
  • Advise and support young students in schools, colleges, and universities on Sikh issues and Sikh traditions.
  • Arrange classes, lectures, seminars, conferences, Gurmat camps and the celebration of holy Sikh events, the basis of their achievement and interest in the field of the Sikh faith and the Panjabi language.
  • Make available all Sikh artifacts, posters, literature, music, educational videos, DVDs, and multimedia CD-ROMs.[citation needed]

There have been several Sikh missionaries:

Sikhs have emigrated to many countries of the world since Indian independence in 1947. Sikh communities exist in Britain, East Africa, Canada, the United States, Malaysia, and most European countries.[85]

Tenrikyo missions

Tenrikyo conducts missionary work in approximately forty countries.[86] Its first missionary was a woman named, Kokan, who worked on the streets of Osaka.[87] In 2003, it operated approximately twenty thousand mission stations worldwide.[88]

Criticism

Contact of Christian missionaries with isolated tribes has been asserted as a cause of the extinction of some tribes, such as extinction from infections and even simple diseases such as flu.[89][90] Documented cases of European contact with isolated tribes has shown rapid health deterioration, but this is not specifically linked to missionaries.[91]

Christian missionary work has been criticized as a form of colonialism.[92] Christian missionary thinkers have recognized complicity between colonialism and missions with roots in 'colonial paternalism'.[93]

Some kinds of Christian missionary activity have come under criticism, including concerns about a perceived lack of respect for other cultures.[94] Potential destruction of social structure among the converts has also been a concern. The Huaorani people of Amazonian Ecuador have had a well-documented mixed relation with Evangelical Christian missionaries and the contacts they brought to their communities, criticized by outsiders.

Impact of missions

A 2012 study by political scientist Robert Woodberry, focusing on Protestant missionaries, found that they have often left a very positive societal impact in the areas where they worked. "In cross-national statistical analysis Protestant missions are significantly and robustly associated with higher levels of printing, education, economic development, organizational civil society, protection of private property, and rule of law and with lower levels of corruption".[95]

A 2020 study by Elena Nikolova and Jakub Polansky replicates Woodberry's analysis[95] using twenty-six alternative democracy measures and extends the time period over which the democracy measures are averaged. These two simple modifications lead to the breakdown of Woodberry's results.[95] Overall, no significant relationship between Protestant missions and the development of democracy can be established.[96]

A 2017 study found that areas of colonial Mexico that had Mendicant missions have higher rates of literacy and educational attainment today than regions that did not have missions.[97] Areas that had Jesuit missions are today indistinct from the areas that had no missions.[97] The study also found that "the share of Catholics is higher in regions where Catholic missions of any kind were a historical present."[97]

A 2016 study found that regions in Sub-Saharan Africa that Protestant missionaries brought printing presses to are today "associated with higher newspaper readership, trust, education, and political participation."[98][99]

Missionaries have also made significant contributions to linguistics and the description and documentation of many languages. "Many languages today exist only in missionary records. More than anywhere else, our knowledge of the native languages in South America has been the product of missionary activity… Without missionary documentation the reclamation [of several languages] would have been completely impossible"[100] "A satisfactory history of linguistics cannot be written before the impressive contribution of missionaries is recognised."[101]

Lists of prominent missionaries

American missionaries

British Christian missionaries

See also

References

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Further reading

  • Dunch, Ryan. "Beyond cultural imperialism: Cultural theory, Christian missions, and global modernity." History and Theory 41.3 (2002): 301–325. online
  • Dwight, Henry Otis et al. eds., The Encyclopedia of Missions (2nd ed. 1904) Online, Global coverage Of Protestant and Catholic missions.
  • Robinson, David Muslim Societies in African History (The Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge Cambridge, UK 2004) ISBN 0-521-53366-X
  • Sharma, Arvind (2014). Hinduism as a missionary religion. New Delhi: Dev Publishers & Distributors.
  • Shourie, Arun. (2006). Missionaries in India: Continuities, changes, dilemmas. New Delhi: Rupa.ISBN 9788172232702
  • Madhya Pradesh (India)., & Niyogi, M. B. (1956). Vindicated by time: The Niyogi Committee report on Christian missionary activities. Nagpur: Government Printing, Madhya Pradesh.

External links

  Media related to Missionaries at Wikimedia Commons

  • Missionary eTexts
  • Henry Martyn Centre for the study of mission & world Christianity
  • William Carey Library, Mission Resources
  • Hiney, Thomas: On the Missionary Trail, New York: Atlantic Monthly Press (2000), p5-22.
  • EtymologyOnLine (word history)

missionary, other, uses, disambiguation, mission, partner, redirects, here, other, uses, mission, disambiguation, partner, disambiguation, this, article, lend, undue, weight, certain, ideas, incidents, controversies, please, help, improve, rewriting, balanced,. For other uses see Missionary disambiguation Mission partner redirects here For other uses see Mission disambiguation and Partner disambiguation This article may lend undue weight to certain ideas incidents or controversies Please help improve it by rewriting it in a balanced fashion that contextualizes different points of view July 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message A missionary is a member of a religious group which is sent into an area in order to promote its faith or provide services to people such as education literacy social justice health care and economic development 1 2 Catholic missionaries in Papua New Guinea In the Latin translation of the Bible Jesus Christ says the word when he sends the disciples into areas and commands them to preach the gospel in his name The term is most commonly used in reference to Christian missions but it can also be used in reference to any creed or ideology 3 The word mission originated in 1598 when Jesuits the members of the Society of Jesus sent members abroad derived from the Latin missionem nom missio meaning act of sending or mittere meaning to send 4 Contents 1 By religion 1 1 Buddhist missions 1 2 Christian missions 1 2 1 Historic 1 2 2 Modern 1 2 2 1 Maryknoll 1 3 Hindu missions 1 3 1 Ananda Marga missions 1 4 Islamic missions 1 4 1 Early Islamic missionaries during Muhammad s era 1 4 2 Ahmadiyya Islam missions 1 5 Jain missions 1 6 Judaism 1 7 Sikh missions 1 8 Tenrikyo missions 2 Criticism 3 Impact of missions 4 Lists of prominent missionaries 4 1 American missionaries 4 2 British Christian missionaries 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksBy religion EditBuddhist missions Edit Buddhist proselytism at the time of king Ashoka 260 218 BCE according to his Edicts Central Asian Buddhist monk teaching a Chinese monk Bezeklik 9th 10th century although Albert von Le Coq 1913 assumed the blue eyed red haired monk was a Tocharian 5 modern scholarship has identified similar Caucasian figures of the same cave temple No 9 as ethnic Sogdians 6 an Eastern Iranian people who inhabited Turfan as an ethnic minority community during the phases of Tang Chinese 7th 8th century and Uyghur rule 9th 13th century 7 The first Buddhist missionaries were called Dharma Bhanaks and some who see a missionary charge in the symbolism behind the Buddhist wheel which is said to travel all over the earth bringing Buddhism with it The Emperor Ashoka was a significant early Buddhist missioner In the 3rd century BCE Dharmaraksita among others was sent out by emperor Ashoka to proselytize 8 the Buddhist tradition through the Indian Maurya Empire but also into the Mediterranean as far as Greece Gradually all India and the neighboring island of Ceylon were converted Then Buddhism spread eastward and southeastward to the present lands of Burma Thailand Laos Cambodia Vietnam and Indonesia 9 Buddhism was spread among the Turkic people during the 2nd and 3rd centuries BCE into modern day Pakistan Kashmir Afghanistan eastern and coastal Iran Uzbekistan Turkmenistan and Tajikistan It was also taken into China brought by Kasyapa Matanga in the 2nd century CE Lokaksema and An Shigao translated Buddhist sutras into Chinese Dharmarakṣa was one of the greatest translators of Mahayana Buddhist scriptures into Chinese Dharmaraksa came to the Chinese capital of Luoyang in 266 CE where he made the first known translations of the Lotus Sutra and the Dasabhumika Sutra which were to become some of the classic texts of Chinese Mahayana Buddhism Altogether Dharmaraksa translated around 154 Hinayana and Mahayana sutras representing most of the important texts of Buddhism available in the Western Regions His proselytizing is said to have converted many to Buddhism in China and made Chang an present day Xi an a major center of Buddhism Buddhism expanded rapidly especially among the common people and by 381 most of the people of northwest China were Buddhist Winning converts also among the rulers and scholars by the end of the T ang Dynasty Buddhism was found everywhere in China 10 Marananta brought Buddhism to the Korean Peninsula in the 4th century Seong of Baekje known as a great patron of Buddhism in Korea built many temples and welcomed priests bringing Buddhist texts directly from India In 528 Baekje officially adopted Buddhism as its state religion He sent tribute missions to Liang in 534 and 541 on the second occasion requesting artisans as well as various Buddhist works and a teacher According to Chinese records all these requests were granted A subsequent mission was sent in 549 only to find the Liang capital in the hands of the rebel Hou Jing who threw them in prison for lamenting the fall of the capital He is credited with having sent a mission in 538 to Japan that brought an image of Shakyamuni and several sutras to the Japanese court This has traditionally been considered the official introduction of Buddhism to Japan An account of this is given in Gangōji Garan Engi First supported by the Soga clan Buddhism rose over the objections of the pro Shinto Mononobe 11 and Buddhism entrenched itself in Japan with the conversion of Prince Shotoku Taishi 9 When in 710 Emperor Shomu established a new capital at Nara with urban grid plan modeled after the capital of China Buddhism received official support and began to flourish 11 Padmasambhava The Lotus Born was a sage guru from Oḍḍiyana who is said to have transmitted Vajrayana Buddhism to Bhutan and Tibet and neighbouring countries in the 8th century The use of missions councils and monastic institutions influenced the emergence of Christian missions and organizations which developed similar structures in places that were formerly Buddhist missions 12 During the 19th and 20th centuries Western intellectuals such as Schopenhauer Henry David Thoreau Max Muller and esoteric societies such as the Theosophical Society of H P Blavatsky The Buddhist Society of Great Britain and Ireland and the Buddhist Society London spread interest in Buddhism Writers such as Hermann Hesse and Jack Kerouac in the West and the hippie generation of the late 1960s and early 1970s led to a re discovery of Buddhism During the 20th and 21st centuries Buddhism has again been propagated by missionaries into the West such as Ananda Metteyya Theravadha Buddhism 13 Suzuki Daisetsu Teitarō Zen Buddhism 14 the Dalai Lama 15 and monks including Lama Surya Das Tibetan Buddhism Tibetan Buddhism has been significantly active and successful in the West since the Chinese takeover of Tibet in 1959 Today Buddhists make a decent proportion of several countries in the West such as New Zealand Australia Canada the Netherlands France and the United States In Canada the immense popularity and goodwill ushered in by Tibet s Dalai Lama who has been made honorary Canadian citizen put Buddhism in a favourable light in the country Many non Asian Canadians embraced Buddhism in various traditions and some have become leaders in their respective sanghas In the early 1990s the French Buddhist Union UBF founded in 1986 estimated that there are 600 000 to 650 000 Buddhists in France with 150 000 French converts among them 16 In 1999 sociologist Frederic Lenoir estimated there are 10 000 converts and up to 5 million sympathizers although other researchers have questioned these numbers 17 Taisen Deshimaru was a Japanese Zen Buddhist who founded numerous zendos in France Thich Nhat Hanh a Nobel Peace Prize nominated Vietnamese born Zen Buddhist founded the Unified Buddhist Church Eglise Bouddhique Unifiee in France in 1969 The Plum Village Monastery in the Dordogne in southern France was his residence and the headquarters of his international sangha Temple of One Thousand Buddhas in La Boulaye Saone et Loire Burgundy In 1968 Leo Boer and Wener van de Wetering founded a Zen group and through two books made Zen popular in the Netherlands 18 19 The guidance of the group was taken over by Erik Bruijn 20 who is still in charge of a flourishing community The largest Zen group now is the Kanzeon Sangha led by Nico Tydeman under the supervision of the American Zen master Dennis Genpo Merzel Roshi a former student of Maezumi Roshi in Los Angeles This group has a relatively large centre where a teacher and some students live permanently Many other groups are also represented in the Netherlands like the Order of Buddhist Contemplatives in Apeldoorn the Thich Nhat Hanh Order of Interbeing and the International Zen Institute Noorderpoort 21 monastery retreat centre in Drenthe led by Jiun Hogen Roshi Perhaps the most widely visible Buddhist leader in the world is Tenzin Gyatso the current Dalai Lama who first visited the United States in 1979 As the exiled political leader of Tibet he has become a popular cause celebre His early life was depicted in Hollywood films such as Kundun and Seven Years in Tibet He has attracted celebrity religious followers such as Richard Gere and Adam Yauch The first Western born Tibetan Buddhist monk was Robert A F Thurman now an academic supporter of the Dalai Lama The Dalai Lama maintains a North American headquarters at Namgyal Monastery in Ithaca New York Lewis M Hopfe in his Religions of the World suggested that Buddhism is perhaps on the verge of another great missionary outreach 1987 170 Christian missions Edit Main articles Christian mission and List of Christian missionaries See also Jesuit reduction Lahetyskirkko a Christian mission church in Ullanlinna Helsinki Finland A Christian missionary can be defined as one who is to witness across cultures 2 The Lausanne Congress of 1974 defined the term related to Christian mission as to form a viable indigenous church planting movement Missionaries can be found in many countries around the world In the Bible Jesus Christ is recorded as instructing the apostles to make disciples of all nations Matthew 28 19 20 Mark 16 15 18 This verse is referred to by Christian missionaries as the Great Commission and inspires missionary work Historic Edit Village of Christianized Tapuyos Indians Brazil c 1820 CE The Christian Church expanded throughout the Roman Empire already in New Testament times and is said by tradition to have reached even further to Persia Church of the East and to India Saint Thomas Christians During the Middle Ages the Christian monasteries and missionaries such as Saint Patrick 5th century and Adalbert of Prague ca 956 997 propagated learning and religion beyond the European boundaries of the old Roman Empire In 596 Pope Gregory the Great in office 590 604 sent the Gregorian Mission including Augustine of Canterbury into England In their turn Christians from Ireland the Hiberno Scottish mission and from Britain Saint Boniface ca 675 754 and the Anglo Saxon mission for example became prominent in converting the inhabitants of central Europe During the Age of Discovery the Catholic Church established a number of missions in the Americas and in other Western colonies through the Augustinians Franciscans and Dominicans to spread Christianity in the New World and 22 to convert the Native Americans and other indigenous people About the same time missionaries such as Francis Xavier 1506 1552 as well as other Jesuits Augustinians Franciscans and Dominicans reached Asia and the Far East and the Portuguese sent missions into Africa Emblematic in many respects is Matteo Ricci s Jesuit mission to China from 1582 which was totally peaceful and non violent These missionary movements should be distinguished from others such as the Baltic Crusades of the 12th and 13th centuries which were arguably compromised in their motivation by designs of military conquest English missionary John Williams active in the South Pacific Much contemporary Catholic missionary work has undergone profound change since the Second Vatican Council of 1962 1965 with an increased push for indigenization and inculturation along with social justice issues as a constitutive part of preaching the Gospel As the Catholic Church normally organizes itself along territorial lines and had the human and material resources religious orders some even specializing in it undertook most missionary work especially in the era after the collapse of the Roman Empire in the West Over time the Holy See gradually established a normalized Church structure in the mission areas often starting with special jurisdictions known as apostolic prefectures and apostolic vicariates At a later stage of development these foundations are raised to regular diocesan status with a local bishops appointed On a global front these processes were often accelerated in the later 1960s in part accompanying political decolonization In some regions however they are still in course Just as the Bishop of Rome had jurisdiction also in territories later considered to be in the Eastern sphere so the missionary efforts of the two 9th century saints Cyril and Methodius were largely conducted in relation to the West rather than the East though the field of activity was central Europe The Eastern Orthodox Church under the Orthodox Church of Constantinople undertook vigorous missionary work under the Roman Empire and its successor the Byzantine Empire This had lasting effects and in some sense is at the origin of the present relations of Constantinople with some sixteen Orthodox national churches including the Romanian Orthodox Church the Georgian Orthodox and Apostolic Church and the Ukrainian Orthodox Church both traditionally said to have been founded by the missionary Apostle Andrew the Bulgarian Orthodox Church said to have been founded by the missionary Apostle Paul The Byzantines expanded their missionary work in Ukraine after the mass baptism in Kiev in 988 The Serbian Orthodox Church had its origins in the conversion by Byzantine missionaries of the Serb tribes when they arrived in the Balkans in the 7th century Orthodox missionaries also worked successfully among the Estonians from the 10th to the 12th centuries founding the Estonian Orthodox Church Jesuits who were martyred by the Araucanian Indians in Elicura in 1612 CE Under the Russian Empire of the 19th century missionaries such as Nicholas Ilminsky 1822 1891 moved into the subject lands and propagated Orthodoxy including through Belarus Latvia Moldova Finland Estonia Ukraine and China The Russian St Nicholas of Japan 1836 1912 took Eastern Orthodoxy to Japan in the 19th century The Russian Orthodox Church also sent missionaries to Alaska beginning in the 18th century including Saint Herman of Alaska died 1836 to minister to the Natives The Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia continued missionary work outside Russia after the 1917 Russian Revolution resulting in the establishment of many new dioceses in the diaspora from which numerous converts have been made in Eastern Europe North America and Oceania Early Protestant missionaries included John Eliot and contemporary ministers including John Cotton and Richard Bourne who ministered to the Algonquin natives who lived in lands claimed by representatives of the Massachusetts Bay Colony in the early 17th century Quaker publishers of truth visited Boston and other mid 17th century colonies but were not always well received 23 The Danish government began the first organized Protestant mission work through its College of Missions established in 1714 This funded and directed Lutheran missionaries such as Bartholomaeus Ziegenbalg in Tranquebar India and Hans Egede in Greenland In 1732 while on a visit in 1732 to Copenhagen for the coronation of his cousin King Christian VI the Moravian Church s patron Nicolas Ludwig Count von Zinzendorf was very struck by its effects and particularly by two visiting Inuit children converted by Hans Egede He also got to know a slave from the Danish colony in the West Indies When he returned to Herrnhut in Saxony he inspired the inhabitants of the village it had fewer than thirty houses then to send out messengers to the slaves in the West Indies and to the Moravian missions in Greenland Within thirty years Moravian missionaries had become active on every continent and this at a time when there were fewer than three hundred people in Herrnhut They are famous for their selfless work living as slaves among the slaves and together with the Native Americans the Delaware i e Lenni Lenape and Cherokee Indian tribes Today the work in the former mission provinces of the worldwide Moravian Church is carried on by native workers The fastest growing area of the work is in Tanzania in Eastern Africa The Moravian work in South Africa inspired William Carey and the founders of the British Baptist missions As of 2014 update seven of every ten Moravians live in a former mission field and belong to a race other than Caucasian Much Anglican mission work came about under the auspices of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts SPG founded in 1701 the Church Missionary Society CMS founded 1799 and of the Intercontinental Church Society formerly the Commonwealth and Continental Church Society originating in 1823 Modern Edit The first recorded baptism in Alta California A Christian missionary of the Wisconsin Synod going to the Apache With a dramatic increase in efforts since the 20th century and a strong push since the Lausanne I The International Congress on World Evangelization in Switzerland in 1974 24 modern evangelical groups have focused efforts on sending missionaries to every ethnic group in the world While this effort has not been completed increased attention has brought larger numbers of people distributing Bibles Jesus videos and establishing evangelical churches in more remote areas Internationally the focus for many years in the later 20th century was on reaching every people group with Christianity by 2000 Bill Bright s leadership with Campus Crusade the Southern Baptist International Mission Board The Joshua Project and others brought about the need to know who these unreached people groups are and how those wanting to tell about the Christian God and share a Christian Bible could reach them The focus for these organizations transitioned from a country focus to a people group focus From What is a People Group by Dr Orville Boyd Jenkins A people group is an ethnolinguistic group with a common self identity that is shared by the various members There are two parts to that word ethno and linguistic Language is a primary and dominant identifying factor of a people group But there are other factors that determine or are associated with ethnicity The missionary ship Duff arriving at Tahiti c 1797 What can be viewed as a success by those inside and outside the church from this focus is a higher level of cooperation and friendliness among churches and denominations It is very common for those working on international fields to not only cooperate in efforts to share their gospel message but view the work of their groups in a similar light Also with the increased study and awareness of different people groups western mission efforts have become far more sensitive to the cultural nuances of those they are going to and those they are working with in the effort Over the years as indigenous churches have matured the church of the Global South Africa Asia and Latin America has become the driving force in missions Korean and African missionaries can now be found all over the world These missionaries represent a major shift in church history Another major shift in the form of modern missionary work takes shape in the conflation of spiritualism with contemporary military metaphors and practices Missionary work as spiritual warfare is the latest iteration in a long standing relationship between Christian missions and militarization Despite the seeming opposition between the submissive and morally upstanding associations with prayer and dominating violence associated with militarism these two spheres interact in a dialectical way they are entangled to produce one another 25 Nigeria and other countries have had large numbers of their Christian adherents go to other countries and start churches These non western missionaries often have unparalleled success because they need few western resources and comforts to sustain their livelihood while doing the work they have chosen among a new culture and people Main articles London Missionary Society Church Mission Society China Inland Mission Church s Ministry Among Jewish People Baptist Missionary Society and Christianity in China David Livingstone preaching from a wagon One of the first large scale missionary endeavors of the British colonial age was the Baptist Missionary Society founded in 1792 as the Particular Baptist Society for the Propagation of the Gospel Amongst the Heathen The London Missionary Society was an evangelical organisation bringing together from its inception both Anglicans and Nonconformists it was founded in England in 1795 with missions in Africa and the islands of the South Pacific The Colonial Missionary Society was created in 1836 and directed its efforts towards promoting Congregationalist forms of Christianity among British or other European settlers rather than indigenous peoples 26 27 Both of these merged in 1966 and the resultant organisation is now known as the Council for World Mission The Church Mission Society first known as the Society for Missions to Africa and the East was founded in 1799 by evangelical Anglicans centred around the anti slavery activist William Wilberforce It bent its efforts to the Coptic Church the Ethiopian Church and India especially Kerala it continues to this day Many of the network of churches they established became the Anglican Communion In 1809 the London Society for Promoting Christianity Amongst the Jews was founded which pioneered mission amongst the Jewish people it continues today as the Church s Ministry Among Jewish People In 1865 the China Inland Mission was founded going well beyond British controlled areas it continues as the OMF working throughout East Asia The iconic black name tags of missionaries of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints LDS Church has an active missionary program Young men between the ages of eighteen and twenty five are encouraged to prepare themselves to serve a two year self funded full time proselytizing mission Young women who desire to serve as missionaries can serve starting at the age of nineteen for one and a half years Retired couples also have the option of serving a mission Missionaries typically spend two weeks in a Missionary Training Center or two to three months for those learning a new language where they study the scriptures learn new languages when applicable prepare themselves to teach the Gospel of Jesus Christ and learn more about the culture and the people they live among As of December 2019 the LDS Church had over 67 000 full time missionaries worldwide 28 and over 31 000 Service Missionaries 29 Maryknoll Edit Further information Maryknoll In Montreal in 1910 Father James Anthony Walsh a priest from Boston met Father Thomas Frederick Price from North Carolina They agreed on the need to build a seminary for the training of young American men for the foreign Missions Countering arguments that the Church needed workers here Fathers Walsh and Price insisted the Church would not flourish until it sent missioners overseas 30 Independently the men had written extensively about the concept Father Price in his magazine Truth and Father Walsh in the pages of A Field Afar an early incarnation of Maryknoll Magazine 31 Winning the approval of the American hierarchy the two priests traveled to Rome in June 1911 to receive final approval from Pope Pius X for the formation of the Catholic Foreign Mission Society of America now better known as the Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers 32 Hindu missions Edit Hinduism was introduced into Java by travelers from India in ancient times When the early Javanese princes accepted Hinduism they did not give up all of their early animistic beliefs they simply combined the new ideas with them Several centuries ago many Hindus left Java for Bali rather than convert to Islam Hinduism has survived in Bali ever since 33 Dang Hyang Nirartha was responsible for facilitating a refashioning of Balinese Hinduism He was an important promoter of the idea of moksha in Indonesia He founded the Shaivite priesthood that is now ubiquitous in Bali and is now regarded as the ancestor of all Shaivite pandits 34 Shantidas Adhikari was a Hindu preacher from Sylhet who converted King Pamheiba of Manipur to Hinduism in 1717 35 Historically Hinduism has only recently had a large influence in western countries such as the United Kingdom New Zealand and Canada Since the 1960s many westerners attracted by the world view presented in Asian religious systems have converted to Hinduism 36 Many native born Canadians of various ethnicities have converted during the last 50 years through the actions of the Ramakrishna Mission ISKCON Arya Samaj and other missionary organizations as well as due to the visits and guidance of Indian gurus such as Guru Maharaj Sai Baba and Rajneesh The International Society for Krishna Consciousness has a presence in New Zealand running temples in Auckland Hamilton Wellington and Christchurch Paramahansa Yogananda an Indian yogi and guru introduced many westerners to the teachings of meditation and Kriya Yoga through his book Autobiography of a Yogi 37 Swami Vivekananda the founder of the Ramakrishna Mission is one of the greatest Hindu missionaries to the West Ananda Marga missions Edit Ananda Marga organizationally known as Ananda Marga Pracaraka Samgha AMPS meaning the samgha organization for the propagation of the marga path of ananda bliss is a social and spiritual movement 38 39 founded in Jamalpur Bihar India in 1955 by Prabhat Ranjan Sarkar 1921 1990 also known by his spiritual name 40 Shrii Shrii Anandamurti 41 Ananda Marga counts hundreds of missions around the world through which its members carry out various forms of selfless service on Relief The social welfare and development organization under AMPS is Ananda Marga Universal Relief Team or AMURT 42 Education and women s welfare The service activities of this section founded in 1963 are focused on 43 Education creating and managing primary post primary and higher schools research institutes Relief creating and managing children s and students homes for destitute children and for poor students cheap hostels retiring homes academies of light for deaf dumb and crippled invalid homes refugee rehabilitation Tribal tribal welfare units medical camps Women s welfare women welfare units women s homes nursing homesIslamic missions Edit Main article Islamic missionary activity Mission Dawah is one of the largest contemporary Islamic missionary organizations The tombs of historic Islamic missionaries in China Sa Ke Zu and Wu Ko Shun at Mount Lingshan Quanzhou Dawah means to invite in Arabic literally calling to Islam which is the second largest religion with 1 6 billion members 44 From the 7th century it spread rapidly from the Arabian Peninsula to the rest of the world through the initial Muslim conquests and subsequently with traders and explorers after the death of Muhammad Initially the spread of Islam came through the Dawah efforts of Muhammad and his followers After his death in 632 CE much of the expansion of the empire came through conquest such as that of North Africa and later Iberia Al Andalus The Islamic conquest of Persia put an end to the Sassanid Empire and spread the reach of Islam to as far east as Khorasan which would later become the cradle of Islamic civilization during the Islamic Golden Age 622 1258 CE and a stepping stone towards the introduction of Islam to the Turkic tribes living in and bordering the area The missionary movement peaked during the Islamic Golden Age with the expansion of foreign trade routes primarily into the Indo Pacific and as far south as the isle of Zanzibar as well as the Southeastern shores of Africa With the coming of the Sufism tradition Islamic missionary activities increased Later the Seljuk Turks conquest of Anatolia made it easier for missionaries to go lands that formerly belonged to the Byzantine Empire In the earlier stages of the Ottoman Empire a Turkic form of Shamanism was still widely practiced in Anatolia but soon lost ground to Sufism During the Ottoman presence in the Balkans missionary movements were taken up by people from aristocratic families hailing from the region who had been educated in Constantinople or other major city within the Empire such as the famed madrassahs and kulliyes Primarily individuals were sent back to the place of their origin and were appointed important positions in the local governing body This approach often resulted in the building of mosques and local kulliyes for future generations to benefit from as well as spreading the teachings of Islam The World Islamic Mission s mosque in Oslo Norway The spread of Islam towards Central and West Africa had until the early 19th century has been consistent but slow Previously the only connection was through Trans Saharan trade routes The Mali Empire consisting predominantly of African and Berber tribes stands as a strong example of the early Islamic conversion of the Sub Saharan region The gateways prominently expanded to include the aforementioned trade routes through the Eastern shores of the African continent With the European colonization of Africa missionaries were almost in competition with the European Christian missionaries operating in the colonies There is evidence of Arab Muslim traders entering Indonesia as early as the 8th century 45 Indonesia s early people were animists Hindus and Buddhists 46 However it was not until the end of the 13th century that the process of Islamization began to spread throughout the areas local communities and port towns 45 The spread although at first introduced through Arab Muslim traders continued to saturate through the Indonesian people as local rulers and royalty began to adopt the religion subsequently leading their subjects to mirror their conversion Recently Muslim groups have engaged in missionary work in Malawi Much of this is performed by the African Muslim Agency based in Angola The Kuwait sponsored AMA has translated the Qur an into Chichewa Cinyanja 47 one of the official languages of Malawi and has engaged in other missionary work in the country All of the major cities in the country have mosques and there are several Islamic schools 48 Several South African Kuwaiti and other Muslim agencies are active in Mozambique with one important one being the African Muslim Agency The spread of Islam into West Africa beginning with ancient Ghana in the 9th century was mainly the result of the commercial activities of North African Muslims The empires of both Mali and Songhai that followed ancient Ghana in the Western Sudan adopted the religion Islam made its entry into the northern territories of modern Ghana around the 15th century Mande speakers who in Ghana are known as Wangara traders and clerics carried the religion into the area The northeastern sector of the country was also influenced by an influx of Hausa Muslim traders from the 16th century onwardsIslamic influence first occurred in India in the early 7th century with the advent of Arab traders Trade relations have existed between Arabia and the Indian subcontinent from ancient times Even in the pre Islamic era Arab traders used to visit the Malabar region which linked them with the ports of Southeast Asia According to Historians Elliot and Dowson in their book The History of India as told by its own Historians the first ship bearing Muslim travelers was seen on the Indian coast as early as 630 CE H G Rawlinson in his book Ancient and Medieval History of India claims the first Arab Muslims settled on the Indian coast in the last part of the 7th century 49 Shaykh Zainuddin Makhdum s Tuhfat al Mujahidin also is a reliable work 50 This fact is corroborated by J Sturrock in his South Kanara and Madras Districts Manuals 51 and also by Haridas Bhattacharya in Cultural Heritage of India Vol IV 52 It was with the advent of Islam that the Arabs became a prominent cultural force in the world The Arab merchants and traders became the carriers of the new religion and they propagated it wherever they went 53 Islam in Bulgaria can be traced back to the mid ninth century when there were Islamic missionaries in Bulgaria evidenced by a letter from Pope Nicholas to Boris of Bulgaria calling for the extirpation of Saracens 54 Pioneer Muslim missionaries to the Kenyan interior were largely Tanganyikan who coupled their missionary work with trade along the centres began along the railway line such as Kibwezi Makindu and Nairobi Outstanding among them was Maalim Mtondo Islam in Kenya a Tanganyikan credited with being the first Muslim missionary to Nairobi Reaching Nairobi at the close of the 19th century he led a group of other Muslims and enthusiastic missionaries from the coast to establish a Swahili village in present day Pumwani A small mosque was built to serve as a starting point and he began preaching Islam in earnest He soon attracted several Kikuyus and Wakambas who became his disciples 55 In 1380 Karim ul Makhdum the first Arabian Islamic missionary reached the Sulu Archipelago and Jolo in the Philippines and established Islam in the country In 1390 the Minangkabau s Prince Rajah Baguinda and his followers preached Islam on the islands 56 The Sheik Karimal Makdum Mosque was the first mosque established in the Philippines on Simunul in Mindanao in the 14th century Subsequent settlements by Arab missionaries traveling to Malaysia and Indonesia helped strengthen Islam in the Philippines and each settlement was governed by a Datu Rajah and a Sultan Islamic provinces founded in the Philippines included the Sultanate of Maguindanao Sultanate of Sulu and other parts of the southern Philippines Modern missionary work in the United States has increased greatly in the last one hundred years with much of the recent demographic growth driven by conversion 57 Up to one third of American Muslims are African Americans who have converted to Islam during the last seventy years Conversion to Islam in prisons 58 and in large urban areas 59 has also contributed to Islam s growth over the years An estimated US 45 billion has been spent by the Saudi Arabian government financing mosques and Islamic schools in foreign countries Ain al Yaqeen a Saudi newspaper reported in 2002 that Saudi funds may have contributed to building as many as 1 500 mosques and 2 000 other Islamic centers 60 Early Islamic missionaries during Muhammad s era Edit Main article List of expeditions of Muhammad During the Expedition of Al Raji in 625 61 the Islamic Prophet Muhammad sent some men as missionaries to various different tribes Some men came to Muhammad and requested that Muhammad send instructors to teach them Islam 61 but the men were bribed by the two tribes of Khuzaymah who wanted revenge for the assassination of Khalid bin Sufyan Chief of the Banu Lahyan tribe by Muhammad s followers 62 8 Muslim Missionaires were killed in this expedition 61 another version says 10 Muslims were killed 63 Then during the Expedition of Bir Maona in July 625 64 Muhammad sent some Missionaries at request of some men from the Banu Amir tribe 65 but the Muslims were again killed as revenge for the assassination of Khalid bin Sufyan by Muhammad s followers 62 70 Muslims were killed during this expedition 65 During the Expedition of Khalid ibn al Walid Banu Jadhimah in January 630 66 Muhammad sent Khalid ibn Walid to invite the Banu Jadhimah tribe to Islam 67 This is mentioned in the Sunni Hadith Sahih al Bukhari 5 59 628 68 Ahmadiyya Islam missions Edit Jamia Ahmadiyya Ghana Missionaries belonging to the Ahmadiyya thought of Islam often study at International Islamic seminaries and educational institutions known as Jamia Ahmadiyya Upon completion of their degrees they are sent to various parts of the world including South America Africa North America Europe and the Far East as appointed by Mirza Masroor Ahmad present head and Caliph of the worldwide Ahmadiyya Muslim community Jamia students may be appointed by the Caliph either as Missionaries of the community often called Murrabi Imam or Mawlana or as Qadis or Muftis of the Ahmadiyya Muslim community with a specialisation in matters of fiqh Islamic Jurisprudence Some Jamia alumni have also become Islamic historians such as the late Dost Muhammad Shahid former Official Historian of the Ahmadiyya Muslim community with a specialisation in tarikh Islamic historiography Missionaries stay with their careers as appointed by the Caliph for the rest of their lives as per their commitment to the community Jain missions Edit According to Jaina tradition Mahavira s following had swelled to 14 000 monks and 36 000 nuns by the time of his death in 527 BCE 69 For some two centuries the Jains remained a small community of monks and followers However in the 4th century BCE they gained strength and spread from Bihar to Orissa then so South India and westwards to Gujarat and the Punjab where Jain communities became firmly established particularly among the mercantile classes 70 The period of the Mauryan Dynasty to the 12th century was the period of Jainism s greatest growth and influence Thereafter the Jainas in the South and Central regions lost ground in face of rising Hindu devotional movements Jainism retreated to the West and Northwest which have remained its stronghold to the present 71 Emperor Samprati is regarded as the Jain Ashoka for his patronage and efforts to spreading Jainism in east India Samprati according to Jain historians is considered more powerful and famous than Ashoka himself Samprati built thousands of Jain Temples in India many of which remain in use such as the Jain temples at Viramgam and Palitana Gujarat Agar Malwa Ujjain Within three and a half years he got one hundred and twenty five thousand new temples built thirty six thousand repaired twelve and a half million murtis holy statues consecrated and ninety five thousand metal murtis prepared Samprati is said to have erected Jain temples throughout his empire He founded Jain monasteries even in non Aryan territory and almost all ancient Jain temples or monuments of unknown origin are popularly attributed to him It may be noted that all the Jain monuments of Rajasthan and Gujarat with unknown builders are also attributed to Emperor Samprati Virachand Gandhi 1864 1901 from Mahuva represented Jains at the first Parliament of the World s Religions in Chicago in 1893 and won a silver medal Gandhi was most likely the first Jain and the first Gujarati to travel to the United States and his statue still stands at the Jain temple in Chicago In his time he was a world famous personality Gandhi represented Jains in Chicago because the Great Jain Saint Param Pujya Acharya Vijayanandsuri also known as Acharya Atmaram was invited to represent the Jain religion at the first World Parliament of Religions As Jain monks do not travel overseas he recommended the bright young scholar Virchand Gandhi to be the emissary for the religion Today there are 100 000 Jains in the United States 72 There are also tens of thousands of Jains located in the UK and Canada Judaism Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Missionary news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Historically various Jewish sects and movements have been consistent in avoiding or even forbidding proselytization religion to religion conversion propaganda to convert gentiles non Jews They believe that gentiles do not need to convert to Judaism due to Abrahamic religions being already under the Seven Laws of Noah Chabad Lubavitch has a sub sect that has engaged in an effort to spread Noahidism Seven Laws of Noah among non Jews who follow none of the existing Abrahamic religions Orthodox Judaism outreach kiruv encourages non practicing Jews to become more knowledgeable and observant of halakha Jewish law Outreach is done worldwide by organizations such as Chabad Lubavitch Aish HaTorah Ohr Somayach and Partners In Torah Members of Reform Judaism began a program to convert to their brand of Judaism the non Jewish spouses of its intermarried members and non Jews who have an interest in Reform Judaism Their rationale is that so many Jews were lost during the Holocaust that newcomers must be sought out and welcomed 73 This approach has been rejected by both Orthodox Judaism and Conservative Judaism 74 as unrealistic and posing a danger on the entire Jewish faith Sikh missions Edit According to Sikhs when he was twenty eight Guru Nanak went as usual down to the river to bathe and meditate It was said that he was gone for three days When he reappeared it is said he was filled with the spirit of God His first words after his re emergence were there is no Hindu there is no Muslim With this secular principle he began his missionary work 75 He made four distinct major journeys in the four different directions which are called Udasis spanning many thousands of kilometres preaching the message of God 76 Currently there are gurdwaras in over 50 countries 77 78 79 Of missionary organizations the most famous is probably The Sikh Missionary Society UK The aim of the Sikh Missionary Society is the Advancement of the Sikh faith in the U K and abroad engages in various activities 80 81 82 83 Produce and distribute books on the Sikh faith in English and Panjabi and other languages to enlighten the younger generation of Sikhs as well as non Sikhs Advise and support young students in schools colleges and universities on Sikh issues and Sikh traditions Arrange classes lectures seminars conferences Gurmat camps and the celebration of holy Sikh events the basis of their achievement and interest in the field of the Sikh faith and the Panjabi language Make available all Sikh artifacts posters literature music educational videos DVDs and multimedia CD ROMs citation needed There have been several Sikh missionaries Bhai Gurdas 1551 1636 Punjabi Sikh writer historian missionary and religious figure the original scribe of the Guru Granth Sahib and a companion of four of the Sikh Gurus 84 Giani Pritam Singh Dhillon Indian freedom fighter Bhai Amrik Singh devoted much of his life to Sikh missionary activities one of the Sikh community s most prominent leaders along with Sant Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale Jathedar Sadhu Singh Bhaura 1905 1984 Sikh missionary who rose to be the Jathedar or high priest of Sri Akal Takhat AmritsarSikhs have emigrated to many countries of the world since Indian independence in 1947 Sikh communities exist in Britain East Africa Canada the United States Malaysia and most European countries 85 Tenrikyo missions Edit Tenrikyo conducts missionary work in approximately forty countries 86 Its first missionary was a woman named Kokan who worked on the streets of Osaka 87 In 2003 it operated approximately twenty thousand mission stations worldwide 88 Criticism EditContact of Christian missionaries with isolated tribes has been asserted as a cause of the extinction of some tribes such as extinction from infections and even simple diseases such as flu 89 90 Documented cases of European contact with isolated tribes has shown rapid health deterioration but this is not specifically linked to missionaries 91 Christian missionary work has been criticized as a form of colonialism 92 Christian missionary thinkers have recognized complicity between colonialism and missions with roots in colonial paternalism 93 Some kinds of Christian missionary activity have come under criticism including concerns about a perceived lack of respect for other cultures 94 Potential destruction of social structure among the converts has also been a concern The Huaorani people of Amazonian Ecuador have had a well documented mixed relation with Evangelical Christian missionaries and the contacts they brought to their communities criticized by outsiders Impact of missions EditA 2012 study by political scientist Robert Woodberry focusing on Protestant missionaries found that they have often left a very positive societal impact in the areas where they worked In cross national statistical analysis Protestant missions are significantly and robustly associated with higher levels of printing education economic development organizational civil society protection of private property and rule of law and with lower levels of corruption 95 A 2020 study by Elena Nikolova and Jakub Polansky replicates Woodberry s analysis 95 using twenty six alternative democracy measures and extends the time period over which the democracy measures are averaged These two simple modifications lead to the breakdown of Woodberry s results 95 Overall no significant relationship between Protestant missions and the development of democracy can be established 96 A 2017 study found that areas of colonial Mexico that had Mendicant missions have higher rates of literacy and educational attainment today than regions that did not have missions 97 Areas that had Jesuit missions are today indistinct from the areas that had no missions 97 The study also found that the share of Catholics is higher in regions where Catholic missions of any kind were a historical present 97 A 2016 study found that regions in Sub Saharan Africa that Protestant missionaries brought printing presses to are today associated with higher newspaper readership trust education and political participation 98 99 Missionaries have also made significant contributions to linguistics and the description and documentation of many languages Many languages today exist only in missionary records More than anywhere else our knowledge of the native languages in South America has been the product of missionary activity Without missionary documentation the reclamation of several languages would have been completely impossible 100 A satisfactory history of linguistics cannot be written before the impressive contribution of missionaries is recognised 101 Lists of prominent missionaries EditThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items July 2014 American missionaries Edit Geronimo Boscana Roman Catholic Franciscan missionary Isabel Crawford Baptist missionary 102 Antonio de Olivares Roman Catholic Franciscan missionary Anton Docher Roman Catholic missionary Elisabeth Elliot American Protestant missionary in Ecuador author and speaker widow of Jim Elliot of Operation Auca Mary H Fulton female medical missionary to China founder of Hackett Medical College for Women 夏葛女子醫學院 in Guangzhou China 103 104 105 106 107 Adoniram Judson first significant missionary in Burma Eusebio Kino Roman Catholic Jesuit missionary Zenas Sanford Loftis medical missionary to Tibet Robert E Longacre Christian linguist missionary to Mexico Dada Maheshvarananda Ananda Marga yoga missionary Fred Prosper Manget medical missionary to China founder of Houzhou General Hospital Houzhou China also a doctor with the Flying Tigers and U S Army in Kunming China during World War II 106 107 108 Lottie Moon Baptist missionary to China Arthur Lewis Piper medical missionary to the Belgian Congo Dada Pranakrsnananda Ananda Marga yoga missionary Darlene Rose missionary in Papua New Guinea John Stewart Methodist missionary Jose de Anchieta Roman Catholic Jesuit missionary Peter of Saint Joseph de Betancur Roman Catholic Franciscan missionary John Allen Chau evangelical Christian missionary killed while attempting to convert the uncontacted SentineleseBritish Christian missionaries Edit John Hobbis Harris with his wife Alice Seeley he used photography to expose colonial abuses Benjamin Hobson medical missionary to China set up a highly successful Wai Ai Clinic 惠愛醫館 109 110 in Guangzhou China 106 107 Teresa Kearney Sister in Uganda Olive Hilda Miller missionary to Jamaica and the Cayman Islands William Milne Bible translator to China Robert Morrison Bible translator to China George Piercy Methodist missionary to China Sam Pollard Bible translator to China James Hudson Taylor missionary to China insist on going into the inland of China John WesleySee also EditList of Protestant missionaries in China List of Protestant missionaries in India List of Roman Catholic missionaries List of Roman Catholic missionaries in China List of Roman Catholic missionaries in India List of Eastern Orthodox missionaries List of missionaries to Hawaii List of missionaries to the South Pacific List of Slovenian missionaries List of Russian Orthodox missionaries List of Protestant missionaries to Southeast Asia List of Roman Catholic missions in Africa Christian missionaries in New Zealand Christian missionaries in Oceania Timeline of Christian missions Catholic missions Christianity and colonialism Christian missionaries Christianisation Evangelism History of Christian missions Indigenous church mission theory Mission Christianity Missiology Missionary kid Missionary religious institutes and societies Portuguese Inquisition in Goa and Bombay Bassein Religious conversion Short term mission Timeline of Christian missionsReferences Edit Missionary Define Missionary dictionary reference com Retrieved on 2019 05 16 a b Thomas Hale On Being a Missionary 2003 William Carey Library Pub ISBN 0 87808 255 7 For example Buddhism launched the first large scale missionary effort in the history of the world s religions in the 3rd century BCE Richard Foltz Religions of the Silk Road Palgrave Macmillan 2nd edition 2010 p 37 ISBN 978 0 230 62125 1 Online Etymology Dictionary etymonline com Retrieved on 2011 01 19 von Le Coq Albert 1913 Chotscho Facsimile Wiedergaben der Wichtigeren Funde der Ersten Koniglich Preussischen Expedition nach Turfan in Ost Turkistan Berlin Dietrich Reimer Ernst Vohsen im Auftrage der Gernalverwaltung der Koniglichen Museen aus Mitteln des Baessler Institutes Tafel 19 Accessed 3 September 2016 Gasparini Mariachiara A Mathematic Expression of Art Sino Iranian and Uighur Textile Interactions and the Turfan Textile Collection in Berlin in Rudolf G Wagner and Monica Juneja eds Transcultural Studies Ruprecht Karls Universitat Heidelberg No 1 2014 pp 134 163 ISSN 2191 6411 See also endnote 32 Accessed 3 September 2016 Hansen Valerie 2012 The Silk Road A New History Oxford University Press p 98 ISBN 978 0 19 993921 3 Dokras Dr Uday 2021 01 01 Greece Kingdoms in India Indo Nordic Author s Collective a b Welty Paul Thomas The Asians Their Heritage and Their Destiny Revised Edition Philadelphia J B Lippincott Co 1966 pg 77 Welty Paul Thomas The Asians Their Heritage and Their Destiny Revised Edition Philadelphia J B Lippincott Co 1966 pg 146 147 a b Crim Keith ed The Perennial Dictionary of World Religions San Francisco HarperCollins 1989 Reprint originally pub as Abingdon Dictionary of Living Religions 1981 pg 523 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 12 12 Retrieved 2013 12 09 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Harris Dr Elizabeth J 1998a Ananda Metteya the First British Emissary of Buddhism see note 36 PDF The Wheel Publication No 420 422 ISBN 9552401798 Antes Peter Geertz Armin W Warne Randi R 2004 New Approaches to the Study of Religion Volume 1 Regional Critical and Historical Approaches p 471 cites Fader 1986 95 p 472 cites Humphreys 1968 78 79 Walter de Gruyter ISBN 9783110176988 3 8 Expansion of Buddhism Humanities LibreTexts 2019 09 19 Retrieved 2022 06 24 Tibetan Buddhism in France A Missionary Religion globalbuddhism org Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 12 October 2015 Lenoir Frederic Le bouddhisme en France Paris Fayard 1999 Janwillem van de Wetering 1973 Het dagende niets The Dawning of Nothingness Janwillem van de Wetering 1973 The Empty Mirror Routledge amp Kegan Paul Erik Bruijn International Zen Institute EN home Zeninstitute org Retrieved on 2011 01 19 Office United States General Accounting 2001 Export controls clarification of jurisdiction for missile technology items needed U S General Accounting Office OCLC 54862406 Selleck D discussed throughout Chapter 1 Quakers in Boston 1656 1964 Fleming amp Son Somerville 1980 Lausanne Movement Connecting influencers and ideas for global mission www lausanne org Archived from the original on June 20 2009 McAlister Elizabeth 2015 The militarization of prayer in America white and Native American spiritual warfare Journal of Religious and Political Practice 1 1 114 130 doi 10 1080 20566093 2016 1085239 Bebbington David A view from Britain in Rawlyk George A Aspects of the Canadian evangelical experience p 46 Montreal McGill Queen s Press MQUP 1997 ISBN 0 7735 1547 X 9780773515475 542 pages Book preview on Google Books Retrieved August 15 2008 Yale University Library Missionary Periodicals Database Archived 2006 09 02 at the Wayback Machine Missionary Program www newsroom churchofjesuschrist org Retrieved April 13 2020 Latter day Saint membership increased this much in 2019 according to new church statistical report www deseret com 4 April 2020 Retrieved April 13 2020 Raymond A Lane The Early Days of Maryknoll 1951 Maryknoll Magazine James H Kroeger ed The gift of mission yesterday today tomorrow the Maryknoll centennial symposium Orbis Books 2013 Hintz Martin Indonesia series Enchantment of the World Chicago Childrens Press 1993 pg 30 31 Pringle p 65 Foundation of Manipuri Muslim History Archived 2007 09 27 at the Wayback Machine Manipur Online August 15 2002 NW 1615 L S Suite 8 Washington and Inquiries DC 20036 USA202 419 4300 Main202 419 4349 Fax202 419 4372 Media America s Changing Religious Landscape 2015 http www pewforum org 2015 05 12 americas changing religious landscape Bowden p 629 Hermans G Immink C A M A De Jong J Van Der Lans 2002 Social Constructionism and Theology BRILL p 47 ISBN 978 90 04 12318 2 Chryssides George D 1999 Exploring New Religions Continuum International Publishing Group p 370 ISBN 978 0 8264 5959 6 According with many Eastern and Western spiritual traditions master and disciples often have a spiritual name in addition to that given to them by their parents Anandamurti as he was called by his early disciples is a Sanskrit word meaning Bliss personified For an example of AMURT activities see amurt org or amurt net or amurthaiti For more detailed information ERAWS or eraws com or amyogaspace eraws Archived 2013 05 26 at the Wayback Machine The Global Religious Landscape Pew Research Center s Religion amp Public Life Project 18 December 2012 Retrieved 12 October 2015 a b Martin C Richard 2004 Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World Vol 2 M Z index Macmillan a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty url help Duff Mark 2002 Islam in Indonesia Proseletysation in Malawi Malawi Accurate Prayer Times أوقات الصلاة Qiblah Qibla اتجاه القبلة Mosques Masjids Islamic Centers Organizations and Muslim Owned Businesses islamicfinder org Retrieved 12 October 2015 ISBN 81 86050 79 5 Ancient and Medieval History of India Tuḥfat al mujahidin A Historical Epic of the Sixteenth Century 2006 ISBN 983 9154 80 X Sturrock J South Canara and Madras District Manual 2 vols Madras 1894 1895 ISBN 81 85843 05 8 Cultural Heritage of India Vol IV Genesis and Growth of the Mappila Community Archived 2006 06 22 at the Wayback Machine H T Norris Islam in the Balkans religion and society between Europe and the Arab world 1993 pp 21 27 Quraishy MA 1987 Text Book of Islam Book 1 Nairobi The Islamic Foundation p 182 Kerinduan orang orang moro TEMPO Majalah Berita Mingguan Archived from the original on 15 May 2011 Retrieved 12 October 2015 A NATION CHALLENGED AMERICAN MUSLIMS Islam Attracts Converts By the Thousand Drawn Before and After Attacks judiciary senate gov https web archive org web 20160303211816 http www judiciary senate gov testimony cfm id 960 amp wit id 2719 Archived from the original on March 3 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Ranks of Latinos Turning to Islam Are Increasing Many in City Were Catholics Seeking Old Muslim Roots Kaplan David E 2003 12 15 The Saudi Connection U S News amp World Report Archived from the original on 2006 06 16 Retrieved 2006 04 17 a b c Mubarakpuri The Sealed Nectar p 187 online a b Watt W Montgomery 1956 Muhammad at Medina Oxford University Press p 33 ISBN 978 0195773071 The common version however is that B Lihyan wanted to avenge the assassination of their chief at Muhammad s instigation and bribed two clans of the tribe of Khuzaymah to say they wanted to become Muslims and ask Muhammad to send instructors a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link online Hawarey Mosab 2010 The Journey of Prophecy Days of Peace and War Arabic Islamic Book Trust ISBN 9789957051648 Note Book contains a list of battles of Muhammad in Arabic English translation available here 1 Tabari Al 2008 The foundation of the community State University of New York Press p 151 ISBN 978 0887063442 Then in Safar which began July 13 625 four months after Uhud he sent out the men of Bi r Ma unah a b Mubarakpuri The Sealed Nectar p 188 online Abu Khalil Shawqi 1 March 2004 Atlas of the Prophet s biography places nations landmarks Dar us Salam p 226 ISBN 978 9960897714 William Muir The life of Mahomet and history of Islam to the era of the Hegira Volume 4 p 135 Muhsin Khan The translation of the meanings of Ṣahih AL Bukhari Arabic English Volume 5 p 440 Crim Keith ed The Perennial Dictionary of World Religions San Francisco HarperCollins 1989 Reprint originally pub as Abingdon Dictionary of Living Religions 1981 pg 370 Cavendish Richard ed Man Myth amp Magic An Illustrated Encyclopedia of the Supernatural vol 11 New York Marshall Cavendish Corp 1970 pg 1481 Crim Keith ed The Perennial Dictionary of World Religions San Francisco HarperCollins 1989 Reprint originally pub as Abingdon Dictionary of Living Religions 1981 pg 371 McCourt Frank God in America in Life December 1998 pg 67 The Catholic Reform Jews and Judaism in Sixteenth Century Germany Jews Judaism and the Reformation in Sixteenth Century Germany BRILL pp 249 268 2006 01 01 doi 10 1163 9789047408857 014 ISBN 9789047408857 S2CID 244752108 retrieved 2022 06 24 Missionary cite note 39 Shackle Christopher Mandair Arvind Pal Singh 2005 Teachings of the Sikh Gurus Selections from the Sikh Scriptures United Kingdom Routledge xiii xiv ISBN 978 0 415 26604 8 Singh Khushwant 2006 The Illustrated History of the Sikhs India Oxford University Press pp 12 13 ISBN 0 19 567747 1 Also as according to the Puratan Janamsakhi the birth stories of Nanak Gurudwaras Sikh Gurdwaras In Alabama Connecticut Florida Georgia Iowa Illinois Indiana Louisiana Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri North Carolina Nevada New Jersey New York Ohio Oregon Pennsylvania Texas Virginia Wisconsin Usa Sikh Places Of Worship For Nri And Indian Visitors In Us From Garamchai com Retrieved on 2011 01 19 Global Gurudwara Database Find Gurudwaras around the world Global Gurdwara Directory Archived 2011 10 04 at the Wayback Machine Gurudwara net Retrieved on 2011 01 19 Punjab Manikaran in Retrieved on 2011 01 19 Sikh Missionary Society U K sikhmissionarysociety org Retrieved on 2011 01 19 Sikh Missionary Society U K The Universal Faith sikhmissionarysociety org Retrieved on 2011 01 19 Sikh Missionary Society U K Articles sikhmissionarysociety org Retrieved on 2011 01 19 Sikh Missionary Society U K Online Publications Library Sikhism eBooks sikhmissionarysociety org Retrieved on 2011 01 19 Saints Sikhs org Aggarwal Manju with Harjeet Singh Lal I Am A Sikh New York Franklin Watts 1985 pg 30 Largest Tenrikyo Communities Adherents com 2000 03 23 Retrieved on 2011 01 19 James H Charlesworth Petr Pokorny Brian Rhea 15 September 2009 Jesus Research An International Perspective The First Princeton Prague Symposium on Jesus Research Prague 2005 Wm B Eerdmans Publishing pp 242 ISBN 978 0 8028 6353 9 Retrieved 19 January 2011 Evangelical Missiological Society Jon Bonk 31 January 2003 Between past and future Evangelical Mission entering the twenty first century William Carey Library pp 254 ISBN 978 0 87808 384 8 Retrieved 19 January 2011 Gaurav Vivek Bhatnagar Centre Ignored ST Panel Advice on Protecting Vulnerable Andaman Tribes The Wire 23 Nov 2018 Navina Jafa The Sentinelese and the Dilemma of Conservation Without Contact The Wire 2 Dec 2018 Is It Ethical to Leave Uncontacted Tribes Alone Time magazine 4 June 2015 Card Rachel 12 October 2020 Missionary work is just another name for colonization North Texas Daily Archived from the original on 17 October 2020 Retrieved 2 November 2021 Robert Dana L Rethinking Missionaries from 1910 to Today PDF Boston University Retrieved 2022 03 03 Abler Thomas S 1992 Protestant Missionaries and Native Culture Parallel Careers of Asher Wright and Silas T Rand American Indian Quarterly 16 1 25 37 doi 10 2307 1185603 JSTOR 1185603 a b c Robert D Woodberry The Missionary Roots of Liberal Democracy American Political Science Review 2012 106 2 244 274 online Archived 2017 08 09 at the Wayback Machine Nikolova Elena Polansky Jakub 2020 Conversionary Protestants Do Not Cause Democracy British Journal of Political Science 51 4 1723 1733 doi 10 1017 S0007123420000174 hdl 10419 214629 ISSN 0007 1234 S2CID 234540943 a b c Waldinger Maria July 2017 The long run effects of missionary orders in Mexico PDF Journal of Development Economics 127 355 378 doi 10 1016 j jdeveco 2016 12 010 Cage Julia Rueda Valeria July 2016 The Long Term Effects of the Printing Press in sub Saharan Africa American Economic Journal Applied Economics 8 3 69 99 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 635 9580 doi 10 1257 app 20140379 ISSN 1945 7782 Cage Julia Rueda Valeria 2017 03 04 The devil is in the detail Christian missions heterogeneous effects on development in sub Saharan Africa VoxEU org Retrieved 2017 06 07 p 223 224 Skutnabb Kangas Tove 2000 Linguistic Genocide in Education Or Worldwide Diversity and Human Rights Mahwah NJ Lawrence Erlbaum Associates p 7 Hovdhaugen Even 1996b Missionary Grammars An attempt at defining a field of research Hovdhaugen ed and the Word was God Missionary linguistics and missionary grammar pp 9 22 Studium Sprachwissenschaft 25 Munster Nodus Crawford Isabel American National Biography Oxford University Press Subscription needed PANG Suk Man February 1998 The Hackett Medical College for Women in China 1899 1936 PDF Hong Kong Baptist University Archived from the original PDF on 16 October 2015 Retrieved 10 October 2015 中国近代第一所女子医学院 夏葛医学院 cqvip com Retrieved 12 October 2015 Mary H Fulton 2010 The United Study of Forring ed Inasmuch BiblioBazaar ISBN 978 1140341796 a b c Rebecca Chan Chung Deborah Chung and Cecilia Ng Wong Piloted to Serve 2012 a b c Piloted to Serve facebook com Retrieved 12 October 2015 Mrs Robert S McMichael The Story of Fred P Manget For the Woman s Auxiliary of the Bibb County Medical Society Georgia April 4 1963 Meeting 回眸 当年传教士进羊城 MW悦读室之岭南话廊 凤凰网博客 ifeng com Archived from the original on 13 March 2013 Retrieved 12 October 2015 合信的 全体新论 与广东士林 cnki net Retrieved 12 October 2015 Further reading EditDunch Ryan Beyond cultural imperialism Cultural theory Christian missions and global modernity History and Theory 41 3 2002 301 325 online Dwight Henry Otis et al eds The Encyclopedia of Missions 2nd ed 1904 Online Global coverage Of Protestant and Catholic missions Robinson David Muslim Societies in African History The Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge Cambridge UK 2004 ISBN 0 521 53366 X Sharma Arvind 2014 Hinduism as a missionary religion New Delhi Dev Publishers amp Distributors Shourie Arun 2006 Missionaries in India Continuities changes dilemmas New Delhi Rupa ISBN 9788172232702 Madhya Pradesh India amp Niyogi M B 1956 Vindicated by time The Niyogi Committee report on Christian missionary activities Nagpur Government Printing Madhya Pradesh External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Missionaries Media related to Missionaries at Wikimedia Commons Missionary eTexts Project on Religion and Economic Change Protestant Mission Stations LFM Social sciences amp Missions Henry Martyn Centre for the study of mission amp world Christianity William Carey Library Mission Resources Hiney Thomas On the Missionary Trail New York Atlantic Monthly Press 2000 p5 22 EtymologyOnLine word history Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Missionary amp oldid 1143948138, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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