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Missionary Christianity and local religion : American evangelicalism in North India, 1836-1870 / Arun W. Jones.

Ebook Central University Press Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Jones, Arun W., author.
Series:
Studies in world Christianity (Waco, Tex.)
Studies in World Christianity
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Missions, American.
Christianity and other religions--India, North.
Christianity and other religions.
Missions, American--India, North--History.
India, North--Church history.
India, North.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (1 PDF (xxi, 321 pages) :) illustrations, map.
Edition:
1st ed.
Place of Publication:
Waco, Texas : Baylor University Press, 2017.
Summary:
The first Christian communities were established among the population of Hindi- and Urdu-speaking North India during the middle of the nineteenth century. The evangelical North American Presbyterian and Methodist missionaries who arrived in what were considered the Hindu heartlands discovered a social and religious landscape far more diverse than expected. With its Hindu majority and significant Muslim minority, the region also proved home to reform and renewal movements both within and beyond Hinduism. These movements had already carved out niches for religious difference, niches where Christianity took root. In Missionary Christianity and Local Religion Arun Jones documents the story of how preexisting indigenous bhakti movements and western missionary evangelicalism met to form the cornerstone for the foundational communities of North Indian Christianity. Moreover, while newly arrived missionaries may have reported their exploits as totally fresh encounters with the local population, they built their work on the existing fledgling gatherings of Christians such as European colonial officials, merchants, and soldiers, and their Indian and Eurasian family members. Jones demonstrates how foreign missionaries, Indian church leaders, and converts alike all had to negotiate the complex parameters of historic Indian religious and social institutions and cultures, as well as navigate the realities of the newly established British Empire. Missionary Christianity and Local Religion provides portrayals and analyses of the ideas, motivations, and activities of the diverse individuals who formed and nurtured a flourishing North Indian Christian movement that was both evangelical and rooted in local religious and social realities. This exploration of new Christian communities created by the confluences and divergences between American evangelical and Indian bhakti religious traditions reveals the birth and early growth of one of the many incarnations of Christianity.
Contents:
1. The religious context in north India : Hinduism, Islam, and Christianity
2. The religious context in north India : American evangelicalism
3. The missionaries : religious and social innovators
4. Indian workers and leaders : negotiating boundaries
5. Theology in a new context
6. Community in a new context.
Notes:
Issued as part of book collections on Project MUSE.
Includes bibliographical references.
Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (ebrary, viewed October 19, 2017).
ISBN:
9781481307314
1481307312
9781602584341
1602584346
OCLC:
1004580573

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