Customs and Cultures: Anthropology for Christian MissionsWilliam Carey Library, 1975 - 306 sider How can the church meaningfully and intelligently engage cultures with Christianity? Oftentimes, it is not the message but the messenger that provides the greatest stumbling block for the average non-Christian. A missionary's ability to identify with the people, not in sympathy, but in empathy, is one of the keys. Language is another crucial factor. Anthropology and missions have much to learn from each other. Customs and Cultures provides practical ways missionaries can become acquainted with the cultural anthropology of the local community. Eugene Nida, a leading scholar and devout Christian, presents a thorough study of the means and methods which best communicate Christianity to people of diverse backgrounds. Dr. Nida is uniquely equipped to write this book because he is a well-known specialist in linguistics, anthropology studies, and the interpretation of the Christian faith, who worked with missionaries on translation problems for over thirty years. The development of the church is the real goal. The power of Jesus Christ working through his consecrated servants can sanctify all of life to the glory of God. |
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RHYME AND REASON | 24 |
Easy and Wrong Explanations | 32 |
Fried or Scrambled? | 39 |
All the Pieces Fit Together | 45 |
What Does Anthropology Show Us? | 52 |
Are Some Races More Intelligent than Others? | 60 |
Back Doors and Bogeymen | 65 |
HOES AND HEADACHES | 73 |
Rites and Ritual | 157 |
From Birth to Death | 164 |
The Socalled World Religions | 170 |
Social Structure Influences Religion | 176 |
All Men Are Artists | 182 |
Rhythm and Melody | 191 |
QUEER SOUNDS STRANGE GRAMMARS | 198 |
Broad Lips and Broad Vowels | 204 |
Share Give Barter or Buy | 80 |
Material and Religious Culture | 87 |
From a Single Family to One World | 93 |
Who Marries Whom? | 100 |
Sex and Procreation | 106 |
Education Formal and Informal | 112 |
Suicide | 118 |
All Is Fair in War | 125 |
Social and Religious Culture | 128 |
DEVILS AND DOUBTS | 134 |
It Just Isnt So | 141 |
Gods and Spirits High and Low | 151 |
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aboriginal America animals animistic anthropology attitudes Aztecs Bahutu become behavior biological borrowed bride price Buddhist ceremonies Christian missions church clan clothing concepts Congo dance deities developed Dinkas distinct economic Eskimos esthetic Europe existence expression fact groups Hinduism Hopi human Ifugao important Indians indigenous individual insist instances Japanese Jesus kind language largely learned less live magic marriage marry Marshallese material culture matrilineal matter means medicine Melanesia Mexico missionaries Mohammedanism moral Navajo Negro objects one's patterns person Plains Indians polygyny possessions practice prestige primarily primitive societies problems Quechua race racial regarded relatively religion religious beliefs result rites Roman San Blas santería sense sexual Shilluk Shipibos social structure South Spanish speak spirits supernatural power Taoism Tarahumara tend thing tion traditional tribe understand village West Africa Western wife wives woman women words worship young