Mission and Conversion

Mission and Conversion
Author: Martin Goodman
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 216
Release: 1994
Genre: History
ISBN:

This book tackles a central problem of comparative religious history: proselytizing by Jews and pagans in the ancient world, and the origins of missions in the early Church. Why did some individuals in the first four centuries of the Christian era believe it desirable to persuade outsiders to join their religious group, while others did not? In this book, the author offers a new hypothesis about the origins of Christian proselytizing, arguing that mission is not an inherent religious instinct, that in antiquity it was found only sporadically among Jews and pagans, and that even Christians rarely stressed its importance in the early centuries. Much of the book focusses on the history of Judaism in late antiquity. Dr Goodman makes a detailed and radical re-evaluation of the evidence for Jewish missionary attitudes in the late Second Temple and Talmudic periods, questioning many commonly held assumptions, in particular the view that Jews proselytized energetically in the first century CE. This leads him on to take issue with the common notion that the early Christian mission to the gentiles imitated or competed with contemporary Jews. Finally, the author puts forward some novel suggestions as to how the Jewish background to Christianity may nonetheless have contributed to the enthusiastic adoption of universal proselytizing by some followers of Jesus in the apostolic age.

British Mission to the Jews in Nineteenth-century Palestine

British Mission to the Jews in Nineteenth-century Palestine
Author: Yaron Perry
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 250
Release: 2004-08-02
Genre: History
ISBN: 1135759316

Yaron Perry's account reveals, without bias or partiality, the story of the "London Society for Promoting Christianity Amongst the Jews" and its unique contribution to the restoration of the Holy Land. This Protestant organization were the first to take root in the Holy Land from 1820 onwards.

The Emergence of the Hebrew Christian Movement in Nineteenth-Century Britain

The Emergence of the Hebrew Christian Movement in Nineteenth-Century Britain
Author: Michael R. Darby
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 295
Release: 2010-10-05
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9004184554

This monograph analyses almost forty Hebrew Christian institutions - and the ideology of their founders - in nineteenth-century Britain, components of a century-long movement which were to varying degrees characteristic, through identity negotiation, of ehtnic, institutional, theological and liturgical independence.