Seed 8: Beware of THIS Aasuric Culture

Seed 8: Beware of THIS Aasuric Culture
Author: Maanoj Rakhit
Publisher: Maanoj Rakhit मानोज रखित
Total Pages: 212
Release: 2009-09
Genre: Christian converts from Hinduism
ISBN: 818974688X

It is they who dumped on us their brand of cheap morality and turned us into Asurs like themselves. This is not acceptable. They can live in their own house and do whatever they feel like but they have certainly no right to sneak into our houses and teach our children their lowly ways. We have a right to know their true characters, and where they have brought us within a matter of one and half a century. We have the right to know what we were without their company, and how low we have sunk being in their company.

That Unknown Face of Christianity

That Unknown Face of Christianity
Author: Maanoj Rakhit
Publisher: Maanoj Rakhit मानोज रखित
Total Pages: 307
Release: 2005
Genre: Christianity
ISBN: 8189746103

Unbelievable as it may sound but then the Christian sources indicate that Christian Postwar World Policy for BhaaratVarsh has been to split the nation into pieces and create militant minorities:- (1) Create a militant minority comprising Christians; (2) Claim for separate States for Christians; (3) Work against national unity. Source: Report of the Christian Missionaries Enquiry Committee, 1956

Arise Arjun

Arise Arjun
Author: Maanoj Rakhit
Publisher: Maanoj Rakhit मानोज रखित
Total Pages: 186
Release: 2003
Genre: Hinduism
ISBN: 8189746014

First published 2003 March

Christians Meeting Hindus

Christians Meeting Hindus
Author: Bob Robinson
Publisher: Wipf and Stock Publishers
Total Pages: 411
Release: 2011-06-16
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1610975960

With rare exceptions, serious intentional, reflective and sustained interfaith encounter is a novel and recent enterprise. This book looks in detail at one such encounter--the intentional recent Hindu-Christian dialog in India--and asks why and how the practice of dialog came to replace previous attitudes of confrontation and monologue (especially on the part of Christians). Part I sets the encounter in its global context. Part II offers a comprehensive and critical analysis of the actual encounter. Part III draws on aspects of the Christian tradition as it critically examines the ways in which the dialog has been justified in Christological categories. A final chapter discusses the future of the encounter. Unlike many other works in the area of interfaith studies, this work combines both descriptive detail of the actual encounter and critical theological analysis of the strengths and weakness of the dialog model.

Debating 'Conversion' in Hinduism and Christianity

Debating 'Conversion' in Hinduism and Christianity
Author: Ankur Barua
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 269
Release: 2015-03-27
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1317538587

Hindu and Christian debates over the meanings, motivations, and modalities of ‘conversion’ provide the central connecting theme running through this book. It focuses on the reasons offered by both sides to defend or oppose the possibility of these cross-border movements, and shows how these reasons form part of a wider constellation of ideas, concepts, and practices of the Christian and the Hindu worlds. The book draws upon several historical case-studies of Christian missionaries and of Hindus who encountered these missionaries. By analysing some of the complex negotiations, intersections, and conflicts between Hindus and Christians over the question of ‘conversion’, it demonstrates that these encounters revolve around three main contested themes. Firstly, who can properly ‘speak for the convert’? Secondly, how is ‘tolerating’ the religious other connected to an appraisal of the other’s viewpoints which may be held to be incorrect, inadequate, or incomplete? Finally, what is, in fact, the ‘true Religion’? The book demonstrates that it is necessary to wrestle with these questions for an adequate understanding of the Hindu and Christian debates over ‘conversion.’ Questioning what ‘conversion’ precisely is, and why it has been such a volatile issue on India’s political-legal landscape, the book will be a useful contribution to studies of Hinduism, Christianity and Asian Religion and Philosophy.

Believing Without Belonging?

Believing Without Belonging?
Author: Vinod John
Publisher: Wipf and Stock Publishers
Total Pages: 250
Release: 2020-11-19
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1532697228

This study examines an indigenous phenomenon of the Hindu devotees of Jesus Christ and their response to the gospel through an empirical case study conducted in Varanasi, India. It analyzes their religious beliefs and social belonging and addresses the ensuing questions from a historical, theological, and missiological perspective. The data reveals that the respondents profess faith in Jesus Christ; however, most remain unbaptized and insist on their Hindu identity. Hence, a heuristic model for a contextualized baptism as Guru-diksha is proposed. The emergent church among Hindu devotees should be considered, from the perspective of world Christianity, as a disparate form of belonging while remaining within one's community of birth. The insistence on a visible church and a distinct community of Christ's followers is contested because the devotees should construct their contextual ecclesiology, since it is an indigenous discovery of the Christian faith. Thus, the "Christian" label for the adherents is dispensable while retaining their socio-ethnic Hindu identity. Christian mission should discontinue extraction and assimilation; instead, missional praxis should be within the given sociocultural structures, recognizing their idiosyncrasies as legitimate in God's eyes and in need of transformation, like any human culture.

Religious Conversion in India

Religious Conversion in India
Author: Manohar James
Publisher: Wipf and Stock Publishers
Total Pages: 302
Release: 2022-03-14
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1725294540

In this book, Dr. Manohar James explores how Hindu intolerance has contributed to anti-Christian propaganda over the centuries, how such intolerance has informed the conclusions of the Niyogi Committee Report, and how the Report’s ongoing publications, redactions and recessions have intensified anti-Christian rhetoric in India over the last six decades.