Christian mission in the twenty-first century has emphasized endeavors that address poverty alleviation, business as mission, marketplace ministry, rural/urban development, microeconomics, and Christian attitudes toward money and consumerism. However, neither the macroeconomic circumstances in which the church does such ministry nor the assumptions that believers have absorbed from the larger economy have been adequately explored. Christian Mission & Economic Systems gathers scholars, experts, and practitioners to address the relationship of Christians to the economic systems in which they are embedded and do ministry, and to evaluate the different cultural and religious dimensions of both micro- and macroeconomic systems around the world from a kingdom perspective. Practitioners doing business as mission will grow in their understanding of the significance of local economic practices. Students and academics will benefit from the critical assessment of the intersection between micro- and macroeconomic systems in the contexts of specific ethnographic circumstances. Missionaries and churches will glean new insights on the difference that being a Christian makes to economic life. NGOs, nonprofits, or other Christian organizations doing work related to markets will benefit from a challenge to their previous understandings. Since work for the kingdom always takes place in some kind of an economic environment, this book will equip Christians in a variety of capacities to be more effective in their ministries.
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John Cheong (PhD, Trinity International University) is the Associate Professor of World Religions and Missions and the missions course lead at Grand Canyon University (Arizona, USA). He has served deeply in 5 cities, in 3 mission contexts in Asia and North America among three distinct people groups and two religious groups. He has co-edited/co-authored seven books and published many articles, researching and writing on many topics, including globalization, world Christianity, urban missions and world religions, and collaborates with the Lausanne Global Diaspora Network.
Eloise Meneses is professor of cultural anthropology in the Department of Missions and Anthropology at Eastern University in the Philadelphia area. She has done research on the lives of Dalit ("untouchable") women, which is published in the book Love and Revolutions: Market Women and Social Change in India (University Press of America, 2007). She has also served as a board member for the Mennonite churches, for ten years. Presently she teaches in the areas of poverty, global economic systems, India, women's experience, linguistics, race and ethnicity, and faith and science.