Spring 1994 · Vol. 23 No. 1
From the Editors: Mission and Pluralism
Elmer A. Martens
2
Islam and Salvation: Some On-Site Observations
Gordon Nickel
3–16
The Concept of Salvation in the Christian-Muslim Encounter
Eberhard Troeger
17–21
Salvation according to Hinduism
R. S. Lemuel
22–26
Salvation as Release from Karma
Santos L. Raj
27–28
Jesus and the Religions of the World
Victor Adrian
29–43
Luke on Pluralism: Flex with History
Delbert L. Wiens
44–53
The Destiny of Those Who Have Never Heard: A Bibliographical Essay
Walter Unger
54–63
Current State of Missiology: Reflections on Twenty-five Years 1968-1993
Hans Kasdorf
64–81
Internationalization: Where Are Those Ends of the Earth?
Harold Ens
82–85
Can Mission Agencies Be Partners?
Valdemar Kroker
86–88
Internationalization Must Replace Paternalism
Takashi Manabe
89–90
The Accord Factor in Mission
Frances F. Hiebert
91–100
A Personal Journey of Missiological Formation
101–10
Hans Kasdorf: Missiologist Par Excellence
Henry J. Schmidt
111–13
Recommended Reading
On Religious Pluralism
Paul G. Hiebert
114–15
God's Creative Masterpiece
D. Edmond Hiebert
116–24
Switch Lenses: Personal Reflections on Post-Modernity
Robert Enns
125–28
Current Research
129–131
Book Reviews
C. Norman Kraus,
The Community of the Spirit: How the Church Is in the World
132–33
ed. Wilbert R. Shenk,
The Transfiguration of Mission: Biblical, Theological and Historical Foundations
133–34
Richard Kyle,
The Religious Fringe: A History of Alternative Religions in America
Jurgen Schonwetter
135–36
«»
Spring 1994Vol. 23 No. 1