Fall 2014 · Vol. 43 No. 2

Missions and Indigenous Peoples

From the Editor: Missions and Indigenous Peoples

Vic Froese

150–151

Mission: An Indigenous Perspective

Terry LeBlanc

152–165

Mission Christianity in Canada and the ‘Problem’ of Indigenous Christianity

Brian Gobbett

166–179

Christian Mission and First Nations Peoples

Cornelius Buller

180–191

Missions to Native Peoples: Moving from Charity to Justice

Ray Aldred

192–201

Thoughts About Missionaries to Native Peoples

C. Roderick Wilson

202–212

Following the Road to Oz: Christian Mission in Mishkeegogamang First Nation

Deanna Zantingh

213–227

Toward a Mennonite Brethren Peace Theology: Reading the Bible through an Anabaptist Lens

Doug Heidebrecht

228–242

Statement of Anabaptist Church Leaders—Truth and Reconciliation Commission Hearings

 

243–245

Ministry Compass

How We Proclaim Christ’s Triumph

Lori Ransom

246–252

Recommended Reading

Mission and North American Aboriginal Peoples: A Selected Bibliography

Vic Froese

253–259

John E. Toews,

The Story of Original Sin

Melanie Kampen

260–261

ed. Kirsten Eve Beachy,

Tongue Screws and Testimonies: Poems, Stories, and Essays Inspired by the Martyrs Mirror

Chris Huebner

262–263

Anthony G. Siegrist,

Participating Witness: An Anabaptist Theology of Baptism and the Sacramental Character of the Church

John D. Rempel

263–266

Robert Zacharias,

Rewriting the Break Event: Mennonites and Migration in Canadian Literature

Dora Dueck

266–268

Harry Huebner,

An Introduction to Christian Ethics: History, Movements, People

Ramon Rempel

268–270

ed. Fernando Enns and Annette Mosher,

Just Peace: Ecumenical, Intercultural, and Interdisciplinary Perspectives

Zac Klassen

270–272

Peter C. Blum,

For a Church to Come: Experiments in Postmodern Theory and Anabaptist Thought

Joseph R. Wiebe

272–274

John Patrick Koyles,

The Trace of the Face in the Politics of Jesus: Experimental Comparisons Between the Work of John Howard Yoder and Emmanuel Levinas

Maxwell Kennel

274–276