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dc.contributor.authorBunda, Nestor D.
dc.date.accessioned2022-10-11T01:18:10Z
dc.date.available2022-10-11T01:18:10Z
dc.date.issued1999
dc.identifier.citationBunda, N. D. (1998). A mission history of the Philippine Baptist churches 1898-1998 from a Philippine perspective. Verlag an der Lottbek.en_US
dc.identifier.isbn3861300575
dc.identifier.issn09338438
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12852/2311
dc.descriptionAuthor's dissertation -- Universität Hamburg, 1999 Preliminary pages available Full text available on requesten_US
dc.description.abstractIn 1963 Dr. Agustin E. Masa, former General Secretary and President of the Convention of Philippine Baptist Churches (CPBC), in his nine-page Outline History of the Baptists in the Philippines, had endeavored "to set in writing the history of the Baptists in the Philippines" as a response to a "popular request". He emphasized that "without such organized written account of the activities of various Baptist groups in the country, there will be no basis for objective investigation of such activities or no way to assess their advances or lapses." In a way, history serves as a basis to understand and transform the present and a guide to plan for the future. Meditating on religion, politics and social transformation, Philippine Baptist scholar Dr. Lester Edwin J. Ruiz pointed out that "memory, narrative, and vision are decisive for transformation inasmuch as they mediate the possibilities of the 'fundamentally new and better. Without dreams - indeed, without the capacity to dream - the future is closed; without memory we are cut adrift in the present without any guiding stars to show the way; and without narrative - or the capacity to tell and re-tell our past and future - there is no possibility for meaning. Taken as a triadix structure, past, present, and future provides the context for human: life." The American Baptist missionaries were not unaware of the need to write history. In 1966 Elizabeth Chambers, librarian of the Baptist-owned Central Philippine University, was one of the participants in an Asian-wide conference on theological education attended by Asian church leaders involved in education, together with some theological school leaders from the United States. In that conference, Missionary Russell Brown affirmed that Chambers acknowledged that there are no historical materials available to help the Philippine people to know about their religious origins. Chambers stressed the importance for Protestant denominations to have a sense of their own beginnings in the Philippines and Brown requested the missionaries „to give serious thought to the possibility of the preparation of a Baptist Church History for the Philippines.” Not before 1976, however, the delegates to the annual assembly of Philippine Baptist churches had resolved to write a Philippine Baptist history. In succeeding years a number of committees were commissioned to do research and to come out with a written history. In June 1981 another committee was created to facilitate a Baptist historiography. That committee wrote a project proposal, "Historical Education and Research (HEAR)", to come out with a book on the history of the Philippine Baptist Churches. With a budget of 219,000 pesos it was expected to launch the book in 1985.4 In 1984, Dr. Domingo J. Diel, Jr., then CPBC General Secretary, announced that the CPBC would "come out with a Baptist primer, compilation of selected sermons, and selected biographies of selected Baptist pastors." The need to write a history cropped up again in 1990. During the 55th CPBC annual assembly, the delegates made two important recommendations: first, that "the Convention of Philippine Baptist Churches asks the Central Philippine University College of Theology to include in its curriculum a subject of theology in the Philippine context." Second, that "the Convention of Philippine Baptist Churches should encourage Filipino Baptist theologians to write books or Baptist Primer taking into account the Philippine setting and culture." Those endeavors, although they were not realized, could be regarded as efforts of Baptists to recognize the need to write a history. This study is an attempt to partly fill in that need.en_US
dc.format.extent460 pagesen_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherVerlag an der Lottbeken_US
dc.relation.ispartofseriesPerspektiven der Weltmission;30
dc.subject.ddcTheoLiben_US
dc.subject.lcshBaptistsen_US
dc.subject.lcshBaptists--Missionsen_US
dc.subject.lcshChurch historyen_US
dc.subject.lcshPhilippinesen_US
dc.subject.lcshBaptists--Historiographyen_US
dc.subject.lcshMissions--Historyen_US
dc.subject.lcshMissions--Philippines--Historyen_US
dc.titleA mission history of the Philippine Baptist churches 1898-1998 from a Philippine perspectiveen_US
dc.typeBooken_US
dcterms.accessRightsLimited public accessen_US
dc.description.bibliographicalreferencesIncludes bibliographical referencesen_US
local.relation.associatedcontenthttps://repository.cpu.edu.ph/handle/20.500.12852/2127 Doctoral dissertationen_US


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