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The Celtic Way of Evangelism by George Hunter III looks at the remarkably effective history of evangelism, discipleship and church planting in the time of St. Patrick in the late 4th and early 5th centuries A.D. It contrasts the Roman and Celtic forms of evangelism as they grew throughout northern Europe.
Under Patrick’s mission efforts, some 700 churches were planted , 1000 priests were ordained, 30-40 of Ireland’s 150 tribes became substantially Christian. Patrick was the first public man to speak against slavery, and within his lifetime, the Irish slave trade came to a halt. His communities modeled the Christian way of faithfulness, generosity, and peace. (p.23)
The book ends with two great quotes.
First is this ancient Chinese poem:
Go to the people.
Live among them.
Learn from them.
Love them.
Start with what they know.
Build on what they have.
The final paragraph of the book reads this way:
The supreme key to reaching the West again is the key that Patrick discovered – involuntarily but providentially. The gulf between church people and unchurched people is vast, but if we pay the price to understand them, we will usually know what to say and what to do; if they know and feel we understand them, by the tens of millions they will risk opening their hearts to the God who understands them.
The book begins with a look at Patrick’s conversation and call to return to Ireland.
The book is excellent, brief, readable, and a good mix of history and missiology. But the book is more effective to us than simply as a history of Celtic Christianity in teaching us how to be missionally-minded in the culture surrounding us
Under Patrick’s mission efforts, some 700 churches were planted , 1000 priests were ordained, 30-40 of Ireland’s 150 tribes became substantially Christian. Patrick was the first public man to speak against slavery, and within his lifetime, the Irish slave trade came to a halt. His communities modeled the Christian way of faithfulness, generosity, and peace. (p.23)
The book ends with two great quotes.
First is this ancient Chinese poem:
Go to the people.
Live among them.
Learn from them.
Love them.
Start with what they know.
Build on what they have.
The final paragraph of the book reads this way:
The supreme key to reaching the West again is the key that Patrick discovered – involuntarily but providentially. The gulf between church people and unchurched people is vast, but if we pay the price to understand them, we will usually know what to say and what to do; if they know and feel we understand them, by the tens of millions they will risk opening their hearts to the God who understands them.
The book begins with a look at Patrick’s conversation and call to return to Ireland.
The book is excellent, brief, readable, and a good mix of history and missiology. But the book is more effective to us than simply as a history of Celtic Christianity in teaching us how to be missionally-minded in the culture surrounding us