• HOME
  • Search & Results
  • Full Text
  • Thesis Details
 
Page: 334
 
Full Screen

  • TITLE
  • CERTIFICATE
  • DECLARATION
  • ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
  • ABBREVIATIONS
  • CONTENTS
  • 1. INTRODUCTION
  • 1.1 Statement of the problem
  • 1.2 Purpose of the study
  • 1.3 Hypothesis
  • 1.4 Scope of the study
  • 1.5 Methodology
  • 1.6 Sources of the study
  • 1.7 Organisation of the study
  • 1.8 Limitations
  • 2. CHRISTIAN MISSIONS IN THE CONTEMPORARY SITUATION OF INDIA
  • 2.1 Background
  • 2.2 The Pluralistic situation
  • 2.3 Mission
  • 2.4 Conventional missionary approach
  • 2.5 Meaning of conversion
  • 2.5.1 Conversion: Hindu perception
  • 2.5.2 Conversion: Christian understanding
  • 2.6 Conversion -Changing Christian perception
  • 2.7 Niyogi commission report
  • 2.8 Christian mission activities: The present scenario
  • 2.8.1 From western to indigenous missions
  • 2.8.2 The contemporary situation: An overview
  • 2.8.3 Evangelization crusades
  • 2.9 Why Christian mission groups are concentrating their activities in North India’s tribal belt?
  • 2.9.1 The agenda of Christian missions working in parts of Orissa and Madhya Pradesh.
  • 2.10 Mission activities in the tribal villages of Bastar, Bilaspur and Raipur of Madhya Pradesh Raigada and Phulbani of Orissa: Findings of the case studies
  • 2.10.1 IET and their main activities
  • 2.10.2 The various ministries of IET and how they work
  • .2.10.3 IEHC and their main activities
  • 2.10.4 IEM and their main activities
  • 2.11 Why tribals and other backward classes are attracted to Christianity?
  • 2.12 Why Hindu groups oppose Christian missionary activities?
  • 3. HISTORY OF CHRISTIAN MISSIONS IN INDIA
  • 3.1 The origin of Christianity in India
  • 3.2 The Syrian tradition
  • 3.3 Socio-cultural life of St. Thomas Christians
  • 3.4 The Portuguese intrusion
  • 3.5 Portuguese-St. Thomas Christian interface
  • 3.6 St. Francis Xavier and Jesuit mission
  • 3.7 Robert De Nobili and the Madurai mission
  • 3.8 The Mogul mission
  • 3.9 Portuguese missions: An assessment
  • 3.10 The Protestant missions
  • 3.10.1 The first Protestant mission
  • 3.10.2 The British period
  • 4. IMPACT OF CHRISTIAN MISSIONSAN OVERVIEW
  • 4.1 The impact of missions, a summing up
  • 4.2 Christian missions and English education
  • 5. RESPONSES TO CHRISTIAN MISSIONS
  • 5.1 Back ground: Socio-religious movements of nineteenth-century
  • 5.2 Modern Hindu responses
  • 5.3 Mahatma Gandhi
  • 6. GANDHI AND THE CHRISTIAN MISSIONS
  • 6.1 Early contact with Christianity
  • 6.2 Days in London
  • 6.3 Critical maturing phase in South Africa
  • 6.4 Gandhi’s response to missionaries
  • 6.5 Contact with ECU
  • 6.6 Influence of Leo Tolstoy
  • 6.7 The final phase
  • 6.8 Encounter with Christian missions
  • 6.9 On the place of missions in Independent India
  • 6.10 State and religion
  • 6.11 Gandhi’s attitude towards Indian Christian community
  • 6.12 Gandhi’s views on religious conversion: A deeper probe
  • 6.13 Why Gandhi opposed proselytization?
  • 7. GANDHI’S MODEL FOR CHRISTIAN MISSIONS AND SOME CHRISTIAN RESPONSES
  • 7.1 How should Christian missions conduct themselves?
  • 7.2 Christian responses to the model offered by Gandhi Background
  • 7.3 Three contemporary witnesses
  • CONCLUSION
  • Gandhian guidelines for Christian missions in India, a summing up
  • BIBLIOGRAPHY
  • APPENDIX QUESTIONNAIRE