Spring 1991 · Vol. 20 No. 1

Mennonite Brethren and Evangelicalism

From the Editors: Mennonite Brethren and Evangelicalism

Elmer A. Martens

2

Focusing the Evangelical Vision

Walter Unger

3–17

Recent Interpretations of Evangelical Pluralism

Paul Toews

18–25

The Mennonite Brethren and American Evangelicalism: An Ambivalent Relationship

Richard Kyle

26–37

Mennonite Brethren: Neither Liberal nor Evangelical

Delbert L. Wiens

38–63

Response to Delbert L. Wiens

Gerald Ediger

64–66

Interpretations of Evangelicalism: An Annotated Bibliography

Kevin Enns-Rempel

67–71

Evangelicalism in India: Dealing with Nominalism and Cults

M. A. Solomon

72–76

Evangelicalism in Japan

Laurence D. Hiebert

76–78

Evangelicalism in Zaire: Thriving but Non-Aligned

Byron Burkholder

78–79

Evangelicalism in Colombia: Stressful Times, Then and Now

Peter J. Loewen

80–82

Evangelicalism in Germany: Immersed in Controversies

Peter Penner

83–86

No Clergy or Laity: All Christians Are Ministers in the Body of Christ, Ephesians 4:11-13

John Vooys

87–95

Hermeneutics: A Case Study for Evangelical/Anabaptist Relations

Greg Camp

96–104

Current Research

Elmer A. Martens

105–11

Timothy J. Geddert,

Watchwords: Mark 13 in Markan Eschatology

Devon H. Wiens

112–15

Paul D. Wiebe,

Christians in Andra Pradesh: The Mennonites of Mahbubnagar

Peter Penner

115–18

ed. Victor Adrian and Victor Loewen,

Committed to World Mission: A Focus on International Strategy

Peter Penner

115–18

Hans Kasdorf,

Gustav Warneck's missiologisches Erbe

Gerhard Ratzlaff

118–19

James Urry,

None But Saints: The Transformation of Mennonite Life in Russia, 1789-1889

Abe J. Dueck

119–21

James C. Juhnke,

Vision, Doctrine, War: Mennonite Identity and Organization in America, 1890-1930

Bruce Entz

121–22

Leo Driedger,

Mennonites in Winnipeg

Ken Reddig

123–24

Historical Endnotes

Heinrich Epp

125–40