Fall 2014 · Vol. 43 No. 2
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
253–259
Book Reviews
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
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Fall 2014Vol. 43 No. 2