Missionary Survey As An Aid To Intelligent Co-Operation In Foreign Missions eBook

Roland Allen
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 133 pages of information about Missionary Survey As An Aid To Intelligent Co-Operation In Foreign Missions.

Missionary Survey As An Aid To Intelligent Co-Operation In Foreign Missions eBook

Roland Allen
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 133 pages of information about Missionary Survey As An Aid To Intelligent Co-Operation In Foreign Missions.

But to view the work in the province as a unity we do not need all the detail of the station districts, indeed we should only find the multiplication of detail confusing.  To gain a general view of work in a large area such as a province or a small country we must first of all select those features which are common to all the parts and vitally important.  We venture to suggest that the important features to be represented are five. (1) The work to be done in the whole area. (2) The strength of the whole force at work in relation to the work to be done. (3) The extent to which emphasis is laid on various forms of work. (4) The extent to which different classes, races, and religions in the area are reached. (5) The extent to which the Church has attained to self-support.

1.  If the mission stations and their allotted districts covered the whole country, we should need to do no more than add together the returns obtained from the station statistics which we have already drawn up.  But in most countries there are large unoccupied areas of the size and population of which we are more or less ignorant.  What we have is, either a census return for the whole province, or an estimate of its area and population.  In dealing with the whole province then we must treat the station returns of towns and villages occupied and of the numbers of the Christian constituency as work done; and then we must find out the relation of these to the whole area and population.  This would have to be done probably first on a large scale map which would show the density of the population in different parts of the area, and would show the stations and the strength of the Christian constituency in relation to the area and population.  These facts could then be expressed in a table, and we should gain at once an idea of the extent to which the missions were in a position to reach the population.  The table would be exceedingly simple and give us no more than the barest idea of the work to be done in its vaguest expression.

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----------- | | | Christian Con- | Non-Christian Province. | Area. | Population. | stituency. | Population. ------------------------------------------------------------
------ | | | | __________|________|______________|________________|________
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If, in addition to this, there was either a census return or a credible estimate of the cities, towns, and villages, in the area, a table could be drawn of the cities, towns, and villages occupied, in the sense that there were Christians resident in them, and the work could be expressed in that form also, which would greatly assist the understanding of the other.

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Missionary Survey As An Aid To Intelligent Co-Operation In Foreign Missions from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.