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.
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_________ | | | Occupied. | Unoccupied.  Province.|__________________________|_______________________
____ | | | | | | |Cities.| Towns.| Villages.| Cities.| Towns.| Villages. _________|_______|_______|__________|________|_______|______
____ | | | | | | _________|_______|_______|__________|________|_______|______
____

We ought here to repeat that we do not imagine for a moment that the Foreign Missions are to occupy all the villages or even all the cities and towns.  We believe that a careful statement of work to be done in this form would very speedily force us to realise, with a clearness and power never before experienced, the truth which we often repeat, that the conversion of the country must be the work of native Christians.

2.  The force at work in relation to the work to be done.  Here again it would not be sufficient to add together the figures returned from the stations, because in a large area like a province or a small country there are often many missionaries not at mission stations but at some large centre engaged in work for the whole province rather than for any particular mission district; as, for instance, translators or journalists; men engaged in hostels or Y.M.C.A. work; or in large institutions, such as training colleges, medical or educational or industrial; or in some special form of Christian philanthropy, such as work amongst lepers, blind, deaf and dumb, and other infirm or defective persons; or men engaged in assisting the missionaries all over the country as directors, or forwarding agents; and all these must be taken into account in considering the foreign force in the province.  Including all these we should get a table for the foreign force similar to that which we had for the station, and that force we could relate directly to the work to be done.

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_____________ | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Re- | | | | | | | |marks Popu- | Total |Propor-| |Propor-| |Single|Propor-| and lation.|Foreign|tion to| Men. |tion to| Wives.|Women.|tion to| Con- | Force.| Popu- | | Popu- | | | Popu- | clu- | |lation.| |lation.| | |lation.|sions. _______|_______|_______|______|_______|_______|______|______
_|______ | | | | | | | | _______|_______|_______|______|_______|_______|______|______
_|______

We cannot sacrifice the proportions, because the life is in them.  Comparison of conditions in different areas can only be made on proportions.  The mere statement of the figures with the suggestion that anyone can work out the proportions would reveal a singular ignorance of human nature.

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