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Book Review
The Kingdom of Character: The Student Volunteer Movement for Foreign Missions, 1886-1926. By Michael Parker. (Lanham: University Press of America and American Society of Missiology, 1998. xiv, 250 pp. Cloth, $57.00, isbn 0-7618-1012-9. Paper, $32.50, isbn 0-7618-1013-7.)
| Michael Parker's
volume in the American Society of Missiology's dissertation series
utilizes extensive manuscript collections at the Yale Divinity School
to delineate the ideology, recruitment program, and cultural significance
of a major force in American Protestantism's global expansion. The
Student Volunteer Movement (SVM), and the World's Student Christian
Federation it spawned, originated in a now-legendary student conference
in 1886 at evangelist Dwight L. Moody's home in Northfield, Massachusetts.
Part of a surging foreign missionary movement in the late nineteenth
and early twentieth centuries, the SVM recruited by 1920 approximately
half of those sent abroad by denominational agencies. Nondenominational
and widely inclusive theologically, it also made important contributions
to the international ecumenical movement. |
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