Essays on modern missions issues by Charles Van Engen, Paul Hiebert, and Ralph Winter, with responses from other missional leaders, edited by David Hesselgrave and Ed Stetzer.
Provocative anchor essays by Charles Van Engen, Paul Hiebert, and Ralph Winter (among the final publications of the latter two authors) on the definition of Christian mission, the nature of contextualization, and the future of Evangelical missions. Diverse response essays, ranging from deferential to reactionary and from deeply insightful to apparently missing the point. An engaging read that, as whole, reveals the underlying tension (or the major shift in question) in Evangelical missions: visionary missiologists present possibilities for greater faithfulness to God's mission, causing many to latch on to hobby horse definitions of biblical inerrancy that obscure the hermeneutical issues really at stake. Stetzer is evenhanded in his responses, and Hesselgrave's conclusion is consistent with his previous reactions to the issues raised.
A fun book of essays and responses that hit on some of the more important issues of evangelical missiology. There is enough diversity in the contributors to make the book interesting.
MissionShift explores a complex topic of contextualization in the church. I appreciate that the book presents a dialogue, not a monologue, giving an equal attention to counterpoints. Highly recommend