Summary
This is a very large introduction to missiology, aiming to give readers a broad and structured overview of the theology, history, practice, and contemporary questions of Christian mission. It belongs to the classroom more than the quick ministry shelf, yet it is written with enough clarity to remain useful beyond formal academic settings. The scope is one of its defining features. Readers are not simply given one line of argument, but a wide framework for understanding the field as a whole. That includes biblical foundations, historical developments, contextual issues, mission methods, and practical concerns for gospel witness across cultures. The result is an expansive reference style volume that can serve long term study very well when readers have the patience to work through it carefully.
Strengths
The chief strength of the book is comprehensiveness. Many works on mission either focus on a narrow question or stay at such a general level that readers are left with slogans rather than categories. This volume does more. It gives students and church leaders a substantial map of the discipline, helping them see how biblical theology, church history, cultural engagement, and practical mission concerns relate to one another. That makes it particularly useful for seminary level study and for ministers who want a serious resource to consult over time. The scale of the book also means that it can function as a reference point. Readers can return to specific sections when preparing teaching on mission, wrestling with contextual questions, or trying to understand competing approaches. There is a clear conservative evangelical instinct in the work, and that will reassure many pastors who want mission discussed with doctrinal seriousness.
Limitations
Its size is also its main drawback. At well over seven hundred pages, this is not a volume most pastors will read straight through with ease while handling ordinary weekly duties. It demands time and intention. The book can also feel more like a textbook than a pastoral argument, which means some sections are strong on information but lighter on memorable theological synthesis. Readers wanting one authorial voice pressing a clear burden throughout may find the volume more functional than stirring. In addition, comprehensive treatments often include material of uneven immediate usefulness. Some chapters will richly reward readers in local church ministry, while others will remain more specialised or academic in feel. None of that undermines the value of the book, but it does shape the kind of reader who will benefit most.
How We Would Use It
We would use this in theological education, ministry apprenticeships, and serious pastoral study where mission needs to be understood as a discipline rather than merely admired as a value. It would also work well as a shelf resource for elders or mission leaders who want one substantial volume to consult repeatedly. We would not place it first into the hands of a new believer or an already stretched church member. It is too large for that. But for those tasked with teaching, leading, or training others in mission, it offers a broad and serviceable tool. It is especially useful when a church wants to move from vague support for mission towards informed, biblical, long term thinking.
Closing Recommendation
This is a strong large scale missiology textbook for serious readers who need breadth, structure, and conservative evangelical grounding. It is not light reading, but it can serve pastors and students very well when used patiently and purposefully over time.
John Mark Terry
John Mark Terry is an American Baptist missiologist of the contemporary era, writing from within a conservative evangelical and missionary framework.
He has taught missions and evangelism for many years, particularly through his service at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. Terry has contributed numerous books and edited volumes on global mission, evangelism strategy, and the history of missionary work. His writing often aims to help churches think carefully about the biblical mandate for mission while learning from the experiences of earlier missionary movements.
Terry is appreciated for combining theological conviction with practical reflection on the spread of the gospel. His work seeks to equip pastors, students, and mission leaders to pursue faithful evangelism and cross cultural witness with clarity and confidence.
Theological Perspective: Baptist