Reviewed by Aminta Arrington (John Brown University). In the 1880s, two missions administrators, one on each side of the Atlantic Ocean, simultaneously, yet independently, developed the indigenous principle (also called the three-self principle): that the goal of missions should be to create self-supporting, self-governing, and self-propagating churches
Native Americans
Marshall, “Upward, not sunwise”
Marshall, Kimberly Jenkins. 2016. Upward, not sunwise: resonant rupture in Navajo neo-pentecostalism. Lincoln : University of Nebraska Press. Publisher’s description: Upward, Not …
Marshall, “Non-Human Agency and Experiential Faith”
Marshall, Kimberly Jenkins. 2015. Non-Human Agency and Experiential Faith among DinĂ© OodlĂĄnĂ, âNavajo Believers.â Anthropologica 57(2): 397-409. Abstract: The neo-Pentecostal …
McAlister, “The militarization of prayer in America”
McAlister, Elizabeth. 2016. The militarization of prayer in America: white and Native American spiritual warfare. Journal of Religious and Political …
Penner, The Ojibwe Renaissance
Penner, Robert. 2015. The Ojibwe Renaissance: Transnational Evangelicalism and the Making of an Algonquian Intelligentsia, 1812â1867. American Review of Canadian Studies http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02722011.2015.1013264 …
Marshall, “‘Navajo Reservation Camp Meeting a Great Success!'”
Marshall, Kimberly Jenkins. 2015. “Navajo Reservation Camp Meeting a Great Success!”The Advent of DinĂ© Pentecostalism after 1950. Ethnohistory 62(1): 95-117. …
Tarango, “Choosing the Jesus Way”
Tarango, Angela. 2014. Choosing the Jesus Way: American Indian Pentecostals and the Fight for the Indigenous Principle. Chapel Hill, NC: …