Furthermore, this book establishes that a relevant Christian practice of puberty will help Sinhalese Christians enjoy the Christian faith that reflects their cultural roots, values, and identity, affirms their relationship with God, and offers a missional witness of their faith that responds to the hearts and lives of the people around them. When Christianity engages people's unique cultural perceptions, interests, and concerns, they can be expected to appreciate the gospel as meaningful and relevant to their daily lives.
This book can serve as a text or a significant resource for upper division undergraduate, graduate, and postgraduate courses on missions, culture, anthropology, rituals, contextualization, cross-cultural communication, ethnic studies, and comparative studies.
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«Paul Mantae Kim's meticulous comparative research exploring the perceptions and attitudes regarding the puberty ritual of Sinhalese Buddhists and Christians in Sri Lanka is comprehensive in scope and stylistically accessible. In this work readers will discover a missiological approach that not only helps Sinhalese Christians respond appropriately to the puberty ritual, but riveted in context and faithful to Christian orthodoxy. Kim distills signposts of contemporary contextualization that will prove helpful to a broad section of global contexts.» (Robert L. Gallagher, PhD President, American Society of Missiology, and Associate Professor of Intercultural Studies, Wheaton College Graduate School, Wheaton, Illinois)