Pitfalls of Trained Incapacity: The Unintended Effects of Integral Missionary Training in the Basel Mission on its Early Work in Ghana (1828-1840) - Softcover

Herppich, Birgit

 
9780227176214: Pitfalls of Trained Incapacity: The Unintended Effects of Integral Missionary Training in the Basel Mission on its Early Work in Ghana (1828-1840)

Synopsis

The need to train Christian missionaries was an afterthought of the Protestant missionary movement in the early nineteenth century. The Basel Missionary Training Institute (BMTI) was the first school designed solely for the purpose of preparing European missionaries for ministry in non-European lands. Pitfalls of Trained Incapacity explores the various sociological and historical factors that influenced the BMTI “community of practice” and how the outcomes affected the work of the Basel Mission in Ghana in its initial phase. It shows that the integral training of the BMTI resulted in missionary practices that lacked flexibility to adjust attitudes and behaviour to the vastly different circumstances in Africa, impeded the realisation of mission objectives, and hindered the emergence of an African appropriation of Christianity. By exploring educational and sociological perspectives in a pre-colonial context, this study reaches beyond its historical significance to raise questions of unintended effects of integral ministry training in other times and places. The natural cultural bias of groups with shared theological assumptions and social ideals – like the Basel Mission – suggests a strong propensity for trained incapacity, that is, for training processes that establish inflexible mental frameworks that are potentially detrimental to intercultural engagement.

Table of Contents

Tables and Figures
Foreword by Wilbert R. Shenk
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Introduction: Integral Missionary Training and the Basel Mission
Part I: The Community of Practice of the Basel Mission Training Institute
1 A Learning Community Shaped by German Pietism
2 A Shared Vision of Christian Foreign Mission
3 Diverse Participants with a Shared Practice
Part II: Indications for Trained Incapacity in the Beginnings of the Basel Mission in Ghana
4 The African Context and the Early Basel Mission (1828–1831)
5 Andreas Riis’s Pioneering (1832–1840)
6 Early Failures at Mission Work (1836–1840)
Conclusion: Pitfalls of Trained Incapacity in Integral Missionary
Training
Bibliography

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About the Author

Birgit Herppich (PhD, Fuller Theological Seminary) is Adjunct Assistant Professor of Intercultural Studies at Fuller Theological Seminary. She is a native of Germany and served with WEC International as a missionary in Ghana for eight years. She now coordinates the Membership Departments of WEC International.

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