Explore the spread of Christianity in West Africa and the bold actions of early missionaries, facing danger, culture, and climate to bring a new gospel to distant shores.
This study follows the frontier of mission work across West Africa, highlighting the efforts of dedicated workers who pressed into Abeokuta, Lagos, Whydah, and beyond. It shows how missionaries met fierce resistance from fetich priests and political rulers, navigated slave trade remnants, and partnered with local communities to establish lasting churches. The narrative blends on-the-ground accounts with the larger story of opportunity and urgency that shaped missionary progress in the region.
- Learn how individual workers moved from coast to interior, establishing stations and building relationships with African leaders.
- See the real-world challenges missionaries faced, from political turmoil to cultural practices and the legacies of the slave trade.
- Understand how different mission societies collaborated to expand West Africa’s Christian presence.
- Discover the broader context of early 20th-century missions in Africa and the questions they raised about faith, education, and social change.
Ideal for readers of missionary history, Africa’s colonial era, and studies of cross-cultural outreach in the early modern world.