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Mission and Migration<a href="https://www.anabaptistwitness.org/volumes/volume-6/issue-2/">Read this issue</a>December 2019GP0|#6eee4d48-4889-4bef-b498-d06130e0cc4f;L0|#06eee4d48-4889-4bef-b498-d06130e0cc4f|Anabaptist Witness;GTSet|#bb9274b4-45fe-43f1-8b69-3df0b933cdb0;GPP|#a82c2124-212e-4f7a-b626-9a0c5a3534c2;GPP|#96e4d92c-656e-45f6-9cd5-ab8aed108e3cVolume 6, Issue 2https://www.mennonitemission.net/resources/publications/Anabaptist Witness/562/Mission and MigrationMission and Migration

 

 

<p>​To talk about migration is to talk about identity, both individual identity and the collective identities of communities of faith. Forced migration characterized and shaped the early Anabaptist movement—a movement created, in part, to ensure religious freedom and the ability to practice faith as separate communities. This pattern of movement, originally meant to support a closed community, has resulted in a migration of theology, growing missions movements, and the spread of Anabaptism across the world.<br></p>

 

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Wednesday, December 11, 2019
562
Wednesday, December 11, 2019

​To talk about migration is to talk about identity, both individual identity and the collective identities of communities of faith. Forced migration characterized and shaped the early Anabaptist movement—a movement created, in part, to ensure religious freedom and the ability to practice faith as separate communities. This pattern of movement, originally meant to support a closed community, has resulted in a migration of theology, growing missions movements, and the spread of Anabaptism across the world.

Mission and Migration
Volume 6, Issue 2
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