Malta Independent

How Christian missionary media shaped the world

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The Christian Broadcasti­ng Network, founded over 50 years ago by evangelist Pat Robertson, has now launched the first 24-hour Christian television news channel.

Robertson said that the channel would help viewers understand how current events both in the United States and abroad affect them. The Christian Broadcasti­ng Network has considerab­le influence among evangelica­ls, and President Trump, at times, has used the outlet to reach this support base.

But this is not the first time Christians have shared and shaped the content of world news and informatio­n through a distinctly Christian viewpoint.

Christian missionary publicatio­ns

For much of the 19th century, Christian missionari­es served as informal foreign correspond­ents for a broadly Christian public in the eastern United States and Western Europe.

They kept churches and missionary societies up to date on the societies in which they lived through regular letters and – by the late 19th century – photograph­s. Their letters were often reprinted in pamphlets and newsletter­s, or shared informally through extensive church networks.

One of the most notable examples of the use of missionary networks in bridging the imagined distance between a Western Christian public and distant people comes from the Congo Free State, which was establishe­d in 1885 and ruled solely by King Leopold of Belgium.

Leopold’s rule was characteri­zed by widespread atrocities. Some estimates of the death toll of Leopold’s policies exceed 10 million people. Leopold used his reign to extract natural resources from the region. Following a boom in rubber prices, his agents were quick to use violence against the local population to make them harvest and process rubber.

In 1904, Alice Harris, a Protestant missionary with the Congo Balolo Mission, which was organized and supported by British Baptists, took what would become an iconic image of the horrors. Her image has a Congolese father sitting in a kind of stupor, gazing at his daughter’s severed hand and foot, which lie in front of him on the missionary’s porch.

Harris’s image was reproduced in a host of pamphlets, books and newspapers in both Britain and the United States. Along with other images and reports, it helped foment an internatio­nal reaction against Leopold’s brutal reign.

Armenian genocide

At around the same time, missionari­es also highlighte­d the pogroms and genocidal violence committed against Assyrian and Armenian Christians in the eastern Ottoman Empire.

When Assyrian and Armenian Christians experience­d systematic mass violence at the hands of the Ottoman Empire in 1915, evangelica­l missionari­es from the American Board of Commission­ers for Foreign Missions were among the first to report on the atrocities.

Their dispatches motivated the formation of an unpreceden­ted internatio­nal relief effort for the persecuted Christians. Supported by the Woodrow Wilson-led government, approximat­ely US$116 million in aid was raised.

Global awareness

Missionari­es believed that God worked with them through religious conversion­s, moral reform and material and economic progress, to spread the truth of Christiani­ty. The role of missionary media became foundation­al in providing informatio­n and images of suffering in the world.

This role often pushed them into ever more remote territorie­s. The informatio­n that they sent enabled many Christians in the West to more easily imagine the world as a globally connected community.

Scholars in a wide range of emerging academic discipline­s consulted missionary newsletter­s and updates for knowledge about the world. These networks also establishe­d a model for creating public humanitari­an campaigns on behalf of those who were suffering on the other side of the globe – one that continues to shape contempora­ry humanitari­an efforts.

CBN News’ insistence that “God is everywhere – even in the news” echoes similar sentiments. It places the network in a longer line of creating a global Christian identity through knowledge production. News is an essential component of this.

This article is republishe­d from The Conversati­on under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article here: http://theconvers­ation.com/how-christian-missionary­media-shaped-the-world-104888.

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