Timeline of Christian missions

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

This timeline of Christian missions chronicles the global expansion of

missionary outreach
events.

Apostolic Age

Earliest dates must all be considered approximate

Early Christianity

  • 100 – First Christians are reported in Monaco, Algeria; a missionary goes to Arbela, a sacred city of the Assyrians that the Christian church is katholikos ("universal")
  • 112 – Pliny the Younger reports rapid growth of Christianity in Bithynia[7]
  • 140 – Hermas writes: "The Son of God ... has been preached to the ends of the earth"[1]
  • 150 – Gospel reaches Portugal and Morocco[1]
  • 166 – Bishop Soter writes that the number of Christians has surpassed the Jews[8]
  • 174 – First Christians reported in Austria[1]
  • 177 – Churches in Lyon and Vienne (southern France) report being persecuted[9]
  • 190 – Pataenus of Alexandria goes to India in response to an appeal for Christian teachers[10]
  • 196 – In
    Persian Empire[11]
  • 197 – Tertullian writes that Christianity had penetrated all ranks of society in North Africa[12]
  • 200 – First Christians are reported in Switzerland and Belgium[1]
  • 206 –
    Abgar, the Syriac King of Edessa, embraces the Christian faith[13]
  • 208 – Tertullian writes that Christ has followers on the far side of the Roman wall in Britain where Roman legions have not yet penetrated[14]
  • 250 –
    Denis (or Denys or Dionysius) is sent from Rome along with six other missionaries to establish the church in Paris[15]
  • 270 – Death of Gregory Thaumaturgus, Christian leader in Pontus. It was said that when Gregory became "bishop" there were only 17 Christians in Pontus while at his death thirty years later there were only 17 non-Christians.[16]
  • 280 – First rural churches emerge in northern Italy; Christianity is no longer exclusively in urban areas
  • 287 – Maurice from Egypt is killed at Agauno, Switzerland for refusing to sacrifice to pagan divinities[17]
  • 300 – First Christians reported in Greater Khorasan; an estimated 10% of the world's population is now Christian; parts of the Bible are available in 10 different languages[18]

Era of the seven Ecumenical Councils

  • 410 – New Testament translated into Armenian[25]
  • 420 – A Pre-Islam Arabian Bedouin tribe under sheikh Peter-Aspebet is converted[34]
  • 425 – The first bishops are ordained for Herat (Afghanistan) and Samarkand (Uzbekistan)
  • 432 – Patrick goes to Ireland as missionary[35]
  • 450 – First Christians reported in Liechtenstein[18]
  • 496 – Conversion of Clovis I, king of Franks in Gaul, along with 3,000 warriors[36]
  • 499 – Persian king
    Kavadh I
    , fleeing his country, meets a group of Christian missionaries going to Central Asia to preach to the Turks
  • 500 – First Christians reported in North Yemen; Nairam becomes Christian center
  • 720 – Caliph
    Umar II
    puts heavy pressure on the Christian Berbers to convert to Islam
  • 716 –
    Germanic tribes[52]
  • 724 – Boniface fells pagan sacred oak of Thor at Geismar in Hesse (Germany)[53]
  • 732 – Muslim advance from Spain and southern France stopped by Charles Martell at Tours and Poitiers
  • 740 – Irish monks reach Iceland[54]
  • 771 – Charlemagne becomes king and will decree that sermons be given in the vernacular. He also commissioned Bible translations.[55]
  • 781 –
    Luminous Religion, thus providing a written record of a Christian presence in China[56]
  • 787 – Liudger begins missionary work among the pagans near the mouth of the Ems river (in Germany)[57]

Middle Ages

1000 to 1499

  • 1408 – Spanish Dominican Vincent Ferrer begins a ministry in Italy in which it is said that thousands of Jews and Muslims were won to faith in Christ[97]
  • 1410 – Bible is translated into Hungarian[65]
  • 1420 – Franciscan missionaries accompany Portuguese expedition to Madeira[98]
  • 1431 – Franciscan missionaries accompany Portuguese expedition to the Azores[98]
  • 1435 – Forced conversion of Jews in Palma de Mallorca, Spain[99]
  • 1445 – First Christians reported in Guinea Bissau[65]
  • 1448 – First Christians reported in Mauritania
  • 1450 – Franciscan missionaries accompany Portuguese expedition to the Cape Verde Islands[98]
  • 1453 – Constantinople falls to the Muslim Ottoman Turks who make it their capital. An Islamic service of thanksgiving is held in the church of Saint Sophia[100]
  • 1455 – With the bull Romanus Pontifex the patronage of missions in new countries behind Cape Bojador is given to the Portuguese (see "Padroado").
  • 1462 – Johannes Gutenberg begins printing the Bible with his movable-type printing process; Pope Pius II assigns the evangelization of the Portuguese Guinea Coast of Africa to the Franciscans led by Alfonso de Bolano[101]
  • 1485 – After having come into contact with the Portuguese, the King of Benin requests that a church be planted in his kingdom[101]
  • 1486 –
    Senegambia
    .
  • 1489 – Baptism of Wolof king Behemoi in Senegal[102]
  • 1491 – The Congo sees its first group of missionaries arrive.[103] Under the ministry of these Franciscan and Dominican priests, the king would soon be baptized and a church built at the royal capital.
  • 1492 – Birth of the
    church in Angola
  • 1493 – Pope Alexander VI allows Spain to colonize the New World with Catholic missions; Christopher Columbus takes Christian priests with him on his second journey to the New World
  • 1494 – First missionaries arrive in Dominican Republic
  • 1495 – The head of a convent in
    Seville, Spain, Mercedarian Jorge, makes a trip to the West Indies
    .
  • 1496 – First Christian baptisms in the New World take place when Guaticaba along with other members of his household are baptized on the island of Hispaniola[104]
  • 1497 – Forced conversion of Jews in Portugal[105]
  • 1498 – First Christians are reported in Kenya
  • 1499 – Portuguese
    mission will end in 1698 due to the Oman
    -Arab conquest.

1500 to 1600

1600 to 1699

1700 to 1799

1800 to 1849

1850 to 1899

1900 to 1949

1950 to 1999

2000 to present

  • 2000 – Asia College of Ministry (ACOM), a ministry of Asia Evangelistic Fellowship (AEF),[427] was launched by Jonathan James, to train national missionaries in Asia.
  • 2001 –
    Baptist
    missionary Roni Bowers and her infant daughter are killed when a Peruvian Air Force jet fires on their small float-plane. Though severely wounded in both legs, missionary pilot Kevin Donaldson landed the burning plane on the Amazon River.
  • 2003 – Publication of
    Back To Jerusalem: Called to Complete the Great Commission – Three Chinese Church Leaders with Paul Hattaway brings Chinese and Korean mission movement to forefront; Coptic priest Fr. Zakaria Botros
    begins his television and internet mission to Muslims in North Africa, the Middle East, Central Asia, and western countries, resulting in thousands of conversions.
  • 2004 – Four Southern Baptist missionaries are killed by gunman in Iraq
  • 2005 – Korean Catholic Bible completed, the first translation of the entire Bible into modern Korean language.
  • 2006 – Abdul Rahman, an Afghan Christian convert, is forced out of Afghanistan by local Muslim leaders and exiled to Italy. Missionary Vijay Kumar is publicly stoned by Hindu extremists for Christian preaching.
  • 2007 –
    Kriol Bible completed, the first translation of the entire Bible into an Australian indigenous language[428]
  • 2010 – The Third Lausanne Congress on World Evangelization held in Cape Town, South Africa
  • 2012 – A study by political scientist Robert Woodberry, focusing on Protestant missionaries, found that they have often left a very positive societal impact in the areas where they worked. "In cross-national statistical analysis Protestant missions are significantly and robustly associated with higher levels of printing, education, economic development, organizational civil society, protection of private property, and rule of law and with lower levels of corruption".[429]
  • 2016 – MECO UK and Ireland merge with SIM.
  • 2019 – Vatican holds synod on the evangelization of the Amazon.

See also

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External links