Don Richardson (missionary)

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Don Richardson
Born 1935
Canada
Occupation Missionary
Religious beliefs Christian
For others named Don Richardson, see Don Richardson (disambiguation)

Don Richardson (born 1935) is a Canadian Christian missionary, teacher, author and international speaker who worked among the tribal people of Western New Guinea, Indonesia.[1] He demonstrates in his writings how, hidden among tribal cultures, there are usually some practices or understandings, that he calls "redemptive analogies", which can be used to illustrate the meaning of the Christian Gospel, contextualizing the Biblical representation of the incarnation of Jesus.

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[edit] Missionary career

Richardson studied at the Prairie Bible Institute and the Summer Institute of Linguistics. In 1955, he and his wife Carol and their seven-month-old baby went to work among the Sawi tribe of what was then Dutch New Guinea in the service of the Regions Beyond Missionary Union. The Sawi were known to be cannibalistic [2] headhunters. Living with them in virtual isolation from the modern world involved exposure to malaria, dysentery, and hepatitis, as well as the threat of violence.

In their new home in the jungle, the Richardsons set about learning the native Sawi language which was daunting in its complexity. There are 19 tenses for every verb. Don was soon able to become proficient in the dialect after a schedule of 8-10 hour daily learning sessions.

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Background
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People
Henry Nott
James Chalmers
John Williams
Hiram Bingham I
John Gibson Paton
John Coleridge Patteson
Florence Young
Betsey Stockton
Don Richardson

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American Board
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Richardson labored to show the villagers a way that they could comprehend Jesus from the Bible, but the cultural barriers to understanding and accepting this teaching seemed impossible until an unlikely event brought the concept of the substitutionary atonement of Christ into immediate relevance for the Sawi.

Missionary historian Ruth A. Tucker writes:

As he learned the language and lived with the people, he became more aware of the gulf that separated his Christian worldview from the worldview of the Sawi: "In their eyes, Judas, not Jesus was the hero of the Gospels, Jesus was just the dupe to be laughed at." Eventually Richardson discovered what he referred to as a Redemptive Analogy that pointed to the Incarnate Christ far more clearly than any biblical passage alone could have done. What he discovered was the Sawi concept of the Peace Child. [3]

Three tribal villages were in constant battle at this time. The Richardsons were considering leaving the area, so to keep them there, the Sawi people came together and decided that they would make peace with their hated enemies. Ceremonies commenced that saw young children being exchanged among opposing villages. One man in particular ran toward his enemy's camp and literally gave his son to his hated foe. Observing this, Richardson wrote: "if a man would actually give his own son to his enemies, that man could be trusted!" From this rare picture came the analogy of God's sacrifice of his own Son. The Sawi began to understand the teaching of the incarnation of Christ in the Gospel after Richardson explained God to them in this way.

Following this event many villagers converted to Christianity, a translation of the New Testament in Sawi was published, and nearly 2,500 Sawi patients were treated by Carol. The world's largest circular building made strictly from un-milled poles was constructed in 1972 as a Christian meeting place by the Sawi[4].

The Richardsons then left the Sawi to be cared for by their own church elders and another missionary couple, while they went on to work on the analysis of the Auyy language.

In 1976 Don and his wife returned to North America where he began teaching at the U.S. Center for World Mission in Pasadena. Don became the Director of Tribal Peoples' Studies. Richardson has continued to teach and travel broadly, speaking about "redemptive analogies" as a means to communicate the gospel message among tribal peoples. His best-selling books have had a significant impact on missiology and ongoing Christian missionary work.

[edit] Works

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Tucker (1983), p. 476-478
  2. ^ Tucker (1983), p. 476
  3. ^ Tucker (1983), p. 477
  4. ^ Tucker (1983), p. 478

[edit] References

  • Tucker, Ruth (1983). From Jerusalem to Irian Jaya A Biographical History of Christian Missions. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan. ISBN 0310239370. 


Persondata
NAME Richardson, Don
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION missionary to Papua New Guinea
DATE OF BIRTH 1935
PLACE OF BIRTH Canada
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH