London Society for Promoting Christianity Among the Jews

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The London Society for Promoting Christianity Among the Jews a.k.a. The Jews Society was a British Protestant Christian missionary society that promoted the teachings of Christianity among Jewish people, founded in London in 1809[1].

In 1914 were the following statistics related to the society:

The society is the oldest, largest, richest, most enterprising, and best organized of its type, and has auxiliary societies throughout the British Isles and Canada. The society, whose income in 1900-01 was £46,338, with an expenditure of £36,910, employed at 52 missionary stations 199 workers, among them 25 clergymen, 19 physicians, 34 female missionaries, 20 lay missionaries, 35 colporteurs, 58 teachers, and 8 apothecaries. Of these, 82 were converts from Judaism. Of the 52 stations 18 are in England, 3 in Austria, 1 in France, 4 in Germany, 2 in Holland, 1 in Italy, 4 in Rumania, 1 in Russia, 1 in Constantinople; in Asia there are 10 stations, among them Jerusalem with 27 workers; in Africa there are 7 stations. About 5,000 Jews have been baptized by the society since its foundation. Its principal organs are the Jewish Missionary Intelligence and the Jewish Missionary Advocate.[2]

[edit] Bibliography

  • Gidney, W. T., Joseph Wolff, (Biographies of eminent Hebrew Christians), London Society for Promoting Christianity Among the Jews, 1903

[edit] References

  • Schaff, Philip (1914). The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge. 
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