Covenant Keepers: A History of Samoan (LMS) Missionary Wives in the Western Pacific from 1839 to 1979
Abstract
Covenant Keepers: A History of Samoan of Samoan
(LMS) Missionary Wives in the Western Pacific from 1839 to 1979
Abstract: From 1839 to 1979, a period spanning 140 years, more
than 600 Samoan missionary couples were sent out by the London
Missionary Society to spread the Gospel to islands of the western
Pacific. Although much has been written about the work of Samoan
missionary husbands in the evangelisation of the western Pacific,
very little is known of Samoan wives. Of the 600 or more of them
who accompanied their husbands, more than half of their names
were not even documented in mission archives. Yet they were
trained and were even expected to perform in the mission field.
Rather than any actual analysis, perceptions of them today, as in
the past, are based on pervasive stereotypes founded on gender
and racial hierarchy that marginalise them. Samoan missionary
wives however were far more than mere “helpmeets” or
assistants to their husbands. Despite the challenges of mission
work, they were a crucial part of the movement to evangelise
islands and places in the western Pacific. Moreover, they were
articulate in their work and deeply committed to mission
endeavour. This thesis examines Samoan missionary wives as a
distinct group. It attempts to analyse their social and cultural
backgrounds, their lives and work in the mission field, and their
interactions with the local people they encountered. It concludes
by considering whether they had a distinctive impact that
distinguished them in the project of evangelisation in the
Pacific.
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