
The Idea of Evangelisation
'Mission', Theology and Scripture from the Early Church to the Age of Bede
Samuel Cardwell(Author)
The British Academy (Publisher)
Published on 29. May 2026
Book
Hardback
256 pages
978-1-80596-578-7 (ISBN)
Description
The evangelisation of the peoples of western Europe to Christianity was arguably the single most important historical development of the early Middle Ages, shaping not only the beliefs and religious practices but also the social, political, cultural and intellectual landscape of the last 1,500 years. Although much has been written on the conversion period, little has been done to understand the development of the Christian impulse to spread the Gospel 'to the ends of the earth'. When and why did Christians develop the idea of the evangelisation of all peoples? When and why did they begin to express this idea by deliberately setting out to evangelise pagan peoples? How did the conception or expression of the idea of evangelisation change over time? How did authors interpret key scriptural texts to justify or explain their views on evangelisation? This book offers the first book-length, diachronic study of these questions. Through contextualised close readings of authors writing mostly in Latin between the fourth and the eighth centuries (including Augustine, Patrick, Gregory and Bede), it argues for a gradual but fundamental transformation in Christian thinking about evangelisation. This in turn provides new insights into the origins of Christian mission.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Liverpool University Press
Illustrations
1 Maps
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-80596-578-7 (9781805965787)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Samuel Cardwell is a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Nottingham, where he is working on the history of biblical interpretation in the early medieval kingdom of Northumbria. He received his PhD in Medieval Studies from the University of Toronto in 2023 and was awarded the Governor-General's Gold Academic Medal. He holds an MPhil in Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic as well as undergraduate degrees from Monash University and the University of Melbourne.
Content
Abbreviations
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Is 'Mission' the Right Word?
Defining Evangelisation
Historiography and Methodology
Chapter Outline and Scope
From the Early Church to Augustine The Pre-Constantinian Church Tempora Christiana 'Missionaries without a Mission' Augustine Conclusion
Prosper, Palladius and Patrick Prosper, Leo and Palladius Patrick Patrick, Scripture and Evangelisation Patrick, Paul and Apostleship Conclusion
Gregory and his Successors Gregory the Great Gregory's Idea of Evangelisation England and the Seventh-Century Papacy Conclusion
The Peregrini, Irish and Frankish Columba, Aidan and Fursa Columbanus and his Successors Conclusion
How the English Interpreted Their Own Evangelisation Gregory 'our Apostle' The Sin of Failing to Evangelise Evangelisation and Exegesis in Bede's Commentaries on Acts The Work of the Word Conclusion
Conclusion
Bibliography Index
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Is 'Mission' the Right Word?
Defining Evangelisation
Historiography and Methodology
Chapter Outline and Scope
From the Early Church to Augustine The Pre-Constantinian Church Tempora Christiana 'Missionaries without a Mission' Augustine Conclusion
Prosper, Palladius and Patrick Prosper, Leo and Palladius Patrick Patrick, Scripture and Evangelisation Patrick, Paul and Apostleship Conclusion
Gregory and his Successors Gregory the Great Gregory's Idea of Evangelisation England and the Seventh-Century Papacy Conclusion
The Peregrini, Irish and Frankish Columba, Aidan and Fursa Columbanus and his Successors Conclusion
How the English Interpreted Their Own Evangelisation Gregory 'our Apostle' The Sin of Failing to Evangelise Evangelisation and Exegesis in Bede's Commentaries on Acts The Work of the Word Conclusion
Conclusion
Bibliography Index