Peter Y. Hong is ordained minister with the Missionary Church denomination. He is chaplain with the Federal Bureau of Prisons and is currently serving at the Low Security Correctional Institution in Butner, North Carolina. He received a PhD in theological studies at Columbia International University.
""Peter Hong has written a book on an important topic that sets just the right tone at just the right moment. His overview of globalization is expansive but not so broad that it risks being thinly developed. His theological analysis is insightful without becoming bogged down in minutia. Together, these two qualities shed a timely and clarifying light on our contemporary world."" --Brent Waters, Emeritus Stead Professor of Christian Social Ethics, Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary ""This book offers a redeemed perspective on how the churches and missions should engage with globalization. It sheds light on the blind spots of Western Christianity and modern missions to provide a practical and theological foundation for a mission of reconciliation. Also, the author explains why Western Christianity in the past couldn't reject colonialism and urges global churches to resist worldly globalization, while promoting true globalization."" --Sanguk (David) Park, regional director, Pacific Asia, SIM International ""This book is an outstanding work on the ills and problems that arise from contemporary globalization. In a remarkable way it educates Christians to engage with the globalized world for the reconciliation of humanity with God and with each other, giving a new perspective on God's plan and purpose for true globalization."" --Ji-Ung Lim, organizational development director, World Evangelical Alliance ""The Reconciliation of Humanity in Christ addresses the opportunities, possibilities, challenges, and difficulties globalization poses for human communities. Hong's detailed discussion is insightful and helpful. The biblical and theological focus provides a valuable framework for the church and Christians to give a biblical and a theological response to globalization and the role theology plays in shaping it . . . I strongly recommend Peter Hong's book to anyone who wants to learn more about globalization and how to respond to it and to engage theologically with the challenges it poses for human communities."" --James Nkansah-Obrempong, dean of Nairobi Evangelical Graduate School of Theology, Africa International University