Kwame Bediako and African Christian Scholarship
Title | Kwame Bediako and African Christian Scholarship PDF eBook |
Author | Sara J. Fretheim |
Publisher | Wipf and Stock Publishers |
Pages | 254 |
Release | 2018-04-17 |
Genre | Religion |
ISBN | 1498299059 |
In a departure from current theologically-focused scholarship on Ghanaian theologian Kwame Bediako, this book places him within the wider historical continuum of twentieth-century Ghana and reads him as a leading Christian scholar within the African study of African religions. The book traces a variety of influences and figures within this emerging African discourse in Ghana, including aspects of missions and colonial history and the voices of poets, politicians, prophets, and priests. Locating Bediako within this complex twentieth-century matrix, this intellectual history draws upon his published and key unpublished works, including his first masters and doctoral dissertations on Negritude literature, an abiding influence on his later Christian thought and an essential foundation for interpreting this scholar. This book also "reads" the Akrofi-Christaller Institute of Theology, Mission, and Culture as "text" by Bediako, revealing essential components of his intellectual and spiritual itinerary revealed in the Institute's community and curriculum. This approach challenges narrowly-focused theological scholarship on Bediako, while highlighting critical methodological divisions between African, Western, confessional, and non-confessional approaches to the study of religion in Africa. In doing so, it highlights the rich complexity of this emerging African discourse and identifies Bediako as a pioneering African Christian intellectual within this wider field.
How Africa Shaped the Christian Mind
Title | How Africa Shaped the Christian Mind PDF eBook |
Author | Thomas C. Oden |
Publisher | InterVarsity Press |
Pages | 205 |
Release | 2010-07-23 |
Genre | Religion |
ISBN | 0830837051 |
Thomas C. Oden surveys the decisive role of African Christians and theologians in shaping the doctrines and practices of the church of the first five centuries, and makes an impassioned plea for the rediscovery of that heritage. Christians throughout the world will benefit from this reclaiming of an important heritage.
Kimbanguism
Title | Kimbanguism PDF eBook |
Author | Aurélien Mokoko Gampiot |
Publisher | Penn State Press |
Pages | 286 |
Release | 2017-03-20 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0271079681 |
In this volume, Aurélien Mokoko Gampiot, a sociologist and son of a Kimbanguist pastor, provides a fresh and insightful perspective on African Kimbanguism and its traditions. The largest of the African-initiated churches, Kimbanguism claims seventeen million followers worldwide. Like other such churches, it originated out of black African resistance to colonization in the early twentieth century and advocates reconstructing blackness by appropriating the parameters of Christian identity. Mokoko Gampiot provides a contextual history of the religion’s origins and development, compares Kimbanguism with other African-initiated churches and with earlier movements of political and spiritual liberation, and explores the implicit and explicit racial dynamics of Christian identity that inform church leaders and lay practitioners. He explains how Kimbanguists understand their own blackness as both a curse and a mission and how that underlying belief continuously spurs them to reinterpret the Bible through their own prisms. Drawing from an unprecedented investigation into Kimbanguism’s massive body of oral traditions—recorded sermons, participant observations of church services and healing sessions, and translations of hymns—and informed throughout by Mokoko Gampiot’s intimate knowledge of the customs and language of Kimbanguism, this is an unparalleled theological and sociological analysis of a unique African Christian movement.
Faces of Jesus in Africa
Title | Faces of Jesus in Africa PDF eBook |
Author | Robert J. Schreiter |
Publisher | Orbis Books |
Pages | 303 |
Release | 2015-03-24 |
Genre | Religion |
ISBN | 1608331741 |
The Nation That Fears God Prospers
Title | The Nation That Fears God Prospers PDF eBook |
Author | Chammah J. Kaunda |
Publisher | Fortress Press |
Pages | 434 |
Release | 2019-01-15 |
Genre | Religion |
ISBN | 1506447074 |
Through its strength in numbers and remarkable presence in politics, Pentecostalism has become a force to reckon with in twenty-first-century Zambian society. Yet, some fundamental questions in the study of Zambian Pentecostalism and politics remain largely unaddressed by African scholars. Situated within an interdisciplinary perspective, this unique volume explores the challenge of continuity in the Zambian Pentecostal understanding and practice of spiritual power in relation to political engagement. Chammah J. Kaunda argues that the challenge of Pentecostal political imagination is found in the inculturation of spiritual power with political praxis. The result of this inculturation is that Zambian Pentecostals sacralize the political authority of state power through the charisma of the national president and other major political personalities. It has also contributed to the construction of Zambian Pentecostal leadership that is deified rather than leadership that is formed through the struggles and experiences of the marginalized and powerless. Kaunda argues that the solution does not lie either in desacralization of powers or the separation between the church and the state, but rather in rethinking the Christ event as a paradigm for the recovery of Pentecostalism's sociopolitical prophetic dynamism.
Christian Identity
Title | Christian Identity PDF eBook |
Author | E. M. Conradie |
Publisher | AFRICAN SUN MeDIA |
Pages | 112 |
Release | 2005-07-01 |
Genre | Religion |
ISBN | 1919980881 |
This book is rooted in the quest for Christian identity in the Southern African context where Christianity is faced with many stark challenges, internal tensions and experiences of rapid social change. The book explores six aspects of the highly complex notion of Christian identity, namely Christian institutions, a Christian ethos, Christian rituals, Christian experiences (with specific reference to the notion of ?faith?), Christian narratives (with specific reference to the category of ?revelation? and the place of the Bible in the Christian tradition) and Christian doctrine.
The Myriad Christ
Title | The Myriad Christ PDF eBook |
Author | Terrence Merrigan |
Publisher | Peeters Publishers |
Pages | 636 |
Release | 2000 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | 9789042909007 |
"Papers gathered here are the fruit of an international congress held at the Faculty of Theology of the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, 18-21 November, 1997."--Pref.