New Book – World Christianity in History and in Culture

“Woven together like finely crafted fabric, world Christianity, history, and culture are always tightly interlaced. Historians realise that all Christians exist in a dynamic web of cultural and historical factors. There is a constant and perpetual interplay between Christianity, history, and culture that illuminates everything else around. This Special Issue of Religions probes the vast and colourful varieties of Christianity, from the apostolic era to today, with a preference for “lived religion.” This Special Issue looks at the often-tumultuous relationship between Christianity and various global cultures. The geographical regions in this Special Issue encompass various locales in India, China, Ethiopia, Germany, and Southeast Asia.”

Please follow the link below to download:

https://www.mdpi.com/books/reprint/9683-world-christianity-in-history-and-in-culture

Or download directly below:

New Book Released – Early South-South Links in the History of World Christianity (16th – Early 19th Century)

Reviewed by Mark Shaw

An important new book in World Christianity studies is Early South-South Links in the History of World Christianity (16th – Early 19th Century), edited by Klaus Karschorke and others . The numerous case study make the point that world Christianity as we know it today with the famous shift from north to south also had south to south links that helped to bring about the new explosion of the faith.  This is one of the first books to help document that important dimension of world Christianity studies.  Among the outstanding case studies, the case of Kongo by John Thornton sets the tone and theme for the whole book. In Thornton’s words, 

“The Kingdom of Kongo is well known as the only solidly established indigenous kingdom in Western Africa to accept Christianity as its national religion. It is also distinguished by having self-evangelized, that is that it developed much of its Christianity through the efforts of its own elite, with assistance, to be sure from outsiders, mostly missionaries. It was also known for its incredibly destructive descent into civil war, which the most violent part of which continued for nearly two centuries and fed the slave trade to the Americas. These slaves carried their home Christianity with them into the New World. As Catholics they blended easily into the colonies of Catholic Europe, but there is evidence that they also played a role in evangelizing non-Christian slaves in their new environment, both in Brazil and in St Domingue. They also did evangelization in Protestant countries. This second range of activities, difficult to determine, (though with evidence from the Protestant Virgin Islands) may have helped to shape the Christianity that developed throughout African descendants in the Americas.”

This book is recommended for students of world Christianity. It can be downloaded as open access at this link: https://www.harrassowitz-verlag.de/ddo/artikel/86985/978-3-447-12224-5_Kostenloser%20Open%20Access-Download.pdf

Hear From Alumnus About Their Experiences – CWC-AIU/NESGT

In this video, you will hear our alumnus from all over the world about their experiences at the CWC-AIU and their dissertation topics. The experiences shared are valuable sources of information for our current PhD students in their writing process.

Introducing our new CWC Administrator brother Fabrice Katembo

Dear All,

May greetings.  I am writing to let you all know that Fabrice Katembo, currently in the Ph.D. program at CWC is our new administrator.  Fabrice is known to most of you.  He is from DRC but is currently based in Uganda training pastors at Shepherd Training College in Luwero district two hours north of Kampala.  He is a graduate of AIU, receiving both his B.Th. (2018) and MA in biblical studies (2020) there. 

In 2020 he published his first book, “The Mystery of the Church” (Hippobooks). His main areas of responsibility will be updating our CWC blog, helping to plan the August and January residencies each year, and keeping in touch with each of you to make sure good communication is flowing and needs are being met.  His area of research is in migration looking at the role of the Miracle Center in Kampala in helping Congolese refugees adjust to their new surroundings. He is a beloved brother who cares for others and will be a great help in the work of CWC.

He will be reaching out to each of you in the weeks ahead to hear more about your work and where you are on the pathway toward completion.  Please lift him up in your prayers and give him your enthusiastic support.

The Nature of World Christianity

World Christianity is now becoming an accepted term in scholarship. It is increasingly being seen as a field of study and not only a subject because of, as this short article suggests, the worldwide nature of the Christian faith. The history of Christianity explains why this is the case.

Since the inception of Christianity, the Middle East and North Africa (Syria, Turkey, Egypt, and Tunisia) have been, for some centuries, the great centers and examples of Christianity. These places produced theological development, scholarship, Christian devotion, martyrs, and witnesses that shaped Christianity from its birth. However, over time, they became the most conflicted and least prosperous of Christian fields.

At other times in history, for a long time, Christianity became associated particularly with Europe, so that Europeans began to think of themselves as Christians on the map, the Christian territorial line, the Christian part of the world, even when there were Christian communities outside, such as in Ethiopia, the USA, South India, and Central Asia, of which Europeans knew little or nothing.

In many ways, the twentieth century is significant because it marked the shift of the Christian faith from being a religion specific to Europe and people of European descent to a truly global phenomenon where the majority of adherents were Africans, Asians, Latin Americans, and Pacific Islanders, and Europeans became less and less significant. That points to a fresh period in Christian history. It suggests a new chapter in church history.

Future of World Christianity

The future trajectory of Christianity remains unknown to scholars studying the global religion. Whether we are living in the final days of the church or the early era is a mystery to all of us, but one thing is certain: new things are happening all over the world.

Christian studies must become more cognizant of Christian centers outside of the West and more reflective of this global phenomenon. In terms of followers, Christianity is primarily a non-Western religion today. This must have a significant effect on theology and, by extension, how we approach the study of history of Christianity.

The study of Christianity has wider implications for the church itself because of theological issues that arise out of the actual lives of actual Christians. This is not something that you work out in the library. It’s something that requires thorough research. For instance, how do we, as Christians, respond to situations that are culturally determined? Furthermore, it stands to reason that in the church, tropical Africa, Brazil, and China have hugely become important contributors to any future chapter of the history of Christianity. These are going to introduce new theological issues and questions that require Christian answers.

The Nature of World Christianity

Christianity began with church fathers, who had to deal with problems arising from the Hellenistic world, from the Greek tradition of thought and from circumstances arising from Roman law. This was a period of great importance and influence for the theology of creative thinking that could potentially occur anywhere in the world today.

The Christian community is no longer centered on a particular location. Around the world, spiritual energy is bubbling over; all kinds of innovative activities are happening. Initiatives for missions can begin and end anywhere. Maintaining this is a significant burden if you work in the academic sector. All these factors become important if your business is the study, practice, or propagation of Christianity.

In the book of Revelation, the prophet tells us that the Christian faith leads to a city that has twelve gates with three in each direction: north, south, east, and west. And all the treasures of all the nations are brought on roads leading into that city. The same prophet gives us the vision of the great multitude whom none can number out of every tried nation and kindred who are singing the traces of the Lamb. While the exact course of world Christianity remains uncertain, the prophecy described in Revelation will mark the pinnacle of world Christianity.

World Christianity is now becoming an accepted term in scholarship. It is increasingly being seen as a field of study and not only a subject because of, as this short article suggests, the worldwide nature of the Christian faith. The history of Christianity explains why this is the case.

Since the inception of Christianity, the Middle East and North Africa (Syria, Turkey, Egypt, and Tunisia) have been, for some centuries, the great centers and examples of Christianity. These places produced theological development, scholarship, Christian devotion, martyrs, and witnesses that shaped Christianity from its birth. However, over time, they became the most conflicted and least prosperous of Christian fields.

At other times in history, for a long time, Christianity became associated particularly with Europe, so that Europeans began to think of themselves as Christians on the map, the Christian territorial line, the Christian part of the world, even when there were Christian communities outside, such as in Ethiopia, the USA, South India, and Central Asia, of which Europeans knew little or nothing.

In many ways, the twentieth century is significant because it marked the shift of the Christian faith from being a religion specific to Europe and people of European descent to a truly global phenomenon where the majority of adherents were Africans, Asians, Latin Americans, and Pacific Islanders, and Europeans became less and less significant. That points to a fresh period in Christian history. It suggests a new chapter in church history.

Future of World Christianity

The future trajectory of Christianity remains unknown to scholars studying the global religion. Whether we are living in the final days of the church or the early era is a mystery to all of us, but one thing is certain: new things are happening all over the world.

Christian studies must become more cognizant of Christian centers outside of the West and more reflective of this global phenomenon. In terms of followers, Christianity is primarily a non-Western religion today. This must have a significant effect on theology and, by extension, how we approach the study of history of Christianity.

The study of Christianity has wider implications for the church itself because of theological issues that arise out of the actual lives of actual Christians. This is not something that you work out in the library. It’s something that requires thorough research. For instance, how do we, as Christians, respond to situations that are culturally determined? Furthermore, it stands to reason that in the church, tropical Africa, Brazil, and China have hugely become important contributors to any future chapter of the history of Christianity. These are going to introduce new theological issues and questions that require Christian answers.

The Nature of World Christianity

Christianity began with church fathers, who had to deal with problems arising from the Hellenistic world, from the Greek tradition of thought and from circumstances arising from Roman law. This was a period of great importance and influence for the theology of creative thinking that could potentially occur anywhere in the world today.

The Christian community is no longer centered on a particular location. Around the world, spiritual energy is bubbling over; all kinds of innovative activities are happening. Initiatives for missions can begin and end anywhere. Maintaining this is a significant burden if you work in the academic sector. All these factors become important if your business is the study, practice, or propagation of Christianity.

In the book of Revelation, the prophet tells us that the Christian faith leads to a city that has twelve gates with three in each direction: north, south, east, and west. And all the treasures of all the nations are brought on roads leading into that city. The same prophet gives us the vision of the great multitude whom none can number out of every tried nation and kindred who are singing the traces of the Lamb. While the exact course of world Christianity remains uncertain, the prophecy described in Revelation will mark the pinnacle of world Christianity.