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The Changing Face of Christianity
Africa, the West, and the World
Sanneh, Lamin Professor of History and D. Willis James Professor of World Christianity, Yale University
Carpenter, Joel A. Provost and Professor of History, Calvin College
Print publication date: 2005 (this edition)
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: October 2005
Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-517728-2
doi:10.1093/0195177282.003.0001
The Cultural Impetus of a World Religion
Lamin Sanneh
This essay provides the global context for the local studies that follow: the emergence of Christianity as a world religion, its rising prominence in the global south and east and its waning influence and adherence in the North Atlantic region. Sanneh highlights the cultural repositioning of African Christianity and Asian Christianity away from their old intellectual and political cradle in Europe. These new forms of “world Christianity” are expressed in more languages, cultural traditions and models of faith and practice than ever before, and they are engaged in a growing cultural conflict with European Christianity and its expressions in North America. This interdisciplinary study shows that expounding the story of world Christianity requires new combinations of scholarly skills and experience.
Keywords: African Christianity, Asian Christianity, European Christianity, cultural conflict, interdisciplinary, world Christianity, world religion,
doi:10.1093/0195177282.003.0001
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Part I Christianity as a Non-Western Religion
Part II Reflex Impact