World Christianity and Interfaith Relations
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In this landmark volume, a rich array of voices make the case that religion is not partitioned off from the secular in the Global South the way it is in the Global North. Authors work at the intersections of freedom and Nationalism, peace and reconciliation, and gender, ecology, and ethnography to contend that religion is in fact deeply integrated into the lives of those in the Global South, even though "secularism"--a political philosophy that requires the state to treat all religions equally--predominates in many of the regions.
World Christianity and Interfaith Relations is part of the multi volume series World Christianity and Public Religion. The series seeks to become a platform for intercultural and intergenerational dialogue, and to facilitate opportunities for interaction between scholars across the Global South and those in other parts of the world by engaging emerging voices from a variety of indigenous Christianities around the world. The focus is not only on particular histories and practices, but also on their theological articulations and impact on the broader societies in which they work.
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World Christianity and Interfaith Relations - Fortress Press
Praise for World Christianity and Interfaith Relations
It is becoming very difficult to figure out our world today. When it comes to Christianity and its almost infinite compositions and multifaceted forms of existences, we feel at loss. World Christianity and Interfaith Relations is a remarkable resource to help us get into those muddy waters. With voices from different parts of the world, this book engages vivid themes of our time such as nationalism, intolerance, race, gender, ecology, forms of resistance, religious dialogues, ecumenical efforts, and more. This book shows us how much we need to pause, learn, and change our views. It is indeed rich material for anyone who wants to understand the complexities of the Christian faiths across the globe.
—Cláudio Carvalhaes, associate professor of worship, Union Theological Seminary, New York City
In Asia, Africa, and Latin America, Christianity is recklessly entangled with matters relating to justice, poverty, race and ethnicity, nationalism, ecological destruction, and encounters with other religious traditions. Courageously and competently, the authors immerse themselves in what too often have been the ‘touch-me-not’ issues of those fixated on church growth. Representing wide-ranging disciplinary perspectives and cultural experiences, these scholars make highly original and indispensable contributions to the study of World Christianity. At a time when livelihoods are threatened by toxic nationalism, climate change, land displacement, and interreligious conflict, the rigorous engagement presented in this volume couldn’t be timelier.
—Chandra Mallampalli, Fletcher Jones Chair of Social Sciences and Professor of History, Westmont College, Santa Barbara, California
Volume 4 of this ground-breaking series delivers a rich selection of multi-layered narratives and interpretations of interfaith realities within and beyond indigenous Christian communities in Myanmar, India, Canada, Brazil, Uganda, Nigeria, and Southern Africa. Interrogating the entanglements of religion and nationalism, race, gender, ecology, privilege, decolonization, violence, caste, spatiality, and theological normativity, this volume uniquely offers emic and etic perspectives of Christians and religious others. A nuanced, thought-provoking, and vital contribution to the field of World Christianity!
—Thomas John Hastings, executive director, OMSC at Princeton Theological Seminary, and editor, International Bulletin of Mission Research (SAGE)
"In World Christianity and Interfaith Relations, Richard Fox Young has put together an excellent collection of essays from scholars representing an array of perspectives on World Christianity. Various regions of Asia, Latin America, and Africa receive attention in this book as categorized within provocative sub-themes. This illustrates how World Christianity is embedded within some of the most topical aspects concerning human existence today, both as a contributing factor to some of our most serious challenges but also, potentially, as crucial to their resolution. This is a great contribution on the wider series theme of World Christianity as a public religion."
—Retief Müller, VID Specialized University, Stavanger, Norway
In one volume, readers will find is a broad-based survey of the contemporary interface between Christian communities and other faith traditions across the globe. Writing from disparate perspectives and using tools from various disciplines, the authors critically and carefully analyze a wide range of issues, in particular interfaith and ecumenical relationships. A much-needed resource! I highly recommend it to scholars and students seeking to understand and appreciate World Christianity.
—James Taneti, assistant professor of World Christianity, Union Presbyterian Seminary, Richmond, Virginia
"This book is a splendid achievement: it illustrates how Christians, as members of the world community, constantly relate to their contemporaries belonging to living religions and ideologies. This relationality is especially true for Asian, African, and Latin American Christians in the Global South. They understand and interpret their Christianity in relation to their non-Christian neighbors. Fourteen essayists of this volume capture the views of these Christians, as they engage with their neighbors on the ground. Their Christianity reflects their living contexts, experiences, challenges, and aspirations for themselves and their neighbors. Therefore, a healthy study of World Christianity necessarily considers interfaith relations and religious experiences.
"This volume contains four focal points and approaches them from multidisciplinary and transnational perspectives. Firstly, four essayists representing India, Myanmar, and Brazil discuss the impact of contemporary notions and practices of religious freedom, religious intolerance, and resurgent nationalism on fellow Christians, who often constitute minorities. Secondly, three Brazilian authors examine the place and role of gender and ecology in ethnographic imagination. Thirdly, an American and two Nigerian authors articulate the indispensable need for peace and reconciliation initiatives in troubled and peaceful times. Finally, two Indian theologians, a Ghanian theologian, and a South African theologian, who had their early education in the Global South, but live and work in the Global North, reflect on the North-South and South-North relationship of Christianity both in the Global South and the Global North.
I warmly recommend this book to all scholars and students who engage with studies in World Christianity, Theology, World Religions, Indigenous religions, philosophy, and the social sciences.
—P. Daniel Jeyaraj, professor of world Christianity and director of Andrew F. Walls Centre for the Study of African and Asian Christianity, Liverpool Hope University, England
World Christianity and Public Religion Series, Vol. 4
Series Editor: Raimundo C. Barreto
World Christianity and Interfaith Relations
World Christianity and Public Religion Series, Vol. 4
Series Editor: Raimundo C. Barreto
World Christianity and Interfaith Relations
Richard F. Young
Editor
Fortress Press
Minneapolis
WORLD CHRISTIANITY AND INTERFAITH RELATIONS
Copyright © 2022 Fortress Press, an imprint of 1517 Media. All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical articles or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publisher. Email [email protected] or write to Permissions, Fortress Press, PO Box 1209, Minneapolis, MN 55440-1209.
All Scripture quotations, unless otherwise indicated, are taken from the Holy Bible, New International Version®, NIV®. Copyright ©1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.™ Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved worldwide. www.zondervan.com The NIV
and New International Version
are trademarks registered in the United States Patent and Trademark Office by Biblica, Inc.™
Scripture quotations marked (KJV) are from the King James Version.
Cover image: A close-up of multiple candles in a vigil by Tammy616 | iStock photo
Cover design: Kristin Miller (series design by Alisha Lofgren)
Print ISBN: 978-1-5064-4849-7
eBook ISBN: 978-1-5064-4850-3
While the author and 1517 Media have confirmed that all references to website addresses (URLs) were accurate at the time of writing, URLs may have expired or changed since the manuscript was prepared.
Contents
The World Christianity and Public Religion Series
Raimundo C. Barreto, Series Editor
Acknowledgments
Contributors
Introduction
Richard Fox Young
I. Religious Freedom, Intolerance, and Resurgent Nationalism
1. Counteracting Resurgent Buddhist Nationalism and Fostering Interreligious Collaboration in Contemporary Burma
Pum Za Mang
2. Emerging Cooperation among Minorities in Defense of Indian Secularism since the Adoption of the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) under the BJP
David Emmanuel Singh
3. Religious Intolerance in Brazil: The Case of the Girl and the Stone
Babalawô Carlos Alberto Ivanir dos Santos
4. The Power of Rewriting History: Literature, Race, and Religion in Contemporary Brazil
Felipe Fanuel Xavier Rodrigues
II. Gender, Ecology, and Ethnographic Imagination
5. From the Amazon toward Women’s Bodies: The Influence of Conservative Religious Discourse in the Dismantling of Brazilian Social Policies
Elisa Rodrigues
6. From the Ruins of the End of the World: Necropolitics, Religion, and the Ecological Crisis in Brazil
Frederico Pieper
7. Between Teas and Prayers: Disobedient Narratives of Two Amazonian Root Herbalists in São Paulo
Sandra Duarte de Souza
III. Peace and Reconciliation Initiatives
8. Resisting the Lord’s Resistance Army: How Was Interfaith Peace Activism Possible in Northern Uganda?
David A. Hoekema
9. Jos Is the Epicenter of Christianity
: Ancestral Land Rights and the Despatializing of Identity in Jos North, Nigeria
Amidu Elabo
10. Bad Omen!
Naked Agency and Body Politics in Public Discourse and Contemporary World Christianity
Ruth Vida Amwe
IV. North-South/South-North and South-South Initiatives in Grassroots and Participatory Ecumenism
11. Embodying Transnational Christian-Muslim Solidarities in India and Canada
Sunder John Boopalan
12. No One Can Serve Christ and Caste
: Indian Ecumenical Initiatives to Combat Caste
Peniel Jesudason Rufus Rajkumar
13. Shifting Theological Boundaries: The Encounter between Western Christianity and African Cultures and Religions in Southern Africa
Henry Mbaya
14. A New Pentecost? The Story of Peoples in the History of the Global Christian Forum and Its Contribution to World Christianity
Casely Baiden Essamuah
Index
The World Christianity and Public Religion Series
During the latter half of the twentieth century, scholars began to pay closer attention to the polycentric and culturally diverse nature of Christianity worldwide. In particular, the rapid growth in the number of Christians living in the Global South caught the attention of Western scholars as a trend that would not be reversed in the near future.
A number of books have been written in an attempt to offer clues on how these drastic demographic changes are reshaping Christian identity and relations worldwide. Beyond the fascination with numbers, the rapid growth Global South Christianities and their respective diasporas have experienced in recent decades is giving birth to a new global Christian consciousness with profound cultural, social, and economic implications that demand further scholarly attention. World Christianity scholarship has demonstrated that Christianity can no longer be dismissed as a Western religion. We have stepped onto the threshold of a new era. New and creative theological insights have emerged, debunking a Eurocentric hegemonic understanding of Christianity that prevailed in the modern era. Contrary to some assumptions, conversion to Christianity in former Western colonies did not imply the westernization of converts. On the contrary, Indigenous cultures and spiritualities that were expected to disappear or be absorbed into the colonial civilizational project remain alive and well. In fact, the end of the twentieth century saw a revitalization of Indigenous traditions and spirituality. Such a resurfacing of Indigenous voices significantly contributed to renewed understandings of Christianity that are not at odds with traditional worldviews.
This series engages emerging voices from a variety of Indigenous Christianities around the world, focusing not only on particular histories and practices but also on their theological articulations and impact on the broader society. If in the modern/colonial world the study of Christianity was predominantly informed by Eurocentric perspectives and priorities, the study of world Christianity at the beginning of the twenty-first century is more representative of diverse contextual experiences, their interaction through the formation of multidirectional transnational networks, and the relationship between Christianity and other religions. Globalization and mass migration have contributed to deepened exchanges among peoples and cultures worldwide, creating a growing demand for making intercultural communication, intercultural theologies, and interfaith dialogue more central to the study of world Christianity. Likewise, questions about hybridity, liminality, border thinking, and cultural interweaving—particularly in the context of formerly colonized cultures—have also gained more attention.
While new tools have been added to the study of Christianity, particularly in response to the cultural turn in the social sciences, some long-existing problems nevertheless still linger and equally require attention. Scientific and technological progress has not mitigated existing injustices and economic asymmetries. Socioeconomic injustice remains as fiercely prevalent as when the first theologies of liberation emerged in the 1960s. As Indian theologian Felix Wilfred reminds us, the demographic shift of world Christianity is not simply a shift from the West to the South, but a shift of Christianity from the rich and middle classes to the poor.
According to him, more than half of all Christians in the world live with less than $500 of annual income.¹
In a context marked by disparity and scarcity, standing in solidarity with the poor remains a priority. Yet a concern with economic justice is not enough. Christians living in contexts marked by widespread poverty and injustice in different parts of the world are asking challenging and complex questions about the reasons for such inequality. The inhuman treatment many migrants, refugees, asylum seekers, and stateless persons receive when crossing borders, for instance, helps increase awareness of the indivisibility of justice, demanding renewed moral commitments and creative responses to problems that are amounting to a global calamity. Unjust relations based on race, gender, and sexuality, along with land-related disputes and environmental concerns, are part of the public agenda Christians are called to engage in, in both the Global North and the Global South. The growing awareness of the impact of the colonial hegemonic project upon minoritized groups—especially the eclipsed non-European Other—has produced new identity claims of previously silenced voices who are now more vocal about the epistemic injustice they have experienced. On the other hand, their regained visibility is often used to justify the growing fear of difference and a relentless sense of insecurity that are at the heart of multiple forms of nationalist and xenophobic ideologies. Such ideologies are quickly poisoning societies across the world, increasing the risk of violence against those who, perceived as different, are feared and discriminated against.
Considering all these things, public reasoning has become an increasingly important dimension of the study of world Christianity. After all, Christians worldwide are key actors in what scholars commonly refer to as the public sphere. Their public living and thinking are important sources for the interrogation of the impact of religion on public life vis-à-vis themes such as citizenship, public witness, peace, justice, environmental relations, and contemporary migration, among others.
This series, which stems from a partnership between Princeton Theological Seminary and Faculdade Unida de Vitoria (Brazil), aims to provide a unique space for sustained dialogue on all these matters. It blends a number of methods and approaches in the burgeoning field of world Christianity, placing them in conversation with other fields of study and disciplines, including public theology, postcolonial/decolonial theory, intercultural studies, migration studies, critical gender theory, critical race theory, queer theory, and globalization studies. The series intentionally gathers religious scholars and theologians representative of diverse Christian traditions and continents into conversation with one another. At its root are two schools related to the Reformed tradition, one located in South America and the other in North America—one that is young (having existed for a little more than two decades) and another with a tradition spanning over two hundred years.
In the first half of the twentieth century, Princeton Seminary appointed John A. Mackay as president after his tenure of almost two decades as a missionary in Latin America. That cross-cultural experience deeply influenced him and impacted his ecumenical thinking. By turning ecumenics into a field of study for the church in the twentieth century, Mackay, in many ways, anticipated the rise of the field we know today as world Christianity: A new reality has come to birth. For the first time in the life of mankind the Community of Christ, the Christian Church, can be found, albeit in nuclear form, in the remotest frontiers of human habitation. This community has thereby become ‘ecumenical’ in the primitive, geographical meaning of that term. History is thus confronted with a new fact.
²
Faculdade Unida de Vitoria, in turn, has a history marked by a commitment to the retrieval of a particular memory. Such memory is linked to theologians such as Richard Shaull and Rubem Alves. Shaull was a pioneer in encouraging young Latin American Christians such as Alves himself, Jovelino Ramos, João Dias de Araújo, Joaquim Beato, Beatriz Melano, and others to take their own social and cultural locations as their theological and social loci. In other words, he called them to do theology as Latin Americans. By doing that, he inadvertently contributed to the rise of Latin American liberation theology. Alves, who studied under Shaull at both the Presbyterian Seminary of Campinas and Princeton, wrote the first book-length treatise on liberation theology³ while living in the United States. He was one of the most creative thinkers of his day, having also contributed to other subfields such as theopoetics.
As an heir of these combined stories, this series is deeply rooted in a long tradition, which continues to be renewed to respond to the challenges and circumstances of a new era. It fosters a dialogue that places priority on voices from the Global South but also invites participants from the Global North to engage with their peers from the South.
Furthermore, the series is published in English and Portuguese. Its bilingual nature garners an inclusionary approach. The work of authors who originally wrote in Portuguese (some also in Spanish) and otherwise would not be available to a broader English readership are through this series brought to the attention of Anglophone scholars, seminarians, and religious leaders. Similarly, the work of authors who, despite being known in the English-speaking world, remain largely unknown in Latin America are through this series made available to Latin American scholars who can read Portuguese. Above all, this series shows that it is possible to advance transnational and transcultural scholarly dialogues without placing priority on one particular language as lingua franca.
The series has six volumes. The first one, published in Brazil in 2016 and in the United States in 2017, approaches world Christianity as a form of public religion, identifying areas for possible intercultural engagement. Each of the remaining five volumes focuses on specific topics deemed important for a public agenda for world Christianity scholarship in the twenty-first century. Volume 2, published in English in 2019, examines migration as an important concern in world Christianity’s public discourses. Volume 3 discusses current approaches to urbanization and identity in world Christianity. Volume 4 focuses on interfaith relations. Volume 5 presents a variety of perspectives on race, ethnicity, gender, and sexuality in world Christianity as part of a broader reflection on the evasion of justice. Finally, volume 6 brings attention to pressing environmental concerns in world Christianity scholarship, engaging with Global South and Global North theological responses to the imminent planetary crisis.
Finally, in the hope that this series becomes a platform for intercultural and intergenerational dialogue, the editors of all volumes have sought to increase the interaction between seasoned and emerging scholars from all parts of the world, creating a broad table that may contribute to and enlarge international, intercultural, and interdisciplinary conversations.
Raimundo C. Barreto
1 Felix Wilfred, Christianity between Decline and Resurgence,
in Christianity in Crisis?, ed. Jon Sobrino and Felix Wilfred, vol. 3, Concilium 2005 (London: SCM, 2005), 31.
2 John Alexander Mackay, Ecumenics: The Science of the Church Universal (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1964), vii.
3 Rubem Alves, Towards a Theology of Liberation: An Exploration of the Encounter between the Languages of Humanistic Messianism and Messianic Humanism
(PhD diss., Princeton Theological Seminary, 1968).
Acknowledgments
The gestation period before a book is born can, I suppose, be quite short. In my experience, however, books start slowly and take their time. That was the case this time, and the two years it took to bring this one out were interrupted by the global Covid-19 public health crisis. More than most books perhaps, a book like this must be true to its purpose and enlist a globally diverse spectrum of contributors who truly reflect the diversity of world Christianity. This was definitely not the easiest of times to sit at the keyboard, with life unsettled globally, but we (by which I mean the fourteen contributors to this volume) brought the baby to term and rejoice at its birth.
The midwives were plenty, but just a few can be mentioned here: the ones most immediately involved in conceiving of the project in the first place (that would be the general editor, Raimundo Barreto of Princeton Theological Seminary); our Fortress Press editor (the ever-helpful Jesudas Athyal); our Portuguese-English translator for several chapters by Brazilian friends (the versatile Monika Ottermann); our conscientious team of editorial assistants (Shalon Park, Guilherme Brasil de Souza, and Stephen DiTrolio, all Princeton doctoral candidates); our colleague in Brazil at the Faculdade Unida de Vitoria who will oversee the eventual publication of this volume in Portuguese (Professor Wanderley Pereira da Rosa, president of that institution); and, of course, Professor Jacqueline Lapsley, the academic dean here at Princeton Theological Seminary, who provides a generous subvention for the bilingual publication of the Fortress Press series on World Christianity and Public Religion. Without their help, always cheerfully rendered, the birthing process would not have been as easy.
As I sit to compose these words of thanks, I have just heard the sad news of the passing of Andrew F. Walls, a figure revered by all in the field of world Christianity, whom I had the joy of knowing as a colleague for the first few years of my tenure here on the faculty of Princeton Theological Seminary. Whatever I have done in the years since would not have been possible without his vision for the field, including the study of Global South religions as integral to studies in world Christianity. It seems only fitting that Andrew was on my mind and that I quoted him twice when I was writing the introduction to this volume the other day, shortly before the news broke. May his memory be a blessing.
A special word of thanks goes to my colleague Raimundo C. Barreto, already singled out for his birthing of the series as a whole. Raimundo also deserves credit for his unstinting encouragement during the production of the current volume and especially for his deep insights into world Christianity and ecumenics. Coming late to theological education and from a background in the history of religions, I have had much to learn from you, my friend!
Richard Fox Young
Princeton Theological Seminary
August 12, 2021
Contributors
Amidu Elabo earned his PhD in 2022 at Princeton Theological Seminary with a dissertation in religion and society. His research interests include religion, space, and place; critical spatial theories; data science; remote sensing; GIS and cartography; African Indigenous religions, Indigeneity, and land; material religion; African religions in the diaspora; African urbanism, postcoloniality; and the spatiality of African ethics.
Babalawô Carlos Alberto Ivanir dos Santos holds a PhD in comparative history from the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (PPGHC/UFRJ), where he also conducted postdoctoral research. A babalawô of the Ifá religion in Nigeria and a babalorixá of Candomblé in Brazil, he is the author of the book Marchar Não é Caminhar: Interfaces políticas e sociais das religiões de matriz africana no Rio de Janeiro (2020). He teaches comparative history at PPGHC/UFRJ and is also a research fellow and coordinator at UFRJ’s Laboratory of History of Religious Experiences (LHER/UFRJ). A widely respected human rights activist, he serves as public interlocutor and convener of the Walk in Defense of Religious Freedom and is the strategy adviser at the Center for Articulation of Marginalized Populations (CEAP).
Casely Baiden Essamuah, secretary, Global Christian Forum, is an ordained Methodist minister from Ghana. With degrees from the University of Ghana, Harvard, and Boston University, he has worked for two decades in global missions at evangelical churches in the United States. A reflective practitioner of his faith, he is a bicultural bridge builder, straddling the spheres of the Global South and North while working in missions, ecumenism, the church, and the academy. His publications include Genuinely Ghanaian: A History of the Methodist Church, Ghana, 1961–2000 (2010).
David A. Hoekema served as academic dean and professor of philosophy at Calvin University (Michigan, USA), following previous appointments at the University of Delaware and St. Olaf College. He directed Calvin’s Ghana study program four times and served as a Fulbright Teacher-Scholar in Kenya. In retirement, he divides his time between West Michigan and southern Arizona, where he is a visiting scholar in the Philosophy Department at the University of Arizona. His contribution to this volume draws on research conducted for his 2019 monograph We Are the Voice of the Grass
: Interfaith Peace Activism in Northern Ghana.
David Emmanuel Singh, PhD, is research tutor and PhD stage leader at the Oxford Centre for Mission Studies. His areas of interest are Sufism, Islam, and interfaith relations in South Asia. Dr. Singh is the author of numerous research articles, seven edited volumes, several encyclopedia entries, book chapters, and two research monographs: Sainthood and Revelatory Discourse: An Examination of the Basis for the Authority of Bayan in Mahdawi Islam (2003) and Islamization in Modern South Asia: Deobandi Reform and the Gujjar Response (2012).
Elisa Rodrigues is professor of the Department of Religious Studies at the Federal University of Juiz de Fora (Brazil). Her PhD in social sciences is from the Universidade Estadual de Campinas (Unicamp), and her PhD in religious studies is from the United Methodist University of São Paulo. Professor Rodrigues is chair of Religion and Education, dedicated to the study of the relationship between religion and education and the teaching of religion in Brazilian public schools. She researches topics related to religious studies (or, as it is called in Brazil, Science of Religion
), epistemology and education, Pentecostalism, religion in the public sphere, religion and politics, secularism, and religion-identity-culture.
Felipe Fanuel Xavier Rodrigues is an assistant professor of English at the Universidade Federal de Roraima (UFRR). He holds a PhD in comparative literature from the Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro (UERJ). During 2014–15, he was a Fulbright Visiting Scholar at Dartmouth College. Dr. Rodrigues was the 2016–17 FAPERJ Nota 10 Postdoctoral Fellow in Literature at UERJ. His work focuses on the intersections of race, gender, and religion in Anglophone and Lusophone Black literatures. He is an elected executive committee member of the Modern Language Association (MLA) Languages, Literatures, and Cultures Luso-Brazilian Forum (2022–27).
Frederico Pieper is professor of the Department of Religious Studies of Federal University of Juiz de Fora (Brazil). His PhD was earned in religious studies at the United Methodist University of São Paulo (UMESP) and his PhD in philosophy at the University of Sao Paulo (USP). Professor Pieper is chair of Theory of Religion for research on hermeneutics, phenomenology, and religion; epistemology of religious studies; and religion and film. He is the author of Religion and Film (2015) as well as numerous articles in specialized journals.
Henry Mbaya is an Anglican priest currently assisting in the Diocese of False Bay, Cape Town. He is associate professor in church history in the Faculty of Theology at the University of Stellenbosch. He is the author of The Making of an African Clergy in the Anglican Church in Malawi: 1898–1996 (2004) and Resistance to and Acquiescence in Apartheid: St. Paul’s Theological College, Grahamstown: 1965–92 (2018). His research focus is on the interface of colonial missions and African cultures in southern Africa.
Peniel Jesudason Rufus Rajkumar currently serves as Global Theologian
with United Society Partners in the Gospel (formerly known as Society for Propagation of the Gospel), the oldest Anglican mission agency. He is also on the staff of Ripon College, Cuddesdon, in the UK. Rev. Dr. Rajkumar was until recently program coordinator for interreligious dialogue and cooperation with the World Council of Churches and adjunct professor at the Ecumenical Institute at Bossey. He is also an Honorary Canon of Worcester Cathedral. His most recent publications include Faith(s) Seeking Understanding: Dialogue and Liberation (2021, as editor).
Pum Za Mang (MA, Princeton Theological Seminary; PhD, Luther Seminary) is associate professor of world Christianity at Myanmar Institute of Theology, Yangon. His articles have appeared in Asia Journal of Theology, Church History and Religious Culture, Dialog: A Journal of Theology, International Journal of Public Theology, Journal of Church and State, Review of Faith & International Affairs, and Studies in World Christianity. His special interests include religion, politics, and ethnicity in his native country of Burma.
Richard Fox Young holds the Timby Chair in the History of Religions at Princeton Theological Seminary (Princeton, New Jersey, USA). An Indologist by training with a PhD from the University of Pennsylvania, he works in mission studies, world Christianity, and contiguous areas. Resistant Hinduism (1981), The Bible Trembled (1995), and Vain Debates (1996) are several of his most widely cited monographs on the encounter of Hindus and Buddhists with Christian missions in South Asia. His research is diverse but usually revolves around theory and methodology for the study of conversion to and from Christianity.
Ruth Vida Amwe is a PhD candidate at Princeton Theological Seminary in the religion and society program. She is interested in the religious and social life of African women in precolonial, colonial, and postcolonial Africa within Africa and its diaspora. Her research traverses across African (Indigenous) religions; African precolonial, colonial, and postcolonial histories; world Christianity; and ethics, migration, and African diasporic studies.
Sandra Duarte de Souza, PhD, is professor of the graduate program in religion sciences of the Methodist University of São Paulo and coordinator of the Group of Studies on Gender and Religion—Mandrágora/Netmal. She currently develops research in the following areas: gender and religion, with an emphasis on the debate on violence against women; politics and religion, especially considering the Brazilian political scenario and the actions of Catholic and evangelical parliamentarians opposed to reproductive and sexual rights; and feminist theology, having as its starting point the decolonial feminist debate.
Sunder John Boopalan, assistant professor of biblical and theological studies at Canadian Mennonite University in Winnipeg, Canada, is the author of the book Memory, Grief, and Agency (2017). His most recent essay, Religious Amnesias, Mythologies, and Apolitical Affects in Racist Landscapes,
is freely available online on Religions. Boopalan serves on the steering committee of the Liberation Theologies Unit of the American Academy of Religion and is a columnist for The Blueprint, a digital publication that explores identity, society, culture, human rights, and freedom by centering marginalized voices with an emphasis on South Asia and its diaspora.
Introduction
Richard Fox Young
In the concluding paragraph of an essay at the conclusion of a major resource on world Christianity, Andrew Walls, a pioneering figure in this newly emergent field—a field barely half a century old in its current form and notable for its preferential focus on the Global South—wrote of its transformative potential for Christian scholarship in the Global North:
Perhaps the most striking single feature of Christianity today is the fact that the church now—more than ever before in its history—looks more like that great multitude whom none can number, drawn from all tribes and kindreds, people and tongues (Rev. 5:9; 7:9). Its diversity and history leads [sic] to a great variety of starting points for its theology and reflects varied bodies of experience. The study of Christian history and theology will increasingly need to operate from the position where most Christians are, and that will increasingly be the lands and islands of Africa, Asia, Latin America, and the Pacific. Shared reading of the Scriptures and shared theological reflection will be to the benefit of all, but the oxygen-starved Christianity of the West will have most to gain.¹
While the jury may be out on whether Christianity’s need of life support in the Global North is really so dire as Walls seems to say, world Christianity as a new and energetic field of study stands ready with a fresh supply of oxygen to invigorate theological reflection.
It will do this in ways that take into creative account the global reality of Christian faith as a polyform, polycentric, and polyglot phenomenon in a world of many religions that are also polyform, polycentric, and polyglot.
Accordingly, and in tandem with its predecessor volumes in the Fortress Press World Christianity and Public Religion series, this collection of essays prioritizes a diversity of scholarly voices, mainly from the Global South, who come from all continents and regions (except Oceania), from multiple ecclesiological traditions (except the Orthodox), and (in one case) from another faith altogether (Candomblé, an Afro-Brazilian religion). Some are confessional scholars, some are not; some are theologians whose concerns are normative, some are more at home in religious studies and other nonconfessional fields and disciplines; and some straddle both sides of the academic divide. Congruent with the epistemological orientation of world Christianity, most probably subscribe to some kind of perspectivalism and hold that if you only know Christianity in terms of your own location, you probably lack an appreciation of its variety and complexity; that if you seek to plumb the depths of Christianity in all of its locations simultaneously, the attempt is doomed to fail; and that if you ignore your own particular location, the endeavor could turn out to be empty of meaning.² Global North Christians who cultivate a predisposition of openness to the many ways Christians can be differently Christian in the Global South will hopefully experience in the pages ahead a fresh infusion of oxygen from the study of world Christianity.
To highlight an astute observation made by the general editor of this series, Raimundo Barreto, in the preface to volume 1, I extract here a kernel of the insight he offered there: "While in the past five centuries, Christianity’s most immediate surrounding environment was highly influenced by Western dominance and its priorities (like the long debate around secularization), world Christianity exists primarily in a context of religious pluralism, which necessarily puts it in relationship with other world religions. In fact, from its inception, Christianity has always been