Thursday, March 03, 2011

the rise of "anti-western" christianity

BrusselsJournal | Occidental Christians assume that Christianity is Western. After all, “Europe is the faith”, asserted Hillaire Belloc. Although by birth a Middle Eastern religion, Christianity, at least as Westerners know it, soon became a European religion in the sense that it melded with various forms of European paganism. Christianity, the story runs, cannot exist in a vacuum. It conforms to the various cultures with which it comes in contact. In its European manifestation (after syncretization with Celtic, Germanic, Greek and Roman paganism), Western Christianity became the religious expression we know today. Comfortable with pagan-Christian holidays like Christmas and Easter, most Westerners could not conceive of Christianity any other way. (By “Westerner” is meant a European or someone of the European Diaspora.)

Yet Jenkins maintains this is not the entire picture. The idea of “Western Christianity,” he maintains, “distorts the true pattern of the religion’s development over time”. First, even during medieval Europe (which is heralded as the epitome of European Christendom), many Christians lived outside Europe and practiced other forms of Christianity. To the Armenian or Ethiopian Christian, European Christianity would have seemed odd. Furthermore, in more recent times, the missionary work of modern Europe has laid the foundation for a new type of Christianity that is different from anything that preceded it.

If “Europe is the faith” for Western Christianity, then, Jenkins maintains, “Africa is the faith” for the coming Christianity. In 1900, Europe possessed two-thirds of the world’s Christians. By 2025, that number will fall below 20%, with most Christians living in what Jenkins calls the “Global South”, largely a proxy term for “Third World”. The Global South could be thought of as slightly modified Gondwanaland, including Africa, Latin America, Philippines, southeast Asia/India, etc. This Global South, not the West, will be the new heart of Christendom.

The statistics are compelling. By 2025, nearly 75% of the world’s Catholics will be non-Western (mostly African and mestizo). At present, Nigeria has the world’s largest Catholic theological school. Our Lady of Peace in Yamoussoukro may be the world’s largest Catholic church. India has more Christians than most Western nations. By 2050, more than 80% of Catholics in the U.S. will be of non-Western (often mestizo) origins. By 2050, only a small fraction of Anglicans will be English or of the European Diaspora. Nigeria, not England, is the new heart of Anglican Christianity. Lutherans, Presbyterians and other mainstream denominations find their chief centres of growth in Africa, Asia and Latin America. Then there are the ever-growing Pentecostal and other indigenous Christian churches. Pentecostals have made tremendous inroads in Latin America, and churches like the Zion Christian Church have grown tremendously in South Africa. The Zion Christian Church attracts over a million pilgrims every Easter (more than greet the Pope in St. Peter’s Square on Easter mornings).

But this is not simply a matter of static (European) Christianity being implemented by people of other races. Christianity itself is radically changing. The New Christendom is “no mirror image of the Old. It is a truly new and developing entity”. Jenkins writes:
“As Christianity moves South, it is in some ways returning to its roots. To use the intriguing description offered by Ghanaian scholar Kwame Bediako, what we are now witnessing is ‘the renewal of a non-Western religion.’”
As once Europeans appropriated Christian iconography as their own, so does the New Christianity in Latin America, where images are filtered through the lens of mestizo identity. The Catholic Church has proclaimed the Virgin of Guadalupe as the patron of all the Americas. Probably the result of syncretization with the Aztec goddess Tonantzin, the Guadalupe Virgin, the dark one (La Morena) as she is called, looks like the local Americanian and mestizo populations, not like Europeans. Likewise, images of the Cuban La Caridad show her “appearing to rescue black and mestizo sailors”. In Equador, the Virgin of El Quinche is popular “because her skin color is that of the local mestizos”. “Ethnically as much as spiritually,” these non-European Virgins are their Virgins.

5 comments:

nanakwame said...

Africans are notoriously religious
John Mbiti

The number of “Christians’ in the African continent has grown from 8,756,000 in 1900 to 382,816,000 in 2004, with projected growth by 2025 of 640,460,000 professing Christians. That would make the Christian Church in African the largest of the six continents.
African Traditional Religion in biblical perspective
By Richard J. Gehman 2005

ATR should be studied for its own sake
ATR is the religious background of African peoples whom Christians seek to evangelise today
Many professing Christians rely on ATR in times of crisis (Mbiti ‘religious concubinage’)

Uglyblackjohn said...

Nana - Are these African Christians Eastern Orthodox?
The EO Christians in Egypt are ancient - but what about in the south?

umbrarchist said...

But what about ENOCH?

Genesis says God took him and he walked with God. So where is the Ethiopian Bible with the Books of Enoch? Forget those European pseudo-Christians.

LOL

nanakwame said...

Uglyblackjohn:

No they are western Christians Evangelizes who have been organizing in Africa; the point is that they are recognizing that you aren’t changing Africans (the mother and the father) simply by ostracizing their traditional practices or beliefs, and that Angels and Spirits are not separate beliefs just cultural manifestations, yet; they are bringing some serious dogma. We shall see how Africans shape this. I believe the next Pope will come from Africa. I believe the consciousness motion today will point to the perennial wisdom of all truly spiritual practices of humanity and see religious institutions as just that institution. This is what he states, it is actually on google books, OT

Culture is ‘a total plan for living’, ‘a way of life of a particular social group’ that is learned from infancy and is integrated into a ‘functionally organized system’..A worldview brings order to all the experiences of life by explaining these experiences; it brings comfort and security to people...Culture also includes ‘patterns of learned behaviour’

Angels are ‘ministering spirits sent to serve those who will inherit salvation’ (Heb 1:14) The Law was given by mediation of angels on Mt. Sinai (Acts 7:38); angles announced the birth of the Lord Jesus (Mt 1:20) Richard J. Gehman

Uglyblackjohn said...

Oriental Orthodox?
Oh Okay... thanks.

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