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How Africa Shaped the Christian Mind – Rediscovering the African Seedbed of Western Christianity - Thomas C. Oden

How Africa Shaped the Christian Mind – Rediscovering the African Seedbed of Western Christianity

(Autor)

Buch | Softcover
204 Seiten
2010
Inter-Varsity Press,US (Verlag)
978-0-8308-3705-2 (ISBN)
CHF 38,90 inkl. MwSt
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.
Africa has played a decisive role in the formation of Christian culture from its infancy. Some of the most decisive intellectual achievements of Christianity were explored and understood in Africa before they were in Europe.
If this is so, why is Christianity so often perceived in Africa as a Western colonial import? How can Christians in Northern and sub-Saharan Africa, indeed how can Christians throughout the world, rediscover and learn from this ancient heritage?
Theologian Thomas C. Oden offers a portrait that challenges prevailing notions of the intellectual development of Christianity from its early roots to its modern expressions. The pattern, he suggests, is not from north to south from Europe to Africa, but the other way around. He then makes an impassioned plea to uncover the hard data and study in depth the vital role that early African Christians played in developing the modern university, maturing Christian exegesis of Scripture, shaping early Christian dogma, modeling conciliar patterns of ecumenical decision-making, stimulating early monasticism, developing Neoplatonism, and refining rhetorical and dialectical skills.
He calls for a wide-ranging research project to fill out the picture he sketches. It will require, he says, a generation of disciplined investigation, combining intensive language study with a risk-taking commitment to uncover the truth in potentially unreceptive environments. Oden envisions a dedicated consortium of scholars linked by computer technology and a common commitment that will seek to shape not only the scholar's understanding but the ordinary African Christian's self-perception.

Thomas C. Oden (Ph.D., Yale University) is the director of the Center for Early African Christianity and formerly Henry Anson Buttz Professor of Theology at The Theological School of Drew University in Madison, New Jersey. He is general editor of the Ancient Christian Commentary on Scripture and the Ancient Christian Doctrine series on the Nicene Creed. He is the author of numerous theological works, including a three-volume systematic theology.

Introduction


Toward a Half Billion African Christians

An Epic Story

Out of Africa

The Pivotal Place of Africa on the Ancient Map

Two Rivers: The Nile and the Medjerda--Seedbed of Early Christian Thought

Affirming Oral and Written Traditions

Self-Effacement and the Recovery of Dignity

The Missing Link: The Early African Written Intellectual Tradition Forgotten

Why Africa Has Seemed to the West to Lack Intellectual History

Interlude



Part One: The African Seedbed of Western Christianity


1 A Forgotten Story


Who Can Tell It?

Pilgrimage Sites Neglected

Under Sands: The Burial of Ancient Christian Texts and Basilicas

2 Seven Ways Africa Shaped the Christian Mind


How the Western Idea of a University Was Born in the Crucible of Africa

How Christian Exegesis of Scripture First Matured in Africa

How African Sources Shaped Early Christian Dogma

How Early Ecumenical Decision Making Followed African Conciliar Patterns

How the African Desert Gave Birth to Worldwide Monasticism

How Christian Neoplatonism Emerged in Africa

How Rhetorical and Dialectical Skills Were Honed in Africa for Europe's Use

Interlude: Harnack?s Folly

Overview

3 Defining Africa


Establishing the Indigenous Depth of Early African Christianity

The Stereotyping of Hellenism as Non-African

Scientific Inquiry into the Ethnicity of Early African Christian Writers

The Purveyors of Myopia

The African Seedbed Hypothesis Requires Textual Demonstration

A Case in Point: The Circuitous Path from Africa to Ireland to Europe and Then Back to Africa

A Caveat Against Afrocentric Exaggeration

4 One Faith, Two Africas


The Hazards of Bridge Building

The Challenge of Reconciliation of Black Africa and North Africa

The Roots of the Term Africa

Overcoming the Ingrained Lack of Awareness

Excommunicating the North

Arguing for African Unity

Defining "Early African Christianity" as a Descriptive Category of a Period of History

How African Is the Nile Valley?

5 Temptations


Tilted Historical Predispositions

The Catholic Limits of Afrocentrism

Ignoring African Sources

The Cost of the Forgetfulness

Overlooking African Voices in Scripture

How Protestants Can Celebrate the Apostolic Charisma of the Copts

The Christian Ancestry of Africa



Part Two: African Orthodox Recovery


6 The Opportunity for Retrieval


Surviving Modernity

The Steadiness of African Orthodoxy

The New African Ecumenism

Pruning Undisciplined Excesses

Burning Away the Acids of Moral Relativism

Orthodoxy: Global and African

Historic Christian Multiculturalism

Reframing Modern Ecumenics Within Classic Ecumenics

7 How the Blood of African Martyrs Became the Seed of European Christianity


Whether Classic Christian Teaching Is Defined by Power

How the History of African Martyrdom Shaped Christian Views of Universal History

Recalling the Exodus as an African Event

Amassing the Evidence

The Challenge of Young Africa

8 Right Remembering


Remembering the Scripture Rightly Through the Spirit

The Heart of African Orthodoxy

Transcending Material Worldliness

Avoiding Racial Definitions of Apostolic Truth

9 Seeking the Reconciliation of Christianity and Islam Through Historical Insight


The Risks Scholars Take

Empathizing With Sub-Saharan Suspicions of the North

Conjointly Studying the History of Islam and Christianity

The Rigorous Language Requirements of African Research

Learning from Primary Sources

A Personal Challenge



Appendix: The Challenges of Early African Research


Three Aims of Future Research

The Precedent

The Scope

The African Center of the International Consortium

The Consortium of Scholars

Assembling the Pieces of the Puzzle

Academic Leadership

Maximizing Digital Technologies

Publishing Outcomes

Conclusion



Literary Chronology of Christianity in Africa in the First Millennium


Bibliography

Erscheint lt. Verlag 1.9.2010
Verlagsort Illinois
Sprache englisch
Maße 140 x 210 mm
Gewicht 268 g
Themenwelt Sonstiges Geschenkbücher
Geschichte Teilgebiete der Geschichte Religionsgeschichte
Religion / Theologie Christentum Kirchengeschichte
ISBN-10 0-8308-3705-1 / 0830837051
ISBN-13 978-0-8308-3705-2 / 9780830837052
Zustand Neuware
Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR)
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