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  • Broschiertes Buch

Conversion as a Social Process presents a detailed and multi-facetted account of the genesis of an African mission church in Southern Zambia. Its main theme is the transformation of European missionary Christianity into an important medium for Africans to negotiate creatively the challenges of the modern world. The first part of this case study scrutinizes the contextual conditions, and the consequences, of the translation process of the European missionary message into the forms of African culture and modes of thought. The second part analyses the developments of post-colonial and…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Conversion as a Social Process presents a detailed and multi-facetted account of the genesis of an African mission church in Southern Zambia. Its main theme is the transformation of European missionary Christianity into an important medium for Africans to negotiate creatively the challenges of the modern world. The first part of this case study scrutinizes the contextual conditions, and the consequences, of the translation process of the European missionary message into the forms of African culture and modes of thought. The second part analyses the developments of post-colonial and post-missionary African Christianity in a rural setting. It argues that Christian ethics and world view offer new means of self-identification in a complex world. Drawing on local oral sources, archival material and ethnographic literature the book represents a new genre of intercultural Church history.
Autorenporträt
Ulrich Luig, born 1945 in Berlin (Germany), studied Protestant theology at Berlin and received a Ph.D. in missiology and religious science from Humboldt University at Berlin. He worked in a rural development project with the Gossner Mission and as a UCZ pastor at the Gwembe Valley/Zambia from 1987 until 1990. After his return from Zambia he worked as a lecturer in missiology and religious science at Humboldt University and as a chaplain at Mainz University thereafter.