African Christianity: A Living and Vibrant Repository of Christian Faith – Part II

Auteurs

  • Johny Thachuparamban The Jesuit Institut South Africa

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.25247/2595-3788.2019.v2n1.p118-139

Mots-clés :

African Jesus. African worldview. Contextual Theologies. Dancing Church. Jesus as Proto-Ancestor. Small Christian Communities. Ujamaa and Ubuntu. Zairian Rite.

Résumé

Africa has played a remarkable role in the formation and growth of Christian faith and culture, right from its infancy. The ancient nature of African Christianity has been substantiated in the first part of this article which tries to establish African Christianity as one of the pillars of faith in Christendom; a fact corroborated by its unique indigenous spiritual symbols, its traditional proverbs that resonate with Christian wisdom literature, and above all its liturgical innovations and vibrancy both in ancient times and post Vatican Council II. Hence the themes discussed are: African Jesus as an ‘Ancestor par excellence’; African liturgical heritage; the Church as Family of God; African proverbs, and African contribution to world Christianity. All this lends a particular stamp of identity and character to African Christianity, not as a replica of Western or Eastern Christianity, but as a unique and equal tradition, a contemporary repository of Christianity. 

  

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Biographie de l'auteur

  • Johny Thachuparamban, The Jesuit Institut South Africa
    Johny Thachuparamban is a member of the CMI religious congregation. He has a Masters degree in Science with maths as major (MSc) from Kerala, India, and a Licentiate (STL) and Doctorate (STD) in biblical studies from KU Leuven, Belgium. He has served in the Kenya mission, at first, as Associate Pastor at Mbiuni Catholic Mission, Machakos, Kenya, and after his theological studies in Belgium as Professor at Hekima Jesuit University College, and later also as part time lecturer at Tangaza University College, Nairobi, Kenya. Besides this, he serves as visiting Professor of New Testament at St Charles Luwanga Diocesan Seminary, Windhoek, Namibia. His doctoral thesis on Matthean studies was published with the title Jesus and the Law in the Matthean Community: A Source - and Redaction - Critical Study of Mt 5, 38-48, Delhi, 2011. He has published articles in reputed journals. At present he is the Regional Superior of the CMI St Thomas Region, East Africa.

Références

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Publiée

2019-06-26

Comment citer

THACHUPARAMBAN, Johny. African Christianity: A Living and Vibrant Repository of Christian Faith – Part II. Fronteiras - Revista de Teologia da Unicap, Recife, PE, Brasil, v. 2, n. 1, p. 118–139, 2019. DOI: 10.25247/2595-3788.2019.v2n1.p118-139. Disponível em: https://www1.unicap.br/ojs/index.php/fronteiras/article/view/1415.. Acesso em: 22 nov. 2024.

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