Time, History and Hope
Social Memory as a Paradigm for an Emerging African Theology:The Case of Kenya
LAP Lambert Academic Publishing
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Zusatztext
By a critical study of the ritual role and function of the concepts of time, history and messianic social hopes in the Kenyan context, we suggest the key elements on which the emerging African theology is to be understood and predicated upon.Ritual events are the occasions through which the power and meaning of time, history and social hopes are made present and celebrated. Two dominant civic ritual days in Kenyas social memory, Kenyatta and Jamhuri are taken to explicate the above.Kenyatta Day as a commemoration for the Kenyan African resistance against British colonialism is explicated in the light of the biblical Passover. The peak of this resistance was the Mau Mau movement which was supported by the African Independent Church, while the missionary churches were in sympathy with the colonial government. Similarly, Jamhuri Day celebrates the coming of Uhuru (Freedom), while anticipating the social-economic salvation through the Harambee movement. Jamhuri day celebrations compares with the Eucharist which prefigures Eschatological hopes.In conclusion we propose a working paradigm of Harambee Liberatory Community of Hope which is informed by ethics and not dogma.
Autorenportrait
The Reverend Dr Jonathan Gichaara is a Methodist minister who hails from Kenya, currently serving the British Methodist Church. Alongside church ministry, Jonathan is a Honorary Research Fellow of Queen's Foundation, Birmingham. He was previously a World Church Tutor at the Urban Theology Union, Sheffield and Senior Lecturer of Kenyatta University
Weitere Details
Erschienen: 14.04.2020
Umfang: 324 S.
Sprache: ENG
Einband: KT
Format: 2.1 x 22 x 15 cm
ISBN/EAN: 9786202523103
Umbreit-Nr.: 9034029
