African Theologies of Identity and Community: The Contributions of John Mbiti, Jesse Mugambi, Vincent Mulago, and Kwame Bediako

This article examines four theologies of identity and community from Africa and their relevance in combating ethnocentrism in Africa. The article focuses on the works of Vincent Mulago, John S. Mbiti, Kwame Bediako, and J. N. K. Mugambi - the key proponents of the schools of thought that we examine....

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Main Authors: Tarus David Kirwa, Lowery Stephanie
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2017-01-01
Series:Open Theology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/opth-2017-0024
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spelling doaj-a72d67cdf19c4b44a0d0b6fd8bc2d0882021-10-02T19:16:03ZengDe GruyterOpen Theology2300-65792017-01-013130532010.1515/opth-2017-0024opth-2017-0024African Theologies of Identity and Community: The Contributions of John Mbiti, Jesse Mugambi, Vincent Mulago, and Kwame BediakoTarus David Kirwa0Lowery Stephanie1McMaster Divinity College, Systematic Theology Department, Ontario, CanadaScott Christian University, Machakos, KenyaThis article examines four theologies of identity and community from Africa and their relevance in combating ethnocentrism in Africa. The article focuses on the works of Vincent Mulago, John S. Mbiti, Kwame Bediako, and J. N. K. Mugambi - the key proponents of the schools of thought that we examine. The themes of identity and community have practical implications. For example, a people’s perception of themselves and their communities (social identity) affects how they perceive and relate to others. Therefore, considering the challenge of ethnocentrism worldwide, the themes of identity and community must always be examined. This article has two major sections. Foremost, it explores the relationship of these concepts. Second, it examines and critiques African theologies of identity and community and their consequent theological implications for social cohesion of communities. Finally, it proposes a way forward utilizing contributions from each theologian.https://doi.org/10.1515/opth-2017-0024african theologyidentitycommunityethnicityreconstructionliberation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tarus David Kirwa
Lowery Stephanie
spellingShingle Tarus David Kirwa
Lowery Stephanie
African Theologies of Identity and Community: The Contributions of John Mbiti, Jesse Mugambi, Vincent Mulago, and Kwame Bediako
Open Theology
african theology
identity
community
ethnicity
reconstruction
liberation
author_facet Tarus David Kirwa
Lowery Stephanie
author_sort Tarus David Kirwa
title African Theologies of Identity and Community: The Contributions of John Mbiti, Jesse Mugambi, Vincent Mulago, and Kwame Bediako
title_short African Theologies of Identity and Community: The Contributions of John Mbiti, Jesse Mugambi, Vincent Mulago, and Kwame Bediako
title_full African Theologies of Identity and Community: The Contributions of John Mbiti, Jesse Mugambi, Vincent Mulago, and Kwame Bediako
title_fullStr African Theologies of Identity and Community: The Contributions of John Mbiti, Jesse Mugambi, Vincent Mulago, and Kwame Bediako
title_full_unstemmed African Theologies of Identity and Community: The Contributions of John Mbiti, Jesse Mugambi, Vincent Mulago, and Kwame Bediako
title_sort african theologies of identity and community: the contributions of john mbiti, jesse mugambi, vincent mulago, and kwame bediako
publisher De Gruyter
series Open Theology
issn 2300-6579
publishDate 2017-01-01
description This article examines four theologies of identity and community from Africa and their relevance in combating ethnocentrism in Africa. The article focuses on the works of Vincent Mulago, John S. Mbiti, Kwame Bediako, and J. N. K. Mugambi - the key proponents of the schools of thought that we examine. The themes of identity and community have practical implications. For example, a people’s perception of themselves and their communities (social identity) affects how they perceive and relate to others. Therefore, considering the challenge of ethnocentrism worldwide, the themes of identity and community must always be examined. This article has two major sections. Foremost, it explores the relationship of these concepts. Second, it examines and critiques African theologies of identity and community and their consequent theological implications for social cohesion of communities. Finally, it proposes a way forward utilizing contributions from each theologian.
topic african theology
identity
community
ethnicity
reconstruction
liberation
url https://doi.org/10.1515/opth-2017-0024
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