A HISTORY OF THE CHURCH IN AFRICA
Date
2004-04-15
Authors
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Journal ISSN
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Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Abstract
`A bitter pill which the majority of writers on Christianity and missionary
activities in Africa should swallow is that they have not been writing African
Church History.'1 This statement by Professors J. F. Ade Ajayi and E. A.
Ayandele must serve as an introductory remark to our Church history of
Africa. The two Nigerian scholars developed their point by claiming that
hitherto Church history had been written `as if the Christian Church were in
Africa, but not of Africa'.2 It stressed the missionary presence while forgetting
or neglecting whatever there was of an African initiative, an African
dimension of African Church history. The sort of book which my Nigerian
colleagues may have had in mind was not least the detailed and lengthy
Mission histories, produced in the pre-Independence period and stamped by
this fact. Of necessity this implied a view centred in some Western metropolis
and in certain mission societies there. This view of Christianization was to
treat it as a Western invasion in sub-Saharan Africa. The continent was
mapped out according to mission societies and mission ®elds.
