The Associated Press
What were the key religious developments around the turn of the third millennium Anno Domini?
Beyond daily headlines, the most important one is probably the ongoing, inexorable shift of Christianity’s population and dynamism away from the West and toward a markedly different style in developing nations of the "Global South."
Gordon-Conwell seminary’s Center for the Study of Global Christianity says 62 percent of the world’s 2 billion Christians live in Africa, Asia and Latin America, a percentage that’s destined to rise.
Africa’s Christian boom since 1900 “may well be the largest shift in religious affiliation that has ever occurred, anywhere,” says Penn State historian Philip Jenkins.
He first examined such trends in “The Next Christendom: The Coming of Global Christianity.” Oxford University Press, which continues a distinguished record in religious publishing, plans an update of that 2002 title plus a Jenkins tome pondering Christianity’s plight in Europe.
Meanwhile, Jenkins pursues the scenario in “The New Faces of Christianity: Believing the Bible in the Global South” (also Oxford), which skirts Latin America to focus on Africa and Asia.
He starts from the Anglican Communion’s severe split, pitting biblical conservatives across the Global South against America’s Episcopal Church, which allows same-sex blessing ceremonies, gay clergy and an openly gay bishop.
Compared with Westerners, Jenkins observes, younger churches demonstrate “much greater respect for the authority of Scripture, especially in matters of morality; ... a special interest in supernatural elements of Scripture, such as miracles, visions and healings; a belief in the continuing power of prophecy; and a veneration of the Old Testament.”
He calls their strict adherence to biblical teachings traditionalism, not fundamentalism, and says it underlies both spiritual deliverance and political liberation, which in the Global South are fused.
Exorcisms, belief in the devil and “spiritual warfare” against demonic powers thrive in situations where paganism, witchcraft, omens and even allegations of human sacrifice persist, and Christian alternatives help overcome people’s fearfulness.
Scripture’s rural culture of herding, farming and fishing seems more familiar in the Global South than in the West.
More important, Jenkins says, “the Bible speaks to everyday, real-world issues of poverty and debt, famine and urban crisis, racial and gender oppression, state brutality and persecution” and situations where pestilence and extreme poverty promote “awareness of the transience of life.”
Meanwhile, Western Christians must address “an age of doubt and secularism” where many are lured by ancient spiritual writings the early church deemed spurious and barred from the Bible.
While Westerners face pressure to interpret the Bible in terms of secular trends, in the Global South secular ideologies “appear false and destructive,” representing corruption, sin and death. Churches’ moral conservatism is also influenced by Islam and other non-Christian faiths.
Worship
AP: Christianity experiencing global shift
- Worship
-
-
Cowboy church offers non-traditional Bible camp
Vacation Bible school gets under way in full force at Joplin area churches next month, but one congregation offers an alternative. How about Horsemanship and Bible camp?
-
David Yount: Christians still await return of Jesus
Unlike ourselves, the earliest Christians lived in imminent expectation of the consummation of history, when Jesus would return to usher in the kingdom of God. They thought heaven was right around the corner. This expectation explains their fervor.
-
Craig Tally: Today’s idols not as visible, still strong
The early nation of Israel existed in a time when people of differing tribes worshiped multiple gods. They fashioned idols to portray these gods, their features and their powers.
-
Four camps scheduled in Joplin to help children deal with tornado experience
Nearly one year later, emotional scars remain from the disastrous Joplin tornado, and children are no exception.
-
Doctors in danger: Joplin author recalls growing up on the mission field
The year was 1937. Mao Tse-tung and his soldiers were marching north as part of the Communist takeover of China, and nothing would stand in their way -- the least of whom would be 7-year-old Garland Bare, his missionary parents or the three other Bare children.
-
Terry Mattingly: Tension builds between women, Vatican
Truth is, tensions have been building for decades between the LCWR leadership and Vatican leaders. Thus, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith missive stressed that its call for reform was built on a lengthy study of materials created by “a particular conference of major superiors and therefore does not intend to offer judgment on the faith and life of Women Religious in the member congregations.”
- Church briefs (May 12 on)
-
Craig Tally: Parenting ideal for understanding idolatry
It is generally believed that idolatry is wrong because of its connection to polytheism. However, the matter of having more than one god is the subject of the First Commandment, which clearly states that we are to have no other gods.
-
Nazarenes build three homes for tornado-stricken families
The latest effort, spearheaded by the Joplin District Church of the Nazarene in Carthage, which has jurisdiction over 77 congregations in Southwest Missouri and Southeast Kansas, has come in the form of three new Joplin homes.
-
David Yount: Bible’s length daunts many
The Bible can be a source of strength for young and old alike. But the challenge every reader of the Bible encounters at the outset is that it is formidable in length -- my copy runs to 1,862 pages of tiny type -- and, to all appearances, lacks a coherent plot.
- More Worship Headlines
-
Cowboy church offers non-traditional Bible camp



