One African Postcolonial Theology: The Imperative to Differ
Posted by: Graeme
A lecture by Dr Kenzo Mabiala () at the Amahoro Gathering in
The church in
In a world that is increasingly becoming a global village, there are not only the obvious changes (like communications, travel, products, etc), but also that we are changing our view of the world. This is as important and profound a change as the shift to the modern era from the middle ages.
Around the world, this is often referred to as postmodernism. In
Knowledge is never innocent. It is a play between two forces: power and control.
The first generation of African scholars saw the colonial problem, and the solution was to regress to pre-colonial, pre-Christian, pre-Islamic
The challenge going forward is to integrate all aspects of who we are now (e.g. Congolese, Christian, technologically advanced individual), rather than denying any one of these aspects of who we are.
Why am I attracted to postmodernism, emerging thinking and postcolonialism? Because they are asking the right questions.
Identity is created, not inherited. In Christ, we can be recreated.
When we study theology, we must realise that every theology is a contextual theology – yes, even Calvin and Luther.
Postmodernity is incredulity towards meta narratives. Every story is told around a plot, and that story is not innocent.
Those (like
Comments
No comments yet. You can be the first!
