2021
DOI: 10.33750/ijhi.v4i2.134
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Africanization of Christianity: Henry Venn’s indigenization of Christianity

Abstract: The history of Christianity has always been a two-way process of transformation in any given culture. Christianity and paganism are reciprocal; Christianity is necessary for revelation to be fulfilled, but the actual quality of this fulfillment depends upon the quality of the religious man transformed by revelation. Christianity, as a result of this, needs a natural religion, the same way it needs all human realities as the sole mission is to save what has first been created. The link between Gospel and cultur… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…A respondent justified this belief by referring to the year 1957 that had been named "Bilemorengire" 1 whose meaning manifested in the social movement towards political independence in then Tanganyika. On religious grounds the year predicted the era of the Africanization of the church (Ekpenyong & Okoi 2021). The argument above gives a writer an avenue for looking into the political climate prevailing at that time.…”
Section: Translatedmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A respondent justified this belief by referring to the year 1957 that had been named "Bilemorengire" 1 whose meaning manifested in the social movement towards political independence in then Tanganyika. On religious grounds the year predicted the era of the Africanization of the church (Ekpenyong & Okoi 2021). The argument above gives a writer an avenue for looking into the political climate prevailing at that time.…”
Section: Translatedmentioning
confidence: 99%