2011
DOI: 10.1111/j.1749-8171.2011.00292.x
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Keswick and the East African Revival: An Historiographical Reappraisal

Jason Bruner

Abstract: The history of the East African Revival has been understood predominantly from the perspective of British missionaries who were associated with the movement in the 1930s and 1940s. The most enduring of these narratives defined the revival by its relation to the English Keswick‐influenced evangelicalism of the Western missionaries associated with the revival. This bias can be observed not only in the basic narrative of the revival, but also in the missionaries’ definition of ‘revival’, which served to exclude f… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Keswick had a profound influence on missionaries to East Africa, particularly Joe Church a medical missionary to Rwanda (Barringer, 2010; Bruner, 2011; Peterson, 2014). While it is easy to attribute the East Africa Revival to the Keswick movement, it is important to understand the centrality of African agency in the movement.…”
Section: Tukutendereza: Reviving Historic Mission Churches 1940smentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Keswick had a profound influence on missionaries to East Africa, particularly Joe Church a medical missionary to Rwanda (Barringer, 2010; Bruner, 2011; Peterson, 2014). While it is easy to attribute the East Africa Revival to the Keswick movement, it is important to understand the centrality of African agency in the movement.…”
Section: Tukutendereza: Reviving Historic Mission Churches 1940smentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It has been suggested that those who initially joined the Anglican Church lacked true commitment, failed to adhere to the faith's precepts, and were, in essence, engaged in the nominal practice of Christianity (Bruner, 2011;Ndyabahika, 1993;Ward, 1989). The Uganda Revival Movement, known as the Balokole ("the redeemed" or "the saved people") was part of the East African Revival (Ndyabahika, 1993) that sought to address the existence of widespread corruption and lack of morality (Ssemugoma, 2021).…”
Section: Evangelicalism and Fundamentalism In Ugandamentioning
confidence: 99%