Indigenous People and the Christian Faith: A New Way Forward
William H. U. Anderson, Charles Muskego (Eds.)
by Daniel Nii Aboagye Aryeh (Perez University College in Winneba, Ghana), Eric Bates Eric Bates (Northern Kentucky University), Rocio Riestra-Camacho , Catherine Caufield , Clara Allejo Cotareloarelo , Paula Guerra (University of Porto, Portugal ), Vinod John (Taylor Seminary and College), Terry LeBlanc (North American Institute for Indigenous Theological Studies (NAIITS)), Stephen W. Martin (The King’s University in Edmonton), Noelia Suarez Montoto , Martin Nord , Matthew Oliver , Fidelis ‘Deji Olokunboro , Alba Suarez Rodriguez , Tobias Schuckert (International University for Applied Science in Liebenzell, Germany), Jonathan Strand (Concordia University of Edmonton in Alberta)
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This book marks a new day where the past is present but, rather than colonizing the future and holding us captives of the common and distinct pain of victim and perpetrator, opens us to a restored life of communion and regard at the heart of the mystery of meeting each other again, and, perhaps, meeting face to face for the first time. It is not enough to remember. We must remember well: the graced movement of the mind and heart born of confession, repair, and restoration, that opens the grave of death calling forth a new resurrection.
David J. Goa
Founding Director, Chester Running Centre for the Study of Religion and Public Life, Univesity of Alberta
Indigenous People and the Christian Faith: A New Way Forward provides detailed historical, cultural and theological background and analysis to a very delicate and pressing subject facing many people around the world. The book is “glocal”: both local and global, as represented by international scholars. Every continent is represented by both Indigenous and non-indigenous people who desire to make a difference with the delicate problematics and relationships. The history of Indigenous people around the world is inextricably linked with Christianity and Colonialism. The book is completely interdisciplinary by employing historians, literary critics, biblical scholars and theologians, sociologists, philosophers and ordained engineers. The Literary Intent of the book, without presuming nor claiming too much for itself, is to provide practical thinking that will help all people move past the pain and dysfunction of the past, toward mutual understanding, communication, and practical actions in the present and future.
List of Tables
Acknowledgment
List of Contributors
Introduction
William H U Anderson
Chapter 1 Quantum Physics, Worldviews and Theology: A New Way Forward in Reconciliation?
Matthew Oliver
Chapter 2 “In the Beginning All the World Was America”: Creation, Eucharist, and the Colonial Reconstruction of Christianity in the Seventeenth Century
Stephen W. Martin
Chapter 3 Indigenous People and the Oblates in Alberta: A Model of a New Way Forward
Catherine Caufield
Chapter 4 Animism and Contemporary Philosophy of Mind: Indigenous People and the Christian Faith
Jonathan Strand
Chapter 5 Culture, Interaction and Ritual: A Sociological Approach to the Xucuru-Kariri Indigenous People of Brazil
Paula Guerra
Chapter 6 Postcolonial Considerations of Endo’s Silence and Indigeneity
Tobias Schuckert
Chapter 7 The Glocal Perspective of Achebe’s Things Fall Apart: A Tool for a New Way Forward with Indigenous People?
Rocío Riestra-Camacho, Noelia Suarez Montoto,
Alba Suarez Rodríguez and Clara Vallejo Cotarelo
Chapter 8 The Response of African Indigenous People to the Christian Faith in Ghana between 1471 and 2010
Daniel Nii Aboagye Aryeh
Chapter 9 Indigenizing Effect on Christianity from Missionary Work: The Socio-Religious Identity of Hindu Christians and Transcontextualization
Vinod John
Chapter 10 African Folk Christianity: A Case of Reformed African Traditional Religion with Creedal Ambiguity or a Valid African Christianity?
Fidelis ‘Deji Olokunboro
Chapter 11 Piety in the American Plains: The Politics of Identity and Pentecostalism on the Blackfeet Indian Reservation
Eric Bates
Chapter 12 I-Thou Ideals in Documents and Loving Relationships: The United Church of Canada’s Reconciliation Efforts
Martin Nord
Chapter 13 Toward an Indigenous Eschatology: Caution, Circle Ahead
Terry LeBlanc
Bibliography
Index
Dr. William H. U. Anderson did his Ph.D. in Biblical Studies and Theology in Postmodern Literary Critical Circles at the University of Glasgow in Scotland. He is Professor of Religious Studies and the Director of the Canadian Centre for Scholarship and the Christian Faith at Concordia University of Edmonton in Alberta, Canada. He has worked interdisciplinarily throughout his academic career and hosts an annual conference on a different topic every year. This book represents the proceedings of the 2018 conference on “Indigenous People and the Christian Faith: A New Way Forward”. He supervised his Indigenous student Charles Muskego’s M.A. thesis entitled Asserting Postcolonial Identities: Cross-Textual Readings of Ezra-Nehemiah and Indigeneity in Canada.
Charles Muskego holds a B.A. and M.A. from Concordia University of Edmonton. He worked for five years with Indigenous Relations in the Government of Alberta and is currently the Communications Director for Cold Lake First Nations in Alberta Canada. He is a member of the Board for Concordia University of Edmonton where he advises on Indigenous matters and has a close relationship with the university’s Indigenous Knowledge and Research Centre.
Subjects
Sociology
Series
Series in Philosophy of Religion
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Bibliographic Information
Book Title
Indigenous People and the Christian Faith: A New Way Forward
ISBN
978-1-62273-881-6
Edition
1st
Number of pages
300