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Diaspora Factor in Christian Expansion: Progressive, Serial or Parallel

Autor: Sam George
Datum: 24.09.2010
Category: Diaspora

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With the exception of the first century, the twentieth century may be the most extraordinary century in the history of Christianity. At the beginning of the twentieth century more than four-fifth of the professing Christians lived in Europe and North America, while by the end of the century more than three-fifth of the Christians live in Africa, Asia and Latin America. At the beginning of the century, almost all missionaries came from the Western world, while at the beginning of the twenty-first century nearly half of missionary force comes from the non-Western world. This led many mission scholars to believe that center of Christian world has shifted from the northern hemisphere to the southern.

Over the last century, Christianity has become more global than ever before and more than all other religions. Its spread and growth has been explosive and unmatched with any era in history. But not everything has been steady and triumphant. Historians like Kenneth Scott Latourette pointed out that there have been periods of advancement and periods of recession. Places like that were once nerve-center of Christianity has been obliterated completely (e.g. Jerusalem and Asia Minor). Regions where Christianity once thrived have been wiped out entirely in few decades or centuries (e.g. Yemen and North Africa ). Churches have been converted to museums, night clubs and mosques (e.g. Turkey and England). The brightest examples of devotion and scholarship have been snuffed out without any trace of its existence (e.g. Syria and North Africa). There are no signs of germination from places where much blood has been shed by Christian martyrs! (e.g. Iraq and China).

Professor Andrew Walls has suggested a helpful way to understand the history of Christian expansion when he stated that ‘the spread of Christianity has not been progressive, but serial.’[1] In mapping the world religions, Prof. Walls sees a distinctive pattern:

The history of the great religions of the world displays different types of expansion. In India religious expansion has been unifocal, absorbing and reformulating influences from many quarters but maintaining one geographical focus for its great religious activity. Iranian religion has been catalytic, profoundly influencing other religious traditions but leaving only small communities to embody its own. Islamic expansion has been progressive, steadily spreading out from its original center (which retains a cosmic significance), claiming the allegiance of the whole world and, with few exceptions, maintaining the gains it has made. By contrast, Christian expansion has been serial. It has not maintained a single cultural or geographical center; it has always retained a substantial separate identity; it recedes as well as advances, declines or dies out in the areas of its greatest strength and reappears, often transformed, in totally different areas of quite distinct culture. Christian history is a series of cross-cultural movements, which result in a succession of different Christian "heartlands" as the geographical and cultural center of Christianity has changed. Changing patterns of world order are thus integrally linked to religious history.[2]

Stichwörter: Christian expansion, migration, diaspora, religion, faith, global christianity, world christianity

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