Bible and Theology in Africa
The 20th century made sub-Saharan Africa a Christian continent. This formidable church growth is reflected in a wide range of attempts at contextualizing Christian theology and biblical interpretation in Africa. At a grassroots level ordinary Christians express their faith and read the Bible in ways reflecting their daily situation; at an academic level, theologians and biblical scholars relate the historical traditions and sources of Christianity to the socio- and religio-cultural context of Africa. In response to this, the series Bible and Theology in Africa aims at making African theology and biblical interpretation its subject as well as object, as the concerns of African theologians and biblical interpreters will be voiced and critically analyzed. Both Africans and Western authors are encourgared to consider this series.
Titles
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Kony as Moses
Old Testament Texts and Motifs in the Early Years of the Lord’s Resistance Army, UgandaVolume 31©2021 Monographs 216 Pages -
A Maasai Encounter with the Bible
Nomadic Lifestyle as a Hermeneutic QuestionVolume 30©2020 Monographs 238 Pages -
Maasai Women and the Old Testament
Towards an Emancipatory ReadingVolume 29©2020 Monographs 238 Pages -
The Bible and Sociological Contours
Some African Perspectives. Festschrift for Professor Halvor MoxnesVolume 26©2018 Monographs 146 Pages -
Generational Curses in the Pentateuch
An American and Maasai Intercultural AnalysisVolume 24©2017 Monographs 312 Pages -
To Whom Belongs the Land?
Leviticus 25 in an African Liberationist ReadingVolume 23©2018 Monographs 304 Pages -
Paul’s Sexual and Marital Ethics in 1 Corinthians 7
An African-Cameroonian PerspectiveVolume 22©2015 Monographs 315 Pages