Deep Inculturation
Traditionally, inculturation has referred to a strategy employed by Western missionaries to evangelize non-Christian cultures. But what does this look like from the other side, from the perspective of indigenous cultures of the Global South and immigrant-heritage cultures in the interstices of dominant cultures? Deep Inculturation features original essays by seven leading global theologians with a focus on what this inculturation looks like in particular contexts: Africa, Mexico, Japan, Australia, and Indonesia.
Contributors: Agbonkhianmeghe E. Orobator, SJ; Marzanna Poplawska, PhD; Ăngel F. MĂ©ndez Montoya, PhD; Carmel Pilcher, RSJ, PhD; Ferdinand Okorie, CMF, PhD; and Christopher D. Tirres, PhD
Original: $41.18
-70%$41.18
$12.35
Description
Traditionally, inculturation has referred to a strategy employed by Western missionaries to evangelize non-Christian cultures. But what does this look like from the other side, from the perspective of indigenous cultures of the Global South and immigrant-heritage cultures in the interstices of dominant cultures? Deep Inculturation features original essays by seven leading global theologians with a focus on what this inculturation looks like in particular contexts: Africa, Mexico, Japan, Australia, and Indonesia.
Contributors: Agbonkhianmeghe E. Orobator, SJ; Marzanna Poplawska, PhD; Ăngel F. MĂ©ndez Montoya, PhD; Carmel Pilcher, RSJ, PhD; Ferdinand Okorie, CMF, PhD; and Christopher D. Tirres, PhD










