The Explosion Of Christianity In Africa

gl151_smIn the twen­ti­eth cen­tu­ry, Christianity in Africa explod­ed from an esti­mat­ed pop­u­la­tion of eight or nine mil­lion in 1900 (8 to 9%) to some 335 mil­lion in 2000 (45%), mark­ing a shift in the “cen­ter of grav­i­ty of Christianity” from the West to Latin America, parts of Asia and Africa. We thank the Overseas Ministries Study Center (OMSC) for the infor­ma­tion and mate­r­i­al used in this issue. Statistical infor­ma­tion pro­vid­ed by David Barrett.

At the turn of the 20th cen­tu­ry, Christianity was vir­tu­al­ly nonex­is­tent in many parts of Africa but is now the faith of the major­i­ty, as the fol­low­ing fig­ures demonstrate:

Congo-Zaïre
Angola
Swaziland
Zambia
Kenya
Malawi
% Christians in 1900
1.4%
0.6%
1.0%
0.3%
0.2%
1.8%
% Christians in 2000
95.4%
94.1%
86.9%
82.4%
79.3%
76.8%

Other African coun­tries with a sig­nif­i­cant Christian pop­u­la­tion are:

Seychelles 96.9%
Saint Helena 96.2%
Sao Tomé & Principe 95.8%
Cape Verde Islands 95.1%
Namibia 92.3%
Burundi 91.7%
Congo-Brazzaville 91.2%
Lesotho 91%
Gabon 90.6%
Uganda 88.7%
South Africa 83.1%
Rwanda 82.7%
Spanish North Africa 80.3%
Equatorial Guinea 76.6%
Central African Republic 67.8%
Zimbabwe 67.5%
Botswana 59.9%
Cameroon 54.2%
Ethiopia 57.7%
Ghana 55.4%
Eritrea 50.5%
Tanzania 50.4%
Madagascar 49.5%
Nigeria 45.9%
Togo 42.6%

The African Story: Amazing Growth, Unthinkable Persecution
In the 20th cen­tu­ry alone, there have been some 1.8 mil­lion Christian mar­tyrs in Africa. This fig­ure does not take into account the esti­mat­ed 600,000 Christians who have died in the geno­ci­dal con­flicts in Rwanda and Burundi, nor does it ful­ly account for the more than two mil­lion deaths in the 17 years of Sudanese civ­il war waged by the mil­i­tant Islamist gov­ern­ment on the pre­dom­i­nant­ly Christian pop­u­la­tion of the south.

The Dictionary of African Christian Biography
The spread of the faith in Africa rep­re­sents per­haps the most dra­mat­ic advance in all Christian his­to­ry, and yet the names and sto­ries of per­sons chiefly respon­si­ble are large­ly unknown. The Dictionary of African Christian Biography (DACB), spon­sored by the Overseas Ministries Study Center in New Haven, Connecticut, is an effort to rec­ti­fy this by gath­er­ing sto­ries of the founders and builders of the African church and offer­ing them free over the inter­net. We con­sid­er this a most sig­nif­i­cant project, and Christian History Institute was eager to help. So last year we assist­ed in the advance of The Dictionary of African Christian Biography. We urge you to vis­it their web­site and make use of the mate­ri­als: www​.dacb​.org.

An Historical Overview by Michèle Sigg of DACB

The Christian Church has been con­tin­u­ous­ly present on the African con­ti­nent since the days of Christ. While the his­to­ry of African Christianity is mul­ti­fac­eted in its region­al devel­op­ment, it is, nev­er­the­less, pos­si­ble to dis­cern four gen­er­al phas­es in the plant­i­ng and matur­ing of the African Church.

Part 1: The Genesis of the Church The Ancient Church in Egypt and Ethiopia
During the first three cen­turies after Christ, Africa was a major cen­ter of Christian thought and activ­i­ty. Origen was from Alexandria in Egypt, while Tertullian and Augustine were from North Africa. By the end of the third cen­tu­ry, Christians in the east­ern Magrib were in the major­i­ty. Sadly, Christianity in much of North Africa vir­tu­al­ly dis­ap­peared as Islam advanced in the fol­low­ing cen­turies. In Egypt and in Ethiopia, how­ev­er, it had tak­en deep root, and was thus able to sur­vive the Islamic jug­ger­naut and con­tin­ues to this day.

Part 2: The Continuation of the Sub-Saharan Church The European Contribution
While the Portuguese intro­duced a Catholic form of Christianity to the Kongo Kingdom (cen­tral Africa) between the six­teenth and eigh­teenth cen­turies, there were few, if any, last­ing results. Only at the end of the eigh­teenth cen­tu­ry did the Evangelical Revival begin to bring to Africa an influx of mis­sion­ar­ies whose labors would pro­duce the first fruits of an endur­ing Christian pres­ence in Sub-Sahara Africa.
With Western civ­i­liza­tion came not only the good inten­tions of Christianity, how­ev­er, but also the appalling­ly dev­as­tat­ing transat­lantic slave trade and the inevitable excess­es of com­mer­cial greed man­i­fest in the white for­eign­ers’ insa­tiable appetite for Africa’s nat­ur­al resources. Before authen­tic Christianity could sink its roots deep into African soil, these evils had to be fought.

Two great British cham­pi­ons from the nine­teenth cen­tu­ry were Thomas Fowell Buxton and Henry Venn, nei­ther of whom ever set foot on African soil. While Buxton sought to ful­ly erad­i­cate the slave trade by encour­ag­ing local com­mer­cial and agri­cul­tur­al ini­tia­tives in its place, Venn is respon­si­ble for lay­ing down the prin­ci­ples of the “indige­nous church” where­by the nascent African church began to come of age.

Part 3: Passing the Mantle The First African Leadership
For the next two hun­dred years, African Christians had to strug­gle against racism and Western spir­i­tu­al impe­ri­al­ism. But, as Venn had writ­ten, if the African church were to mature and estab­lish itself, mis­sion­ar­ies had to move on once the seed was sown, leav­ing indige­nous lead­ers to build the church. Samuel Ajayi Crowther was the first African to be appoint­ed bish­op by the Anglican Church. He is the sub­ject of our next issue.

Part 4: “Pentecost” The African Church Seeks Its Own Language
The seeds of the Sub-Saharan church had been plant­ed by Western mis­sion­ar­ies. Now, as the Gospel spread through­out the nooks and cran­nies of the con­ti­nent, African Christianity began to define itself on its own cul­tur­al terms. Reformers with­in the mis­sion­ary church­es as well as inde­pen­dent church lead­ers called for change in the insti­tu­tion­al­ized church. This led to both reform, on the one hand, and to the birth of thou­sands of “African Initiated Churches” (AICs) on the other.
See more here :The Explosion of Christianity in Africa

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