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Journal of Anglican Studies, Vol. 6, No. 1, 17-30 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/1740355308091383
© 2008 SAGE Publications and The Journal of Anglican Studies Trust

National Anglican Identity Formation: An African Perspective

Michael O. Fape

michaelfape{at}yahoo.co.uk

Africa played a prominent role in the formation of earliest Christianity not least in the persons of Cyprian of Carthage and Augustine of Hippo. The Anglican heritage is considered through the experience of the Yoruba people in south-west Nigeria through whom christian faith came to the rest of Nigeria. The Anglicanism which came to the Yoruba was evangelical through the Church Missionary Society, though a key role was played by liberated slaves from Sierra Leone. Contexts in which the gospel is proclaimed and the way it is expressed may change, yet the contents of the gospel do not. A contextualized curriculum thus includes key courses such as biblical studies and systematic theology. It also includes contextual subjects such as African traditional religions and Islam and Christianity. The Church of Nigeria has thus undertaken a thorough review of the curriculum to adequately represent this kind of contextualized theology.

Key Words: Nigeria • Anglican identity • theological education • Yoruba • contextualization


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