January 30, 2008

Ask Anything Wednesday: Evangelizing Muslims

Welcome to Ask Anything Wednesday. This week I am answering another great question. Please keep them rolling in! Just submit your question--on anything!--in the comments section below and I'll consider responding to it in our weekly feature.

Question:
What is the best way to help a Muslim to consider the claim of Christ?

Answer:
Quite simply, the best way to help a Muslim consider Christ is to build a relationship with him or her, showing your Muslim friend the love of Christ. Fortunately, John Piper has just posted an excellent article on this very subject: "How Shall We Love Our Muslim Neighbor?"

But if you were asking me about the best argument to use when proclaiming the gospel to Muslims, I am not sure that I can provide you with an answer. Why? Because I do not believe that evangelism is best accomplished through a canned, one-size-fits-all presentation. Building a relationship and steering conversations toward Christ is the most valuable approach. Over time, you'll want to cover who God is (Trinity vs. singularity), how He redeems us (the gospel vs. our efforts and his judgement), and what His revelation to us is (Bible vs. Koran). I know these brief contrasts may be an oversimplification of our differences, but I am sure that you understand our need to clearly share the good news of Jesus Christ with Muslims. By God's grace and through His Spirit, may Christians commit to bringing Christ and His gospel to them!

January 29, 2008

Ask Anything Wednesday is Tomorrow

Tomorrow I will post the latest in our weekly series--Ask Anything Wednesday. Do you have any questions about the Africa Center for Apologetics Research? Do you have a question about witnessing to cult members? Do you want to know what I am reading right now? Anything is fair game!

Just ask and I'll try to answer it. The easiest way to ask a question for tomorrow is simply to post it as a comment below. I can't wait to see what you come up with!

January 28, 2008

The New Faces of Christianity 3: Old and New

Today the ACFAR Network continues reading through The New Faces of Christianity: Believing the Bible in the Global South by Philip Jenkins. If you haven't bought the book or signed up yet, it is not too late to join! This week we are discussing chapter 3: "Old and New."

Summary

Jenkins continues to differentiate between the Christianity of the West and the Christianity of the Global South by examining how each treats the Old Testament. The Western world tends to minimize the place of the Old Testament with many liberals accepting the New Testament as Christian Scripture but conceding the Old Testament to Judaism. Our societies are so far removed from what we read before the Gospels that we relegate this section of the Bible to an ancient and bygone era.

No such cultural distance exists for those in the Global South as they encounter the Old Testament. There are obvious parallels between their own societies and those of the Old Testament. From polygamy to animal sacrifice, rituals and practices found in the Bible are well-known and recognized by many African and Asian Christians.

Consequently, modern Christians in the Global South (especially in Africa) see a direct link between themselves and Old Testament Jews. Some believers practice the rules and customs found in the Old Testament, including the dietary laws and a Saturday Sabbath. Furthermore, there are Christians in Africa that consider their history as their own Old Testament. African traditional religion was a predecessor to Christ.

Thus the Old Testament is cherished by Southern Christians and they often feel at home in its pages. They also appreciate passages and books of the Bible that are often overlooked by Christians in the West. Hebrews is popular with its focus on priesthood and the sacrificial system as well as Revelation with its symbols of the lamb, the blood, the animals, and the dead still living in the afterlife. Old Testament ideas of prophecy are important as are wisdom literature like Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, and the New Testament letter of James.

With the Global South's reverence for the Old Testament, believers will often apply its truths in the political realm. The maintenance of a godly nation requires its people to be righteous. Christianity is not just about personal salvation but corporate well-being. Many Bible readings and sermon texts focus on these themes.

As a result, we find a large divide between Christians in the West and the South in their treatment of the Old Testament. For Southern believers, all of Scripture is given by God for His people, and the Old Testament cannot be minimized.

My Thoughts

Once again, I appreciate the commitment of Christians in the Global South in their commitment to the Word of God. They are right to reject the liberal attempts to discard the Old Testament. At the same time, God's revelation is progressive and the Old Testament must be understood in light of the New. I am deeply concerned when Jenkins quotes Bengt Sundkler as saying, "In some quarters, the differences between the Old and New Testament standards are felt as a problem, and where this is so, the Old Testament standard in generally accepted" (50). Christ fulfills the Old Testament, and His coming brought an end to the types and shadows that pointed to Him. Identifying too closely with the Old Testament prevents Christians from recognizing the newness of the New Covenant that our Savior sealed in His blood. What is desperately needed throughout the Global South is growth in proper biblical interpretation (hermeneutics).

I also found the direct connection often made between African history and the Old Testament troubling. Israel played a unique role in God's unfolding of salvation history. While finding parallels between cultures is fine, moving beyond this to embracing traditional religion as Africa's Old Testament is simply wrong. Jenkins notes:
Such a comprehensive approach ideally draws believers to Christianity, allowing the faith to make free use of traditional symbols and rituals, albeit in converted and Christianized form. Yet critics also urge that such borrowings raise the danger of compromise or pollution, creating in effect not a stronger indigenous Christianity, but a syncretistic religion that has more in common with pagan animism than with anything authentically Christian (52-53).

These critics are right to be worried. Christianity must not be compromised through the improper incorporation of traditional beliefs and practices.

Your Turn

What do you think? Your thoughts do not have to be profound or anything. Please feel free to contribute to the discussion!

January 25, 2008

Weekly Round-Up: Witchcraft, Charismatic Excess, Missions-Minded Churches, and Islam

Here's this week's round-up:

1) Anthony Bugembe, "Does witchcraft really work?" in the Sunday Vision newspaper (Uganda). This is a brief piece on witchcraft in African culture, maintaining its incompatibility with Christianity.

2) Kevin O'Connor, "Pastors - why no pothole miracles?" in the Sunday Monitor newspaper (Uganda). Here is a cynical commentary on the charismatic excesses often found in Uganda and East Africa.

3) Ken Sorrell, "Is Your Church Missions-Minded?" on the SBC Impact! blog. A Southern Baptist missionary thinks through what it really means to be a missions-minded church. Hint: it involves a lot more than having missionaries speak and giving money to overseas ministries!

4) Rob Bowman, "Introduction to Christian Apologetics" on the Parchment and Pen blog. Bowman is a top-rate evangelical scholar that is teaching an upcoming online course. I would highly recommend enrolling if at all possible. The class will certainly be well worth the money.

5) John Piper, "A Common Word Between Us?" on the Desiring God blog. Pastor and theologian John Piper provides some important and insightful words on the Islamic document "A Common Word Between Us and You" as well as the response to it from 300 Christian leaders. Here is the video:

January 23, 2008

Ask Anything Wednesday: African Apologetics

Welcome to Ask Anything Wednesday. This week I am answering another great question. Please keep them rolling in! Just submit your question--on anything!--in the comments section below and I'll consider responding to it in our weekly feature.

Question:
"I have a question about the similarities and differences in confronting cults and equipping the church when it comes to working within two different cultures (Western vs. African).

"Does it appear that there are going to be challenges in the apologetic work you will be doing in Africa that are unique to Africa? That is, do you perceive there to be any unique cultural issues bound up with the way Ugandans, for example, think or approach life that will present challenges for you that you don't face here?

"In the same vein, are there challenges that are unique to the west--ways of thinking that cloud our vision that are not so prevalent where you are going?"

Answer:
Let me begin by honestly saying that I have not spent enough time in Africa to provide a detailed or specific answer. At the same time, I am very much aware of the questions you raise and will take these issues into account as I seek to defend our faith in Africa. My goal is not to bring Western argumentation to Africa; my goal is to equip African believers themselves to contend for the faith that was once for all delivered to the saints.

Essentially, this means that all apologetics is dependent on the context in which it takes place. Tim Keller often makes this point when talking about defeater beliefs. In his article "Deconstructing Defeater Beliefs" (in PDF format), Keller writes:
Every culture hostile to Christianity holds to a set of 'common-sense' consensus beliefs that automatically make Christianity seem implausible to people. These are what philosophers call "defeater beliefs". A defeater belief is Belief-A that, if true, means Belief-B can't be true.

Christianity is disbelieved in one culture for totally opposite reasons it is disbelieved in another. So for example, in the West . . . it is widely assumed that Christianity can't be true because of the cultural belief there can't be just one "true" religion. But in the Middle East, people have absolutely no problem with the idea that there is just one true religion. That doesn't seem implausible at all. Rather there it is widely assumed that Christianity can't be true because of the cultural belief that American culture, based on Christianity, is unjust and corrupt. (Skeptics ought to realize, then, that the objections they have to the Christian faith are culturally relative!) So each culture has its own set of culturally-based doubt-generators which people call 'objections' or 'problems' with Christianity.

When a culture develops a combination of many, widely held defeater beliefs it becomes a cultural 'implausibility-structure.' In these societies, most people don't feel they have to give Christianity a good hearing -- they don't feel that kind of energy is warranted. They know it just can't be true. That is what makes evangelism in hostile cultures so much more difficult and complex than it was under 'Christendom.' In our Western culture (and in places like Japan, India, and Muslim countries) the reigning implausibility-structure against Christianity is very strong. Christianity simply looks ludicrous. In places like Africa, Latin America, and China, however, the implausibility structures are eroding fast. The widely held assumptions in the culture make Christianity look credible there.

As you can see, the key to understanding how to defend the faith in Uganda and East Africa is to assess their implausibility-structures and defeater beliefs (as a side note, I am unsure of Keller's conclusion that the implausibility structures are eroding fast in Africa--Christianity is making great strides, but many challenges remain!). Once these beliefs are known, a Christian can effectively respond to them with the gospel and biblical truth.

One difference between the West and Africa that I already recognize has been pointed out by Philip Jenkins. As I mentioned previously to the ACFAR Network, he states: "Global South Christians, in contrast, do not live in an age of doubt, but must instead deal with competing claims to faith." This statement has tremendous implications for Christian apologetics. So much of our apologetic is geared toward doubt. But these usually aren't the primary challenges given against Christianity in Africa.

With all of this in mind, what do we do? We strive to understand the culture(s) that God has called us to minister to. I am in the process of learning more about East Africa and look forward to seeing how the Lord will use me!

January 22, 2008

Another Ask Anything Wednesday Tomorrow

Tomorrow I will post the latest in our weekly series--Ask Anything Wednesday. Do you have any questions about the Africa Center for Apologetics Research? Do you have a question about witnessing to cult members? Do you want to know what I am reading right now? Anything is fair game!

Just ask and I'll try to answer it. The easiest way to ask a question for tomorrow is simply to post it as a comment below. I can't wait to see what you come up with!

January 21, 2008

The New Faces of Christianity 2: Power in the Book

Today the ACFAR Network continues reading through The New Faces of Christianity: Believing the Bible in the Global South by Philip Jenkins. If you haven't bought the book or signed up yet, it is not too late to join! This week we are discussing chapter 2: "Power in the Book."

Summary

After differentiating between the Christianity of the West (Northern liberals) and the Christianity of the Global South (Southern conservatives), Jenkins examines why the South has such a high view of biblical authority. While part of the answer lies in the fact that the missionaries who brought Christianity to these areas were themselves generally conservative, it would be too simplistic to suggest that this foreign influence is the main reason the Global South holds to a high view of Scripture. He writes, "The communities to whom such ideas are targeted might be poor, but they do not constitute a cultural blank slate on which foreign notions can be inscribed at will" (21).

So then, what else can explain the conservatism of the South? First, the growing importance of the written word brought with it the advance of Christian Scripture. This is especially seen through the progress of literacy and the translation of the Bible into native languages. Second, the centrality of the public reading of Scripture leads to a different kind of reception and impact. Third, the frequent retelling of the Bible's stories and narratives as well as the practice of drama bring the Bible alive to those in the Global South. Fourth, music has been effectively used to internalize Bible passages, stories, and doctrines. When taken together, all of these factors have lead to a widespread belief in the absolute authority of Scripture.

This high view of Scripture defines how the Bible is understood. Jenkins says,
If every word is true, then the whole is contained in each part, and indeed in each verse. This encourages the use of popular proof texts, which are cited very much as aphorisms and proverbs were used in traditional African and Asian societies. . . . At its worst--whether in Africa or North America--this literalist approach can lead to a selective reading of the scripture, a stress on passages that confirm familiar ideas or prejudices, and a neglect of context. Texts thus become little more than bumper sticker slogans (35).

Not only may they practice proof-texting, but their reverence for the Bible also may lead to superstitious and magical beliefs. The Bible itself is often seen as the center of spiritual power which can combat sickness and evil. It can even be used as a tool for divination!

Additionally, the author notes "The mystical awe inspired by the Bible text sometimes encourages suspicions about the existence of other lost or secret portions of scripture" (37). Differences between the books found in the Catholic and Protestant Bibles suggest that some Christians have wanted to suppress biblical texts or hide certain spiritual truths.

In any case, Christian Scripture holds a fundamental role of authority in Southern churches. They reject Northern liberal attempts to minimize what the Bible teaches.

My Thoughts

I found this chapter very informative. Reading about the different ways in which the Word of God has impacted the Global South causes me to praise God! From recognizing the importance of the public reading and exposition of Scripture to the singing of God-glorifying music, these churches understand the foundational place of the Bible in our faith.

However, the entire section "My Bible and I" disturbed me. Misusing Scripture through proof-texting often leads to error. Believing that the Bible is an object with inherent power misplaces a believer's trust in God to a physical object. A fascination with secret spiritual truths
found outside of Scripture undermines the sufficiency of God's revelation.

Jenkins also troubled me with a statement at the end of the chapter:
The African view effectively follows more contemporary theories of reading and interpretation, stressing the role of the communities that receive and use the texts in question. From this perspective, it makes little difference to argue that a given text is clearly not from the hand of its supposed author, if it is received as authoritative by the churches that read it. . . . The nature of the reading community is critical. In this sense, literalism has much in common with postmodern theories of reading (41).

Rejecting liberal views of biblical inspiration must not lead to a postmodern approach in understanding Scripture. Churches do not give meaning to a biblical text--they must seek to know the meaning given by the author and revealed by God.

As this chapter shows, we have reason both to celebrate and to be concerned. A high view of Scripture is good, but the Bible must be interpreted properly and trusted as the sufficient and complete revelation from God. How can we help our spiritual brothers and sisters in Africa to not only believe in the Bible but to know it and to use it in refuting error?

Your Turn

What do you think? Your thoughts do not have to be profound or anything. Please feel free to contribute to the discussion!

January 18, 2008

Weekly Round-Up: Syncretism, Prayer for Kenya, and Untrained Pastors

This week's round-up are all news stories that come from Uganda:

1) Michael J. Ssali, "Healings and miracles at dead priest’s grave" in the Sunday Monitor newspaper (Uganda). Would you like to read about an example of syncretism, combining the beliefs of African traditional religions with Roman Catholicism? Look no further than the merging of ancestral spirits with interceding saints. This story talks about regional devotion to a Catholic priest who has not even begun the process of being recognized as a saint by the Roman Catholic Church.

2) Flavia Nakagwa, "Christians in Uganda pray for Kenya" in the New Vision newspaper (Uganda). A welcome event in Kampala, Uganda. The chaos in Kenya must be kept in prayer by all followers of Christ! Nevertheless, I especially appreciate seeing my fellow believers caring for those troubled in a neighboring country.

3) Ephraim Kasozi, "Untrained pastors ruining churches" in the Daily Monitor newspaper (Uganda). Another pastor admits an all too common reality in Uganda and throughout East Africa--pastors are often not properly equipped, causing numerous problems in many local churches.

January 16, 2008

Ask Ask Wednesday: Next Week

With no incoming questions for this week, Ask Anything Wednesday will return next week.

I look forward to it! And you don't have to wait--ask away. Just type your question in the comment section below. I'll be curious to see what comes in!

January 15, 2008

Book Review: The Discipline of Spiritual Discernment

The Discipline of Spiritual Discernment
Tim Challies, The Discipline of Spiritual Discernment (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books, 2007), 206 pp.

I have been anxiously awaiting Tim Challies' new book, The Discipline of Spiritual Discernment, for two reasons. First, the practice of spiritual discernment is near and dear to my heart. My entire ministry is essentially built upon the need for establishing and growing biblical discernment. Second, I have been a regular reader of Tim Challies' blog for several years now. Over this time, I have come to respect and trust him. God has truly blessed Challies and I placed an advance order for his book as soon as I could afford it. A couple of weeks ago, my wait finally ended. An autographed copy arrived at my door and I started reading it immediately.

Why was I so interested in getting started? Because I have rarely come across a book dedicated to spiritual discernment written for the average believer in the pew. Sure, as a seminary graduate I came across plenty of great works on hermeneutics, apologetics, and spiritual disciplines. But I generally could not see recommending them to fellow members of my local church. Challies book fills this unfortunate void.

His book is both incisive and readable. It covers everything from showing the need for spiritual discernment to assisting the reader in practicing discernment. But what exactly is spiritual discernment? Challies defines it this way:

Discernment is the skill of understanding and applying God's Word with the purpose of separating truth from error and right from wrong (61).

Whether in how we live or what we believe, discernment is an essential aspect of every Christian's life. As the Apostle Paul instructs us, "test everything; hold fast what is good. Abstain from every form of evil" (1 Thessalonians 5:21-22).

Thankfully, Challies book helps us to carry out Paul's directions. And while its pages are filled with insight, I especially appreciate two chapters. The first is on the dangers of discernment. He's right to say that many people who seek to be discerning wind up practicing a counterfeit shadow of true, biblical discernment. The ten dangers he provides are ones that I have all too often struggled with, and I applaud the author for warning against them.

I also found his step-by-step method in the final chapter incredibly valuable. Not content to stop short of providing a practical approach to begin practicing spiritual discernment, Challies lays out a helpful plan to follow. We have to move beyond simply giving lip service to the importance of discernment--we have to make the effort to actually do it. Following this method allows the reader to start.

It is hard for me to hide my enthusiasm for this book. I believe every Christian seeking to be faithful to our Savior will benefit from its contents. May His body grow in discernment, transforming ourselves more and more by the renewal of our minds.

Ask Anything Wednesday is Tomorrow

Tomorrow I will post the latest in our weekly series--Ask Anything Wednesday. Do you have any questions about the Africa Center for Apologetics Research? Do you have a question about witnessing to cult members? Do you want to know what I am reading right now? Anything is fair game!

Just ask and I'll try to answer it. The easiest way to ask a question for tomorrow is simply to post it as a comment below. I can't wait to see what you come up with!

January 14, 2008

The New Faces of Christianity 1: Shall the Fundamentalists Win?

Today begins the official launch of the ACFAR Network, a community of evangelical Christians that want to work together toward making a difference in Uganda and throughout the region. We will start by reading through The New Faces of Christianity: Believing the Bible in the Global South by Philip Jenkins. If you haven't bought the book or signed up yet, it is not too late to join! In any case, this week we are discussing chapter 1: "Shall the Fundamentalists Win?"

Summary

Playing off of American liberal Harry Emerson Fosdick’s sermon title, Jenkins concentrates on differentiating between the Christianity of the West and the Christianity of the Global South--between the Northern liberals and the Southern literalists. He states, "These controversies are grounded in attitudes to authority and, above all, to the position of the Bible as an inspired text" (1). Using the contemporary conflict in Anglicanism over homosexuality to illustrate his point, the author writes about the opposite directions that Christians in the North and South take on the authority of the Bible. While Northern liberals seek to interpret the Bible in light of today's world (thus homosexuality is acceptable), Southern literalists maintain the need for strict obedience to scriptural authority (hence homosexuality is sinful).

Jenkins goes on to summarize how the South's high view of the Bible impacts their beliefs. "We often encounter the same range of conservative themes in the religious thought of African and Asian Christians. These include a much greater respect for the authority of scripture, especially in matters of morality; a willingness to accept the Bible as an inspired text and a tendency to literalism; a special interest in supernatural elements of scripture, such as miracles, visions, and healings; a belief in the continuing power of prophecy; and a veneration for the Old Testament, which is considered as authoritative as the New" (4).

Next, the author shows through statistical and demographic research that Christianity worldwide is rapidly shifting from North America and Europe southward. He maintains, "By 2025, Africa and Latin America will vie for the title of the most Christian continent" (9). Due to this trend, we should see a global conservative shift in theology. No longer will western theology be labeled as "theology" whereas other theologies will be labeled "African Theology," "Asian Theology," etc. Rather, the Global South will play an increasingly central role in defining our faith.

With this in mind, traditional labels become irrelevant. Fundamentalism, liberalism, and conservatism developed as Western concepts and cannot be easily imposed on Christians in the South. We must seek to allow global Christianity to define itself.

My Thoughts

I really enjoyed reading about fellow believers in the Global South having a steadfast commitment to the Bible. At the same time, their commitment must be combined with the dedicated practice of biblical discernment. What good is devotion to the Word of God when Christians may embrace whatever someone claims the Bible says? The shift in Christianity demonstrates the essential need of developing discernment and the defense of our faith in the Global South. If we see the importance of apologetics in America and the West, then how much more important is it in the rapidly growing South?

Additionally, one statement in this chapter has given me a lot to think about: "Global South Christians, in contrast, do not live in an age of doubt, but must instead deal with competing claims to faith" (5). So much of our defense of the faith in the West is tied to questions of doubt: "How can God exist with so much evil in the world?", "How can you believe in God when science has shown that He is unnecessary?", etc. But if Jenkins is correct in this difference, then the most pressing issues in the Global South are not dealing with doubt but with religious pluralism. How would apologetics change in this context?

Your Turn

What do you think? Your thoughts do not have to be profound or anything. Please feel free to contribute to the discussion!

January 11, 2008

Weekly Round-Up: Church History, Christian Science, the American Dollar, and the Camel

I know I have been away from blogging, but I am now officially back! Today we return to my weekly round-up of important and/or interesting articles that I find around the web. All of these have been posted since the beginning of the year:

1) Darrell L. Bock, "Roots Matter: Defending the faith in today's cultural climate means not only knowing our Bible but also knowing our history" in Christian History, Fall 2007. Bock writes about an important but often neglected aspect of apologetics--church history. I could not agree more!

2) Malita Wamala, "Mastering the art of Christian Science" in the Weekly Observer newspaper (Uganda). Did you know that Christian Science has a presence in East Africa? It does, and here is an Ugandan commending the principles of Mary Baker Eddy.

3) Dustin Benge, "The Weak Dollar Undercuts Missionaries" on the Pastor and People blog. American news has been filled with the depreciation of the dollar around the world. This economic shift is really starting to hurt missionaries and agencies. Check out this brief post to learn more.

4) Daniel Akin, David Nelson, and Bruce Ashford, "An Assessment of The Camel" (a paper available online in PDF format). The Camel is a popular but controversial approach to bring the gospel to people in Islamic cultures. This short paper is a balanced treatment and assessment of this method.

January 7, 2008

Book Review: Religious Ethics in Africa

Religious Ethics in Africa
Peter Kasenene, Religious Ethics in Africa (Kampala, Uganda: Fountain Publishers, 1998), 110 pp.

One of several books that I picked up while in Uganda last year was Religious Ethics in Africa by Peter Kasenene. Since I am always interested in reading Africans themselves when learning more about a subject of importance on their continent, I was intrigued by this brief work on morality and ethics.

The author himself explains why he wrote this book:

The book discusses the teachings of the major religions in Africa, namely African traditional religions, Christianity, Islam and the Baha'i Faith on each of the selected moral issues. Although the different religions have been put side by side giving them equal treatment, the basic position is that, with relevant adjustments to changing situations and circumstances in Africa, the traditional ethic should be recaptured and used as a basis for moral reasoning and decision-making (iii).

An expansion of the author's university lectures, his work covers a diverse range of ethical issues: ethical theory; religion, ethics, and morality; preservation and promotion of one's life; respect for other people's lives; sex outside marriage; marriage; and family life.

I found this book a helpful and informative descriptive tool. What do some of the main religions in Africa teach regarding various ethical questions? Kasenene provides concise and useful answers. From alcoholic drinking to polygamy, from abortion to bride-gift exchanges, he provides us with informative comparisons of religious morality.

However, he moves from describing what religions teach about morals to prescribing how Africans should live ethically virtuous lives. In doing so, he never grounds his "shoulds" of behavior with reasons. As a matter of fact, he removes any objective criteria for morality when he says:

In the end, everone is morally responsible for his or her actions. People are not machines and so they have to decide personally on what to do, irrespective of what theories, custom, law or even religions prescribe. A person's religion guides him or her on how to behave, but the choice remains his or hers because religious guidance is not infallible (101).

In attempting to insure human responsibility, he undermines it by ultimately leaving ethics up to one's own conscience.

Additionally, throughout this book Kasenene gives his own evaluation of ethical behavior, sometimes disagreeing with all of the surveyed religious views including African traditional religions. His concluding comments on each ethical issue often sound more like a liberal Western scholar's opinion than the views of one who wants to recapture traditional African morality in reasoning and decision-making.

As a result, Kasenene's book is of limited usefulness. A reader can consult it to gain an understanding of different religious views on ethics in Africa. At the same time, he or she should beware of the attempts to move toward an African ethic by the author.

There's Still Time to Join

The New Faces of Christianity
Starting next Monday, the ACFAR network will begin reading through and interacting with Philip Jenkins' book The New Faces of Christianity: Believing the Bible in the Global South. Would you like to know more about Christianity in East Africa and the rest of the Global South? How about discovering some of the unique challenges and opportunities that are taking place among Christians outside of the Western world? Here is your opportunity!

Why not join in? Simply buy a copy of the book (it should be available online or at most bookstores) and add your name to the list.

Next week we will tackle the first chapter. Our time together will last through February and should cover around 20 pages a week. I'm excited about working toward making a difference in Uganda and throughout the region!