世界基督教的非殖民化与跨文化:拉丁美洲视角

IF 0.3 0 RELIGION
R. Barreto
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在过去的几十年里,“世界基督教”已经成为一个流行语,与将基督教描绘成“西方”宗教的欧洲中心观点形成对比作为一种世界性的宗教,基督教以跨越国界的姿态出现,在多种文化中平等地寻找家园,并在不同文化之间平等地寻找家园。因此,世界基督教既指一个研究领域,也指一场运动作为一个研究领域,它探索基督教的“世界性”本质,关注不同文化背景下基督教经历的独特性以及它们之间的关系。自二十世纪初以来,学者们注意到基督教在所有六大洲的存在使它事实上获得了世界宗教的地位然而,这种全球存在不应被理解为一种静态现象。在过去的一个世纪里,尤其是在过去的五十年里,世界基督教经历了剧烈的人口变化,在全球南方,特别是在非洲,经历了惊人的数字增长,与此形成鲜明对比的是,在现代基督教的摇篮北大西洋,人数减少,公众影响力下降(Sanneh 2005: 3-18)。Andrew Walls(2002)和Lamin Sanneh(2003)等学者注意到,最近这种剧烈的人口结构变化正在重塑基督教信仰在当代世界的表现形式,并指出“世界-基督教转向”(Kollman 2014)具有广泛的文化含义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Decoloniality and Interculturality in World Christianity: A Latin American Perspective
‘World Christianity’ has become a buzz word in the past few decades, contrasting Eurocentric perspectives that portray Christianity as a ‘Western’ religion.1 As a world religion, Christianity presents itself as border-crossing, finding a home equally within multiple cultures, and between them. World Christianity refers, then, to both a field of study and a movement.2 As a field of study, it explores the ‘worldwide’ nature of Christianity, paying attention to both the distinctiveness of Christian experiences in different cultural contexts and the relationships among them. Since the beginning of the twentieth century scholars noticed that the presence of Christianity in all six continents granted it the de facto status of a world religion.3 That global presence, however, should not be understood as a static phenomenon. In the past century, and more emphatically in the past fifty years, World Christianity experienced a drastic demographic shift, undergoing an astounding numeric growth in the global south, especially in Africa, in contrast with dwindling numbers and decreasing public influence in the North Atlantic, the cradle of modern Christianity (Sanneh 2005: 3–18). Scholars such as Andrew Walls (2002) and Lamin Sanneh (2003), among others, noticed that this most recent drastic demographic shift was reshaping the manifestation of Christian faith in the contemporary world, noting that the “world-Christian turn” (Kollman 2014) had sweeping cultural implications.
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