Conversion or Proselytization? Being Maasai, Becoming Christian
Date
2021-04
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Global Missiology
Abstract
Conversion is part of Christianity’s DNA. Scholarly discussions about the meaning(s) and
nature of Christian conversion perhaps reflect a popular—and historical—confusion about
conversion vis-à-vis proselytization (e.g., Goodman 1994; Cornelli 2017, 413). Nonetheless,
proselytization and conversion are not the same. Culture plays an important role in proper
Christian conversion because this conversion, or “the turning to Christ what is already there”
in the words of Andrew Walls, takes place within the context of culture. By contrast
proselytization is the mere exchange of one human culture for another and was rejected by the
Apostles. Because “the gospel enriches the culture,” in African contexts “Christianity should
strengthen and reaffirm one’s African identity” (Falconer 2015, 161). After exploring these
themes, I will propose a model to discuss Christian conversion within the Maa language and
culture of the Maasai people of East Africa.
Description
Keywords
Christianity, conversion to
Citation
Global Missiology 18, no. 2 (April 2021)