Abstract:
This article responded to the question about the right methodology needed for the
reconstruction of a viable African Christian theology. It equally contributed an answer to
earlier concerns by Appiah-Kubi, Stinton and Nyiawung, who had grappled with an African
response to the question of Jesus’ identity: ‘Who do you say I am?’ (Lk 9:20). It also attended
to Aben’s remark that Africans contribute minimally to biblical theology especially in the
domain of biblical exegesis. Finally, it proposed an African biblical hermeneutic approach,
a shift of paradigm from the text, its author as well as its context to the context of the subject
of exegesis as a contextual approach of biblical criticism. Three main conclusions emerged
from the article, namely, (1) the African context contains enormous potentials that can enhance
the understanding and interpretation of biblical texts; (2) from the perspective of biblical
interpretation, there is no superior context or culture; and (3) the African biblical hermeneutic
approach is a possible route to the development of an authentic African Christian theology.
Description:
This article is an
extensive reworking of an
article published in the nonaccredited
Journal of the
Presbyterian Theological
Seminary Kumba, Voices from
Kumba, 2013, Volume 4,
144−168.