Abstract:
This article investigates the role of the Law in the Lutheran Church of Uganda. It investigates
how the Law is understood and lived among Lutherans in Uganda. Luther, the sixteenthcentury
Reformer, understood and interpreted the Law in terms of the social and cultural
context of his time. Luther’s background is very different and so much removed from the
African context in which the Ugandan Lutherans find themselves today. Therefore, can the
Lutheran Church of Uganda have the same understanding and interpretation of the Law as
the Reformer? Is Luther’s sixteenth-century European understanding of the Law applicable
to the current Lutherans in Africa, specifically in the Lutheran Church of Uganda? This article
examines the social and cultural context of Lutherans in Uganda and determines how it
affects their understanding and interpretation of the Law. The article aims to demonstrate
that the social and cultural context of the people plays an important role in the way the
Christian life is conducted. This article appeals to Paul’s situation in Galatians to prove this
point.
Description:
Enoch Ekyarikunda is part
of the research project,
‘Socio-Cultural Readings’,
directed by Prof. Dr Ernest
van Eck, Department of
New Testament Studies,
Faculty of Theology,
University of Pretoria.