Description:The explosive southward expansion of Christianity in Africa, Asia, and
Latin American has barely registered on Western consciousness. Nor has
the globalization of Christianity--and the enormous religious,
political, and social consequences it portends--been properly
understood. Philip Jenkins' The Next Christendom: The Coming of
Global Christianity is the first book to take the full measure of the
changing face of the Christian faith. Jenkins asserts that by the year
2050 only one Christian in five will be a non-Latino white person and
that the center of gravity of the Christian world will have shifted
firmly to the Southern hemisphere. Within a few decades Kinshasa, Buenos
Aires, Addis Ababa, and Manila will replace Rome, Athens, Paris,
London, and New York as the focal points of the Church. Moreover,
Jenkins shows that the churches that have grown most rapidly in the
global south are far more traditional, morally conservative,
evangelical, and apocalyptic than their northern counterparts.
Mysticism, puritanism, belief in prophecy, faith-healing, exorcism, and
dream-visions--concepts which more liberal western churches have traded
in for progressive political and social concerns--are basic to the newer
churches in the south. And the effects of such beliefs on global
politics, Jenkins argues, will be enormous, as religious identification
begins to take precedence over allegiance to secular nation-states.
Indeed, as Christianity grows in regions where Islam is also expected to
increase--as recent conflicts in Indonesia, Nigeria, and the
Philippines reveal--we may see a return to the religious wars of the
past, fought out with renewed intensity and high-tech weapons far
surpassing the swords and spears of the middle ages. Jenkins shows
that Christianity is on the rise again, and to understand what that rise
may mean requires a new awareness of what is happening in Africa, Asia,
and Latin America. The Next Christendom takes the first large step
towards that new awareness.