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Restoring Identities
The Contextualizing Story of Christianity in Oceania
The Global Story of Christianity
Edited by Upolu Lumā Vaai and Mark A. Lamport
Introduction by Dana L. Robert and Afereti Uili
Imprint: Cascade Books
312 Pages, 6.00 x 9.00 x 0.62 in
- Paperback
- 9781666729764
- Published: November 2023
$38.00 / £31.00 / AU$59.00
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Upolu Lumā Vaai serves as principal of the Pacific Theological College (Fiji) and professor of theology and ethics. His recent co-edited volumes include reSTORYing the Pasifika Household (2023), Methodist Revolutions (2022), and Transformative Spiritualities for the Ecumenical Pilgrimage of Justice (2022).
Mark A. Lamport has for forty years been a professor at graduate theological schools in the United States and Europe. He is editor of a dozen reference works, including Emerging Theologies from the Global South (2022); Christianity in the Middle East (2020); Encyclopedia of Christianity in the Global South (2018); Encyclopedia of Martin Luther and the Reformation (2017); Encyclopedia of Christianity in the United States (2016); and Encyclopedia of Christian Education (2015).
“This book moves on from colonial narratives of Christianity in Oceania, allowing indigenous Christians to tell their own stories to the global Christian community. Their insights offer profound understandings of community and our relationship to land, water, and the environment—perhaps what mankind needs to reverse its poor stewardship of the planet. This collection presents a strong rationale for decolonizing Christianity around the world and forefronting those who, up until now, have had little or no voice.”
—Todd M. Johnson, distinguished professor of mission and global Christianity, Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
“Restoring Identities offers lively conversations and insightful storytelling about the past, present, and future of Christianity in Oceania. All the contributors insightfully consider Pasifika cultural dynamics in fresh and compelling ways, and the volume’s diverse chapters harmonize thanks to the authors’ shared critical engagements. This book is sure to become a standard reference in studies of global Christianity.”
—Matt Tomlinson, professor of anthropology, Australian National University
“Restoring Identities offers a window into the current stage of decolonizing a received Christianity through an Oceanic lens. Of particular interest is the intersection running throughout the volume between talanoa and a moana hermeneutics (on the one hand) and history and the reading of faith’s entanglement with empire. The foundations are being laid for further phases of work on a Christian identity and its always ambivalent relationship to culture and theology.”
—Clive Pearson, editor-in-chief, International Journal of Public Theology
“This is a timely and important collection which serves the great need—long ignored in the general literature, where it is often absent altogether—of rendering the contested category of Oceania/the Pacific visible to non-specialist scholars and the ‘helicopter narrative’ scholars. There is a lot here to satisfy readers—whether they be new to the area or established scholars.”
—Mark Hutchinson, university historian, Western Sydney University