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E-grāmata: Growth and Decline in the Anglican Communion: 1980 to the Present

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The Anglican Communion has seen dramatic church growth and decline across recent decades. This book provides the first detailed study of such growth and decline by means of a wide range of case studies across five continents, prefaced by a substantial introductory chapter and followed by a short conclusion. Drawing on new research from a range of disciplines, balancing western and non-western scholarship. contributors give serious attention to both the non-western and the western elements of the Anglican communion. Exploring beyond the study of Anglicanism, the volume situates the trajectories of the various provinces of Anglicanism, alongside the trajectories of other Christian churches and wider debates about secularisation and ’re-sacralisation’. This book offers invaluable insights for a wide range of readers: in the Anglican church, in academia and beyond, particularly in light of the Lambeth Conference 2018.

Recenzijas

The Secretary General of the Anglican Communion, Archbishop Josiah Idowo-Fearon commended Growth and Decline in the Anglican Communion, 1980 to the Present, published by Routledge. If this book is not in thelibrary, it ought to be, said Archbishop Josiah.

This is a truly valuable book. In a collection of outstanding essays, the contributors seek to find firm ground for statements about growth and decline in the Anglican Communion, one of the worlds largest religious institutions. At every stage, what they find repeatedly challenges conventional assumptions, and also raises fundamental questions that demand to be applied to other global churches. This is truly eye-opening. I cannot speak too highly of this excellent volume.

Philip Jenkins, Distinguished Professor of History, Baylor University, USA

This volume is a veritable goldmine. It contains a huge amount of mostly numerical information on the Anglican Communion in all its fullness. Quite rightly it eschews easy generalizations, probing instead the complex and evolving mosaic that constitutes modern Anglicanism. Almost every reader will be surprised about something. I recommend this book very warmly.

Grace Davie, Professor emeritus of Sociology, University of Exeter, UK

To be "Anglican" once meant to be Christian in a peculiarly Church of England fashion, and the extent of "Anglicanism" could be neatly mapped onto the boundaries of the British Empire or Commonwealth. This timely and wide-ranging volume demonstrates that, happily, neither of these generalisations any longer applies. It shows how the Anglican Communion since 1980 displays a complex narrative of rise and fall in its different parts, and now exhibits a fascinating range of variations on the historic theme of what it means to be Anglican.

Brian Stanley, Professor of World Christianity, University of Edinburgh, UK

Numerical church growth and bolstering congregational numbers continues to preoccupy many mainline denominations in the developed world. As this important study shows, church growth is a complex and nuanced phenomena, and needs to be studied with care if it is to be understood. David Goodhews continued work in this field offers new perspectives in an arena that is inherently complicated and he brings to this a clear-sighted vision. For all who research church growth as theoreticians or practitioners this major study makes a valuable contribution to a burgeoning field of enquiry that sits between missiology and ecclesiology.

Martyn Percy, Dean of Christ Church, Oxford, UK

This deepening of the analysis of global Anglicanism is refreshing and welcome for its challenge to the popular presentation of declining North versus growing South. This nuanced approach starts outside the North/West and exhibits the range of geo-political contexts and diversity of growth patterns. In so doing it reconfigures and complicates the picture, challenges conceptions of growth and decline, questions projections of secularization, and re-shapes the future Communion.

Kirsteen Kim, Professor of Theology and World Christianity, Leeds Trinity University, UK

The Essays in this book invite readers to further discourse on "growth" and "decline" within the respective "Provinces" of Anglicanism in particular, and within Christianity in general. The book is worth reading as a whole, and informative in its wide range of contributions.

Jesse N.K. Mugambi, Professor of Philosophy and Religious Studies, University of Nairobi, Kenya.

David Goodhew and his diverse team of collaborators have produced a timely, illuminating, and comprehensive collection of essays. This landmark volume represents an essential text for students of global Christianity, as well as worldwide Anglicanism, at the turn of the twenty-first century.

Michael Snape, Michael Ramsey Professor of Anglican Studies, Durham University, UK

The two words in the title, Growth and Decline, are at the core of this book. They are not neutral, but provocative. They paint the picture of the Anglican Church from 1980 onwards, exploding from its originally historical and geographical entity as an English (later British) "thing", to a global "complexity". Originally the Church was an "island Church", but by the beginning of the twenty first Century it had acquired global ingredients, a global platform, and a global kaleidoscope.

This did not happen against a single and simple landscape. Its tendrils have embraced world languages, world cultures, world aspirations, and worldwide communication channels. Like that, the Anglican Church is paradoxically both "Anglican plus and Anglican minus", to mean Multi-Anglicanism in the twenty first century and beyond.

That being the case, we welcome and appreciate the comprehensive and challenging contribution of this book to this phenomenon of the Church and what it means. The book brings us to where the Anglicanism stands (and falls) today and tomorrow, the outcome and witness of both its internal character and external outreach rubbing shoulders, to the Glory of the Lord.

John Mbiti, Emeritus Professor of Theology, University of Bern, Switzerland

open, empirical, and nuanced. It provides very useful information, some varied interpretations, andavoids any easy prescription for turning decline around.

The Rt Revd Michael Doe, in Church Times

'This book deserves a wide readership. Deaneries should encourage study groups and maybe hold day conferences on it ... There is actually a great deal of material worth pondering in a book that provides a unique overview of the Anglican Communion'

Paul Richardson, in Church of England Newspaper

'an admirable survey of the situation revealed by [ a] diverse set of contributors, each with a deep knowledge of a particular region or country.'

Kevin Ward, University of Leeds, in Ecclesiology

'Growth and Decline in the Anglican Communion: 1980 to the Present provides both a big picture overview and fascinating case studies from around the world. an extremely helpful and important means of going beyond the caricatures of church growth and decline by looking at what is actually happening around the world.'

Richard Cheetham, Diocese of Southwark (Church of England), University of Roehampton & Kings College London, in Journal of Contemporary Religion

List of contributors
ix
Illustrations
xi
Acknowledgements xiv
Introduction 1(2)
1 Growth and decline in the Anglican Communion, 1980 to the present
3(34)
David Goodhew
Overview
35(2)
2 The changing demographics of global Anglicanism, 1970--2010
37(20)
Todd M. Johnson
Gina A. Zurlo
Africa
55(2)
3 Ghana
57(20)
Daniel Eshun
4 Nigeria
77(21)
Richard Burgess
5 Congo
98(16)
Yossa Way
Emma Wild-Wood
6 Kenya
114(14)
Joseph D. Galgalo
7 South Africa
128(19)
Barbara Bompani
Asia
145(2)
8 The Church of South India
147(12)
Anderson Jeremiah
9 Singapore
159(18)
Daniel Wee
10 South Korea
177(17)
Andrew Eungi Kim
11 Australia
194(33)
Ruth Powell
The Americas
225(2)
12 The United States of America
227(22)
Jeremy Bonner
13 The Anglican Province of South America
249(20)
Maurice Sinclair
John Corrie
England
267(2)
14 The Church of England
269(31)
David Voas
Conclusion
292(8)
David Goodhew
Afterword 300(6)
Graham Kings
Index 306
Revd. Dr. David Goodhew is Director of Ministerial Practice, Cranmer Hall, St John's College, Durham University, UK. Prior to Cranmer, he was a parish priest in York and before that, Chaplain and Fellow of St Catharines College, Cambridge. He has published widely in the fields modern British and South African history. He edited the controversial study Church Growth in Britain: 1980 to the Present (Ashgate 2012) and the volume Towards a Theology of Church Growth (Ashgate 2015).