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Contextualization and folk Islam : a case study in the Sudan

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dc.contributor.advisor Saayman, W. A. (Willem A.)
dc.contributor.author Hadaway, Robin Dale
dc.date.accessioned 2011-07-29T06:46:51Z
dc.date.available 2011-07-29T06:46:51Z
dc.date.issued 2010-11
dc.identifier.citation Hadaway, Robin Dale (2010) Contextualization and folk Islam : a case study in the Sudan, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/4659> en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/4659
dc.description.abstract Estimates suggest that seventy percent of Muslims follow folk Islam (popular Islam), rather than the orthodox Islamic faith. Most methods for reaching Muslims with the Gospel have concentrated on one of two broad approaches with a third blending the first two methods. Apologetic, polemic and dialogue techniques argue that Christianity is more valid or reasonable than Islam. Other approaches consist of contextualized methods seeking some common ground between Christianity and Islam. Apologetic arguments have not been very effective with folk Muslims because cognitive propositions fail to answer the “why” questions posed by popular Islam. Most contextualized methods also miss the mark with folk Muslims; they rarely attend Islamic worship, observe the five pillars of Islam, or read the Qur’an. A few missiologists propose a fourth category for reaching Muslims – contextualizing according to their worldview. This thesis explores what are the best approaches for evangelizing folk Muslims who are particularly influenced by African Traditional Religion (ATR). The Beja tribe of the Sudan and the Sukuma tribe of Tanzania serve as case studies. I argue for a contextualized approach to folk Muslims, addressing their unique worldviews. ATRinfluenced folk Muslims lean toward a fear-power worldview, while the Sufis among them hold to an existential- transcendent worldview. Each group, therefore, necessitates a different evangelism approach. The first chapter presents preliminary matters, the research question, a literature review, and a rationale for the thesis. The second chapter analyzes the case study example of Beja folk Islam. Chapter three examines folk Islam and its relationship to orthodox Islam,including further illustrations from the Beja tribe. The fourth chapter explores the subject of ATR and its relationship to folk Islam. The Sukuma tribe of Tanzania serves as a base-line model of ATR for a comparison with Beja folk Islam. Chapter five introduces the topic of contextualization in Muslim evangelization and assesses the effectiveness and validity of methods that have been used. Chapter six suggests worldview approaches for reaching ATR and Sufi-influenced folk Muslims. The final chapter summarizes the thesis content, reviews the response to the research question, and analyzes the implications of the findings of the case study. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (319 leaves)
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Beja tribe en
dc.subject Sukuma tribe en
dc.subject Folk Islam en
dc.subject African traditional religion (ATR) en
dc.subject Sufism en
dc.subject Power encounter en
dc.subject Camel method en
dc.subject Popular Islam en
dc.subject Contextualization en
dc.subject Traditional religion en
dc.subject.ddc 297.09624
dc.subject.lcsh Islam -- Sudan
dc.subject.lcsh Mysticism -- Islam -- Sudan
dc.subject.lcsh Beja (African people) -- Religion
dc.subject.lcsh Beja (African people) -- Sudan -- Social life and customs
dc.subject.lcsh Sukuma (African people) -- Religion
dc.subject.lcsh Sukuma (African people) -- Sudan -- Social life and customs
dc.subject.lcsh Sufism -- Sudan
dc.subject.lcsh Christianity and culture -- Sudan
dc.title Contextualization and folk Islam : a case study in the Sudan en
dc.type Thesis en
dc.description.department Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology
dc.description.degree D. Th. (Missiology)


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