Public Theology as a Theology of Resilience in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Public Pastoral Care Contribution
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Living in despair and feeling hopeless, people ask obvious, challenging, and disturbing questions: Why this suffering, and why me? Where is God in this crisis? The problem of evil becomes not only a philosophical riddle to solve, but a personal and collective struggle. It leads us into the abyss of suffering and meaninglessness, as well as to the imperative of care and compassion, and a fight for recovery, reconstruction, and reconciliation. The crisis presents us with not only an intellectual, political, and existential challenge. It becomes a moral commitment.
2. Sub-Saharan Africa: Contextual Overview
The security situation in many SSA countries is acutely problematic, as exemplified most recently by escalating violence and displacement in Sudan. Since the turn of the millennium, intermittently persistent conflicts have caused severe human suffering and economic destabilization throughout the region. Conflicts often begin with isolated operations of extremist groups, but quickly expand into regional violence that spreads, like a virus, from one subregion to another.
3. Resilience Theory and Theology: An Exploration
4. Public Theology and Resilience in Sub-Saharan Africa
If we want to understand what resilience and a resilient religion mean, we must take as our starting point the experiences and stories from Africa of people who live (surviving) on the periphery of the city in poverty, socio-political exclusion, and culturally marginalized.
4.1. Understanding Public Theology Concerns
‘Public theology’ is a fairly recent term referring to a theology which critically reflects on both the Christian tradition as well as social and political issues. This dialogue is seen to benefit both theology and society.
Public theology, as I understand it, is not primarily and directly evangelical theology which addresses the Gospel to the world in the hope of repentance and conversion. Rather, it is theology which seeks the welfare of the city before protecting the interests of the church, or its proper liberty to preach the Gospel and celebrate the sacraments. Accordingly, public theology often takes ‘the world’s agenda’, or parts of it, as its own agenda, and seeks to offer distinctive and constructive insights from the treasury of faith to help in the building of a decent society, the restraint of evil, the curbing of violence, nation-building, and reconciliation in the public arena, and so forth.
So, to chart briefly the scope and range of public theology, we can begin by saying that most contributors to such discourse would agree that public theology is theology that is social, political, and practical. But I would argue that at its best public theology involves theological hermeneutics in the service of moral, social, and political praxis.
4.2. The Intersection of Public Theology and Pastoral Care in Fostering Resilience
Helping activities, participated in by people who recognise a transcendent dimension to human life, which, by the use of verbal or non-verbal, direct or indirect, literal or symbolic modes of communication, aimed at preventing, relieving, or facilitating persons coping with anxieties. Pastoral care seeks to foster people’s growth as full human beings together with the development of ecologically and socio-politically holistic communities in which all persons may live as humanely as possible.
5. Strategic Approaches for Enhancing Public Theology’s Contribution to Resilience in Sub-Saharan Africa
6. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Nanthambwe, P. Public Theology as a Theology of Resilience in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Public Pastoral Care Contribution. Religions 2024, 15, 1213. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15101213
Nanthambwe P. Public Theology as a Theology of Resilience in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Public Pastoral Care Contribution. Religions. 2024; 15(10):1213. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15101213
Chicago/Turabian StyleNanthambwe, Patrick. 2024. "Public Theology as a Theology of Resilience in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Public Pastoral Care Contribution" Religions 15, no. 10: 1213. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15101213
APA StyleNanthambwe, P. (2024). Public Theology as a Theology of Resilience in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Public Pastoral Care Contribution. Religions, 15(10), 1213. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15101213