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Study Section 25:  Explosion of Christianity in Africa, 1950-60





               25.1 Connect


                         As we conclude our study of church history, we see the Western church on the decline, especially in
                         Europe.  Church buildings once declared the Gospel are now printing offices.  Dozens of churches are
                         closing every day.  But we also see God moving in other parts of the world.  Christianity is exploding
                         in China, in Latin America, in Asia, and especially in Africa.  God is busy bringing new people into His
                         kingdom.  So as we close our study, we want to see what God is doing today in the world, especially
              in these areas of evangelism and discipleship.

              Again, we will see Satan busy at work to counter God’s grace displayed.  But we have to remember that “greater
              is He that is in us, then he that is in the world!”  We also know that in the final battle, God wins!  If you stand
              with the Lord, you will win!

              25.2 Objectives


                        1.  The student will see how Satan used John Hick to mislead thousands.

                        2.   The student will be able to describe the amazing movement of God in Africa and other parts of
                        the world.

              3.  The student will be able to see how modernism has moved to a new level as Satan battles God for the minds
              of men.

              25.3 John Hick,  1922-2012 120


                       John Hick was a philosopher of religion and theologian born in England who
                       taught in the United States for the larger part of his career.

                       He argued for a pluralist approach to other religions in his book God and the
                       Universe of Faiths (1973) by which one focuses on God and sees the
                       similarities between these other religions as valid ways to reach God.

              In the late 1960s, Hick had another set of experiences that dramatically affected his life
              and work. While working on civil rights issues in Birmingham, he found himself working
              and worshiping alongside people of other faiths. During this time he began to believe
              that sincere adherents of other faiths experience the Transcendent just as Christians do, though with variances
              due to cultural, historical, and doctrinal factors. These experiences led him to develop his pluralistic hypothesis,
              which, relying heavily on Kant’s phenomenal/noumenal distinction, states that adherents of the major religious
              faiths experience the ineffable Real through their varying culturally shaped lenses. Hick’s pluralistic
              considerations then led him to adjust his theological positions, and he subsequently developed interpretations
              of Christian doctrines, such as the incarnation, atonement, and trinity, not as metaphysical claims but as
              metaphorical or mythological ones.



              120  https://www.iep.utm.edu/hick/
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