The Role of Christianity and Islam in Slavery: A Wesleyan Interpretation

This paper is a detail of slave trade and how it impacted Africans and specifically how it became a source of inspiration for John Wesley the founder of Methodism in his mission endeavors. The article uses Wesleyanism in reference to John Wesley’s mission work. Muslim or Christian Slavery refers to...

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Main Author: Maiko, Saneta
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Stellenbosch University 2017-11-01
Series:Missionalia: Southern African Journal of Missiology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://missionalia.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/192
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spelling doaj-96976d6b76e146f7a3e07e54b3b8bfd42020-11-25T00:44:12ZengStellenbosch UniversityMissionalia: Southern African Journal of Missiology0256-95072312-878X2017-11-0145214415310.7832/45-2-192The Role of Christianity and Islam in Slavery: A Wesleyan InterpretationMaiko, Saneta 0Purdue UniversityThis paper is a detail of slave trade and how it impacted Africans and specifically how it became a source of inspiration for John Wesley the founder of Methodism in his mission endeavors. The article uses Wesleyanism in reference to John Wesley’s mission work. Muslim or Christian Slavery refers to slave trade that was driven by followers of Islam and Christianity. The paper is divided into subsection. First, John Wesley (1703-17891) the founder of Wesleyan movements including Methodism is discussed and his role in the fight against slavery. The paper delves into how religion was used to advance or fight against slave trade; especially looking at the role played by American Methodist in this task. The paper concludes by challenging religions especially Christianity and Islam to be sensitive to this history whenever they advance their outreach.http://missionalia.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/192MissiologyChurch HistoryAfrica SlaveryWesleyanism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maiko, Saneta
spellingShingle Maiko, Saneta
The Role of Christianity and Islam in Slavery: A Wesleyan Interpretation
Missionalia: Southern African Journal of Missiology
Missiology
Church History
Africa Slavery
Wesleyanism
author_facet Maiko, Saneta
author_sort Maiko, Saneta
title The Role of Christianity and Islam in Slavery: A Wesleyan Interpretation
title_short The Role of Christianity and Islam in Slavery: A Wesleyan Interpretation
title_full The Role of Christianity and Islam in Slavery: A Wesleyan Interpretation
title_fullStr The Role of Christianity and Islam in Slavery: A Wesleyan Interpretation
title_full_unstemmed The Role of Christianity and Islam in Slavery: A Wesleyan Interpretation
title_sort role of christianity and islam in slavery: a wesleyan interpretation
publisher Stellenbosch University
series Missionalia: Southern African Journal of Missiology
issn 0256-9507
2312-878X
publishDate 2017-11-01
description This paper is a detail of slave trade and how it impacted Africans and specifically how it became a source of inspiration for John Wesley the founder of Methodism in his mission endeavors. The article uses Wesleyanism in reference to John Wesley’s mission work. Muslim or Christian Slavery refers to slave trade that was driven by followers of Islam and Christianity. The paper is divided into subsection. First, John Wesley (1703-17891) the founder of Wesleyan movements including Methodism is discussed and his role in the fight against slavery. The paper delves into how religion was used to advance or fight against slave trade; especially looking at the role played by American Methodist in this task. The paper concludes by challenging religions especially Christianity and Islam to be sensitive to this history whenever they advance their outreach.
topic Missiology
Church History
Africa Slavery
Wesleyanism
url http://missionalia.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/192
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