Leadership and Conflict in African Churches: The Anglican Experience

Author:   C.K. Robertson ,  Mkunga H. P. Mtingele
Publisher:   Peter Lang Publishing Inc
Edition:   New edition
Volume:   11
ISBN:  

9781433132940


Pages:   266
Publication Date:   30 November 2016
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Leadership and Conflict in African Churches: The Anglican Experience


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Author:   C.K. Robertson ,  Mkunga H. P. Mtingele
Publisher:   Peter Lang Publishing Inc
Imprint:   Peter Lang Publishing Inc
Edition:   New edition
Volume:   11
Dimensions:   Width: 15.00cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 22.50cm
Weight:   0.500kg
ISBN:  

9781433132940


ISBN 10:   143313294
Pages:   266
Publication Date:   30 November 2016
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

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Reviews

Mkunga H. P. Mtingele has produced an excellent work on the causes and consequences of conflict and conflict management in the Church in Africa under indigenous leadership. Taking the Anglican Church of Tanzania as a case study, the book provides an in-depth analysis of the context, nature, and causes of conflicts that affect the African Church in the past fifty years after indigenous leaders took over from the missionaries. Tribalism and power struggles have not spared the African church. The discourse is rich, informative, and educative not only to experts of church conflict management but also to general leadership interested in leadership and church politics in Africa. I strongly recommend this book which has been published at the right time when the African church needs transformative church. -Palamagamba John Kabudi, University of Dar es Salaam School of Law This is a shocking book, a real eye-opener! Based on original primary research data, Mkunga H. P. Mtingele not only provides sufficient evidence on the leadership crisis in the Anglican Church of Tanzania but equally elsewhere in Africa. -Aloo Mojola, Chairman Department of Theology, Biblical Studies, and Philosophy, St. Paul's University Limuru-Kenya I am grateful for Mkunga H. P. Mtingele's well-researched and informative book, which paints a picture of leadership challenges in Tanzania and the rest of Africa from the perspective of an insider. This is stimulating and worth reading. -Michael B. Curry, Presiding Bishop and Primate of The Episcopal Church In an Anglican Communion in which the member churches are only just beginning to get to know each other, books like this make a vital contribution. As Augustine wrote in his Confessions, `To the best of my power and the best of my will I have laid this long account before you because you first willed that I should confess to you.' It is in this spirit that Mkunga H. P. Mtingele offers this analysis of conflict within the church in Tanzania: to help the church acknowledge its weaknesses and better understand itself, so that it might be renewed and live more fully into its calling. Through sharing his own church's struggle, may Mtingele inspire and equip other churches do the same. -Christopher C. Brittain, Chair in Social and Political Theology, University of Aberdeen


This is a shocking book, a real eye-opener! Based on original primary research data, Mkunga H. P. Mtingele not only provides sufficient evidence on the leadership crisis in the Anglican Church of Tanzania but equally elsewhere in Africa. -Aloo Mojola, Chairman Department of Theology, Biblical Studies, and Philosophy, St. Paul's University Limuru-Kenya In an Anglican Communion in which the member churches are only just beginning to get to know each other, books like this make a vital contribution. As Augustine wrote in his Confessions, 'To the best of my power and the best of my will I have laid this long account before you because you first willed that I should confess to you.' It is in this spirit that Mkunga H. P. Mtingele offers this analysis of conflict within the church in Tanzania: to help the church acknowledge its weaknesses and better understand itself, so that it might be renewed and live more fully into its calling. Through sharing his own church's struggle, may Mtingele inspire and equip other churches do the same. -Christopher C. Brittain, Chair in Social and Political Theology, University of Aberdeen I am grateful for Mkunga H. P. Mtingele's well-researched and informative book, which paints a picture of leadership challenges in Tanzania and the rest of Africa from the perspective of an insider. This is stimulating and worth reading. -Michael B. Curry, Presiding Bishop and Primate of The Episcopal Church Mkunga H. P. Mtingele has produced an excellent work on the causes and consequences of conflict and conflict management in the Church in Africa under indigenous leadership. Taking the Anglican Church of Tanzania as a case study, the book provides an in-depth analysis of the context, nature, and causes of conflicts that affect the African Church in the past fifty years after indigenous leaders took over from the missionaries. Tribalism and power struggles have not spared the African church. The discourse is rich, informative, and educative not only to experts of church conflict management but also to general leadership interested in leadership and church politics in Africa. I strongly recommend this book which has been published at the right time when the African church needs transformative church. -Palamagamba John Kabudi, University of Dar es Salaam School of Law


In an Anglican Communion in which the member churches are only just beginning to get to know each other, books like this make a vital contribution. As Augustine wrote in his Confessions, 'To the best of my power and the best of my will I have laid this long account before you because you first willed that I should confess to you.' It is in this spirit that Mkunga H. P. Mtingele offers this analysis of conflict within the church in Tanzania: to help the church acknowledge its weaknesses and better understand itself, so that it might be renewed and live more fully into its calling. Through sharing his own church's struggle, may Mtingele inspire and equip other churches do the same. -Christopher C. Brittain, Chair in Social and Political Theology, University of Aberdeen I am grateful for Mkunga H. P. Mtingele's well-researched and informative book, which paints a picture of leadership challenges in Tanzania and the rest of Africa from the perspective of an insider. This is stimulating and worth reading. -Michael B. Curry, Presiding Bishop and Primate of The Episcopal Church Mkunga H. P. Mtingele has produced an excellent work on the causes and consequences of conflict and conflict management in the Church in Africa under indigenous leadership. Taking the Anglican Church of Tanzania as a case study, the book provides an in-depth analysis of the context, nature, and causes of conflicts that affect the African Church in the past fifty years after indigenous leaders took over from the missionaries. Tribalism and power struggles have not spared the African church. The discourse is rich, informative, and educative not only to experts of church conflict management but also to general leadership interested in leadership and church politics in Africa. I strongly recommend this book which has been published at the right time when the African church needs transformative church. -Palamagamba John Kabudi, University of Dar es Salaam School of Law This is a shocking book, a real eye-opener! Based on original primary research data, Mkunga H. P. Mtingele not only provides sufficient evidence on the leadership crisis in the Anglican Church of Tanzania but equally elsewhere in Africa. -Aloo Mojola, Chairman Department of Theology, Biblical Studies, and Philosophy, St. Paul's University Limuru-Kenya


In an Anglican Communion in which the member churches are only just beginning to get to know each other, books like this make a vital contribution. As Augustine wrote in his Confessions, 'To the best of my power and the best of my will I have laid this long account before you because you first willed that I should confess to you.' It is in this spirit that Mkunga H. P. Mtingele offers this analysis of conflict within the church in Tanzania: to help the church acknowledge its weaknesses and better understand itself, so that it might be renewed and live more fully into its calling. Through sharing his own church's struggle, may Mtingele inspire and equip other churches do the same. -Christopher C. Brittain, Chair in Social and Political Theology, University of Aberdeen Mkunga H. P. Mtingele has produced an excellent work on the causes and consequences of conflict and conflict management in the Church in Africa under indigenous leadership. Taking the Anglican Church of Tanzania as a case study, the book provides an in-depth analysis of the context, nature, and causes of conflicts that affect the African Church in the past fifty years after indigenous leaders took over from the missionaries. Tribalism and power struggles have not spared the African church. The discourse is rich, informative, and educative not only to experts of church conflict management but also to general leadership interested in leadership and church politics in Africa. I strongly recommend this book which has been published at the right time when the African church needs transformative church. -Palamagamba John Kabudi, University of Dar es Salaam School of Law This is a shocking book, a real eye-opener! Based on original primary research data, Mkunga H. P. Mtingele not only provides sufficient evidence on the leadership crisis in the Anglican Church of Tanzania but equally elsewhere in Africa. -Aloo Mojola, Chairman Department of Theology, Biblical Studies, and Philosophy, St. Paul's University Limuru-Kenya I am grateful for Mkunga H. P. Mtingele's well-researched and informative book, which paints a picture of leadership challenges in Tanzania and the rest of Africa from the perspective of an insider. This is stimulating and worth reading. -Michael B. Curry, Presiding Bishop and Primate of The Episcopal Church


In an Anglican Communion in which the member churches are only just beginning to get to know each other, books like this make a vital contribution. As Augustine wrote in his Confessions, 'To the best of my power and the best of my will I have laid this long account before you because you first willed that I should confess to you.' It is in this spirit that Mkunga H. P. Mtingele offers this analysis of conflict within the church in Tanzania: to help the church acknowledge its weaknesses and better understand itself, so that it might be renewed and live more fully into its calling. Through sharing his own church's struggle, may Mtingele inspire and equip other churches do the same. -Christopher C. Brittain, Chair in Social and Political Theology, University of Aberdeen This is a shocking book, a real eye-opener! Based on original primary research data, Mkunga H. P. Mtingele not only provides sufficient evidence on the leadership crisis in the Anglican Church of Tanzania but equally elsewhere in Africa. -Aloo Mojola, Chairman Department of Theology, Biblical Studies, and Philosophy, St. Paul's University Limuru-Kenya I am grateful for Mkunga H. P. Mtingele's well-researched and informative book, which paints a picture of leadership challenges in Tanzania and the rest of Africa from the perspective of an insider. This is stimulating and worth reading. -Michael B. Curry, Presiding Bishop and Primate of The Episcopal Church Mkunga H. P. Mtingele has produced an excellent work on the causes and consequences of conflict and conflict management in the Church in Africa under indigenous leadership. Taking the Anglican Church of Tanzania as a case study, the book provides an in-depth analysis of the context, nature, and causes of conflicts that affect the African Church in the past fifty years after indigenous leaders took over from the missionaries. Tribalism and power struggles have not spared the African church. The discourse is rich, informative, and educative not only to experts of church conflict management but also to general leadership interested in leadership and church politics in Africa. I strongly recommend this book which has been published at the right time when the African church needs transformative church. -Palamagamba John Kabudi, University of Dar es Salaam School of Law


«Mkunga Mtingele has gifted his readers with a provocative volume, in which an insider takes a candid look at the practice and failings of a tradition which he holds dear. It is fine example of what critical theology should do. Any historian working on the ACT in post-colonial period will ignore this work at their peril. It deserves to be a vade mecum (or handbook) within the discipline.» (Fergus J. King, Mission Studies 35/2018) «I believe this volume is of significance for anyone interested in the global dimension of Anglicanism [...]» (John L. Kater, Anglican and Episcopal History, Vol.87 No.2 2018)


Author Information

Rev. Canon Dr. Mkunga H. P. Mtingele has a Ph.D. in leadership and conflict management from Open University (UK); an M.A. and Postgraduate Diploma in theological studies from Open University (UK) and St. John’s College, Nottingham (UK) respectively; as well as a LL.B. (Hons.) from the University of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. He is a former state attorney in the Ministry of Justice and a former general secretary of the Anglican Church of Tanzania. He served on the Anglican Consultative Council (1993–1999). Currently, he is General Secretary of the Bible Society of Tanzania and serves on the Global Council of United Bible Societies.

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