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The Nagel Institute: Promoting, Partnering, Provoking

Sat, Mar 01, 2014

The logo for the Nagel Institute for the Study of World Christianity is an adinkra symbol from Ghana, one of many such Ghanaian symbols often used on fabric or pottery.

The one chosen by the , the akomantoaso, looks a little like four shovels linked by a circle, but is in fact symbolic of linked hearts.

It represents understanding, agreement, trust and partnership and thus, said , 鈥渋s a most fitting emblem for an institute which aims to link Christian scholars worldwide.鈥

Although the elements of the akoma ntoaso are not actually shovels, that metaphor is also apropos for the Nagel Institute, said Carpenter. For eight years now, the institute has been doing yeoman鈥檚 work with partners around the globe as it tries to promote a deeper understanding of world Christianity, to partner with Christian scholars and study centers, and to provoke a reorientation of Christian thought in the North Atlantic.

鈥淥ur three P鈥檚,鈥 Carpenter said with a low chuckle. 鈥淭hey have been with us since the beginning and they guide us still.鈥

Indeed when the Nagel鈥檚 initial, endowing benefactors, Calvin alumni Doug and Lois Nagel, created their eponymous institute, they had been supporters of front-line Christian missions for many years, and they understood the strategic needs of rising Christian movements in the global South and East.

The Nagels 鈥渞ecognized that if the Gospel is going to go deep and be transformative in the world鈥檚 varied cultures, it needs to be applied to all realms of life, and this kind of discipleship and witness takes much thought,鈥 recalls Carpenter, who as Calvin鈥檚 then-provost was involved in the beginning conversations. 鈥淭here is an intellectual and cultural mission to engage, worldwide, and by their endowing gift, Doug and Lois acknowledged and supported this strategic mission.鈥

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Expanding interest in the growth of Christianity

In 2006, Carpenter said there was a growing interest in where and how Christianity was growing outside of North America, particularly in Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Pacific region. There also was a sense that European and North American Christianity were about to be significantly shaped by followers of the faith who were leaving their homelands for cities on the two continents.

Neither one of those things has changed eight years later. In fact, both trends continue to accelerate.

A 2011 report, called , from the Pew Research Center鈥檚 Forum on Religion & Public Life found that there were 2.18 billion Christians in the world from a global population at the time of almost 7 billion people.

But, they wrote, 鈥淐hristians are also geographically widespread, so far-flung, in fact, that no single continent or region can indisputably claim to be the center of global Christianity.鈥

That was a big change from a century prior when most of the world鈥檚 Christians lived in Europe.

A global faith

鈥淐hristianity,鈥 the Pew report added, 鈥渉as grown enormously in sub-Saharan Africa and the Asia-Pacific region, where there were relatively few Christians at the beginning of the 20th century. The share of the population that is Christian in sub-Saharan Africa climbed from nine percent in 1910 to 63 percent in 2010, while in the Asia-Pacific region it rose from three percent to seven percent. Christianity today, unlike a century ago, is truly a global faith.鈥

Tracking that shift, and the ways in which Christianity in Europe and North America is changing because of immigration patterns, has been the province of the Nagel Institute via a variety of research, publishing and faculty development projects.

Among the highlights in just the past few years:

  • In May 2013, the Nagel Institute received funding and authorization from the John Templeton Foundation and the Issachar Fund Initiative to assess the needs and opportunities for funding projects and programs in sub-Saharan Africa.
  • Carpenter and Calvin political science professor Kevin den Dulk co-edited Religion, Society and the Rule of Law: Christianity in Chinese Public Life, essays that resulted from Nagel鈥檚 third faculty development seminar, 鈥淩eligion, Society, and the Rule of Law,鈥 in China in 2011.
  • A trio of books on primal religions was published as a result of a Nagel-funded, four-year collaborative research project coordinated by the Akrofi-Christaller Institute in Ghana.
  • The concluded three years of intensive programmatic work with Chinese philosophers, funded by the John Templeton Foundation, in partnership with the Society of Christian Philosophers.
  • A partnership began with Baylor University Press for a series of books on world Christianity, including , by Sun Deuk Oak, published in fall 2013 and named favorite book of the year by Books & Culture magazine.
  • A new book series was begun with Baker Academic called Turning South: New Directions in Christian Scholarship, with Nick Wolterstorff鈥檚 Journey Toward Justice: Personal Encounters in the Global South published in November 2013 and titles to come from literary scholar Susan van Zanten and historian Mark Noll.
  • A seminar called 鈥溾 was held in summer 2013 in Brazil that looked at the interplay of faith and public life in that country with visits to Rio de Janeiro (focusing on poverty and violence), Brasilia (focusing on religion and politics) and Manaus (focusing on environmental stewardship).
  • The 鈥,鈥 was held in the summer of 2013, a two-week seminar with Christian intellectuals working in the visual arts, half from the United States and half from Africa.

Partnering is paramount

鈥淭he work we do, we do with other people,鈥 said Carpenter. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 our basic MO; we partner. We don鈥檛 have a big footprint here. That鈥檚 deliberate.鈥

But Carpenter is quick to add that the Nagel鈥檚 home base at Calvin College is critical to the institute鈥檚 ability to find partners around the globe.

鈥淐alvin has a strong record of encouraging and supporting scholarship, and it is one of the leading institutions among North American Christian colleges and universities for promoting rigorous inquiry from Christian perspectives,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd Calvin鈥檚 faculty has a growing investment in studies pertaining to Christianity in the global South and East.鈥

On such faculty member is , who twice has gone on Nagel-sponsored trips with fellow artists from Christian colleges in North America, the first to Indonesia and the most recent in the summer of 2013 on the R5 trip to South Africa (the R5 moniker represents the five critical issues that South African artists wrestle with: remembrance, resistance, reconciliation, representation and re-visioning).

A native of Canada and a 1983 Calvin graduate, Van Reeuwyk said the first experience in Indonesia changed her life. When offered a chance to go to South Africa, she did not hesitate.

鈥淚t is a country that has been always close to my heart,鈥 she said. 鈥淢y parents chose to immigrate to Canada, but South Africa was certainly an option at the time. I鈥檝e closely followed the events over the past 30 years, incorporated elements of South African history and literature in courses that I taught, and prayed for a country devastated by apartheid and finally moving into democracy.鈥

For two weeks VanReeuwyk and 10 fellow North American artists journeyed throughout South Africa alongside 10 artists from the African continent. They examined how South African artists have engaged the five R鈥檚, how they have created art in response to them, and they considered how the South African artistic experience might reorient the approach of North American artists.

Now all of the artists are working on pieces for an exhibition titled 鈥淪hadows and Light鈥 that will debut at Xavier University in New Orleans in September 2014 and thereafter will travel the country, including appearances in North America and Africa.

VanReeuwyk is partnering with two female artists from Ghana and South Africa on a three-part piece for the upcoming exhibition. 鈥淚t is based on the experience of the townships we visited,鈥 she said. 鈥淪uch utter poverty and yet the arts and faith exist and flourish. Working through these images of the places we visited and the experiences we had with the people confirmed for me the absolute importance of the arts in all aspects of life and living.鈥

VanReeuwyk recalled a visit to the Regina Mundi, a Catholic parish in Soweto close to where Nelson Mandela lived.

鈥淲e were greeted with warm and genuine welcomes and immediately swept into the environment of music,鈥 she recalled. 鈥淎 brightly colored stained-glass window stretched along one side of the large church depicting important moments in the movement, including images of Nelson Mandela and Desmond Tutu. The experience was stunning.鈥

Carpenter said those moments are embedded in the Nagel Institute鈥檚 DNA. 鈥淥ne of our advisers, when we began dreaming about the Nagel eight years ago, was the late Kwame Bediako [a theologian from Ghana],鈥 he said. 鈥淚 remember he was concerned about all of the study centers in the West. Their relationship to the global South, he thought, was often exploitive. So he challenged us to help Christian institutions grow and thrive elsewhere, to look outward.

鈥淗e told me: 鈥榃e don鈥檛 want to be part of the next curio collection.鈥 That was good advice, and it鈥檚 enabled us to be involved since the start in ever so much more.鈥

Phil de Haan is Calvin鈥檚 senior public relations specialist.

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