For those who met Christ elsewhere, Americanized Christianity can look a bit strange.
According to an African proverb, “He who never travels thinks mom is the only cook.” That’s not a putdown of mom’s cooking, just an acknowledgement that there are lots of things you’ll never know if you don’t venture away from home.
Likewise, Christians who never listen to those from other parts of the world can assume the only way to practice the faith is the way you were taught and have gotten used to. That’s living on mom’s cooking.
Christians in the United States can learn a lot from believers from other parts of the world, including how unusual certain aspects of Americanized Christianity are. I interviewed pastors currently ministering in the United States who were raised and came to faith in another country. I wanted to learn what they saw and experienced of Christianity in the United States that was distinct from their country of origin. Through their eyes I saw many things about my homegrown Christian faith that I’d never noticed before. Read More
When my family first began attending the then Protestant Episcopal Church in the USA back in the early 1960s, we noticed how different that church was from the Church of England which we had attended in the UK. The PECUSA church that we began to attend showed the influence of the nineteenth century Catholic Revival far more than the C of E churches that we had attended.Image: Christianity Today
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