Available Formats
Christians in the City of Nairobi: An African City and the Future of World Christianity
By (Author) Kyama Mugambi
By (author) Mark Shaw
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
20th March 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Christianity
276.7625
Hardback
192
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Founded in 1899 as little more than a train depot for the Uganda Railway, Nairobi has come a long way. This book examines the diverse expressions of Christianity in the city. Kyama Mugambi and Mark Shaw explore Metropolitan Nairobi - a city boasting a population of ten million which is one of the most religiously pluralistic cities in the world. Mosques, megachurches and temples serve as the backdrop for examining Christianity and public life in this vibrant city. Christian pluralism runs deep in the city, with 85% of Nairobi claiming allegiance to one of the thousands of different Christian churches. The city is a laboratory of a new global pluralism, and avital centre of a new global Christian pluralism specifically. Mugambi and Shaw argue that this kind of pluralism is reshaping religion everywhere in the majority world. Chapters cover all the major Christian traditions practiced in the city, including Protestantism, Orthodoxy and Catholicism. Other themes include the role of women in Christianity, Kenyan Independent Churches, and the Christian youth movement. The book illuminates how through Christianity, Africans have begun to come to terms with modern urban realities, including religious pluralism, hypothesising how this process could unfold in other parts of the world.
Kyama Mugambi is a Senior Researcher with the Centre for World Christianity, Africa International University. Mark Shaw is the director of the Centre for World Christianity and Professor of Historical Studies at Africa International University.