Paul Glen Grant is Lecturer in the History Department at the University of Wisconsin, Platteville.

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Description
Introduction: The Moral Imagination Primal Globalization The Existing Ritual Toolkit Three Hundred Years of Irrelevance Satan's Strongholds 5 How the Missionaries Became Shrine Priests Divergent Modes of Hermeneutics States of Exception Conclusion: The Cross and the Machete
It embodies what the whole book documents in detail: that in the years before the English colonizaiton it was the Africans who, in search of healing, belonging, and spiritual powers, created a new, unique form of Christianity, combining it with their religious forms and used the missionaries for this very purpose. --Martin Hailer Heidelberg "Theologische Literaturzeitung" In this well-written, historically rich, and detailed monograph, Grant sets out to understand the making of Ghanaian Christianity by exploring how indigenous intellectual and cosmological frameworks, as well as pragmatic concerns and experiences, came to shape the reception and domestication of missionary Christianity. --Karen Lauterbach "Reading Religion" Drawing richly from archival sources, Paul Grant presents a masterpiece describing the place of Christianity in Ghana's early formation. He skillfully presents the culture and faith of nineteenth-century Ghana. --Francis Benyah "International Bulletin of Mission Research" Overall, the study is smart and sensitive. The prose is exceptionally clear and a pleasure to read. Without a doubt, this book is required reading for any student interested not only in missionary activities in Africa, but also in landscapes of power, shrines, and the spiritual dimensions of imperial confrontations. --Sarah Balakrishnan "African Studies Review" ...Paul Glen Grant succeeds in bringing alive his central argument with rich ethnographic insights. The overall narrative of the book is presented from a cross-historical lens which proves a clearer prism through which to see early indigenous religious expression as a precursor of present-day Ghanaian Pentecostalism. This book will appeal to students of comparative religions and African church historiography. --Isidore Lobnibe "Journal of Ecclesiastical History" Grant's excellent exposition is highly recommended as a source for scholars and students of the history of Christianity, cross-cultural studies, comparative religion, sociocultural and general studies on Africa. --Ebenezer Ayesu "Missio Dei" ...A great book that should be read widely by scholars of global Christianity, African Christianity, mission studies, West African history, and religion more broadly --Adam H. Mohr "H-Net Reviews"
