News of the extended network of faculty, alumni, students, visiting researchers, and mission partners is regularly updated, and some of the big ideas or major events in Global Christianity are covered in the CGCM News.

Cambridge Center for Christianity Worldwide Seminar, 17 February 2026

We are delighted to invite you to the upcoming CCCW Day Lecture on Tuesday, 17 February, featuring Professor Dana Robert of Boston University.

Professor Robert will present a lecture titled "The Challenges of Sacred Charters for World Christianity," offering timely and critical reflections on key developments shaping World Christianity and mission in the twenty-first century.

This event will also celebrate the relaunch of "Connecting Christianities: World Christianity and Mission in the Twenty-First Century," edited by Muthuraj Swamy and Jenny Leith and published by Brill. Professor Robert is one of the editors of this significant volume, published just before Christmas 2025.

Tuesday, 17 February
4:00–5:30 PM (GMT)
Runcie Room, Faculty of Divinity

We warmly encourage colleagues, students, and friends to join us for this special lecture and book relaunch.
More details about the CCCW Day Lecture will be shared soon. 

Cambridge Center for Christianity Worldwide Seminar, 3 February 2026

Lecture: Christianity, Class, and Masculinity in Late Colonial and Postcolonial Sri Lanka
 
Join Dr. Jessica A. Albrecht (Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen–Nuremberg) on Tuesday, 3 February 2026, 4:00–5:30 PM GMT in Lecture Room 2, Faculty of Divinity, or online. This presentation analyses how these schools have produced and stabilized specific ideals of middle- and upper-class masculinity from late colonial rule into the present.
 
Click here for more information and registration. Download the flyer here.

 

 

Webinar on The Dictionary of African Christian Biography with Dr. Michèle Sigg

Since 2018, Africa has been the continent with the most Christians worldwide. In the next two decades, the growth of Christianity in Africa will far outpace that of every other continent. Since its conception in 1995, the mission of the Dictionary of African Christian Biography (DACB.org) has been to recover and preserve the history of this remarkable growth by collecting the biographies of the African men and women at the center of this narrative. This webinar will track the milestones of this now 30-year-old project, the insights gained for historical research in the 21st century, emerging approaches to collaborative scholarship, and resources for theological education in Africa.

On Thursday, 15 January 2026, at 1400 UTC, Dr. Michèle Sigg, Executive Director of the Dictionary of African Christian Biography (DACB), will introduce the role of this project in documenting the stories of our fathers and mothers.

Click here to register and for more information.

Celebrating Rodney L. Peterson’s “Book of Revelation” Book Launch

We are grateful to celebrate the book launch of Rodney L. Petersen’s new commentary on the "Book of Revelation" at Marsh Chapel on November 20, 2025.

Now a visiting scholar at Duke Divinity School, Dr. Petersen has long been a valued member of the Center of Global Christianity and Mission community. We also want to recognize the colleagues and friends—especially Rev. Dr. Casely Essamuah, Dan Carman, Jeffrey Cox, and Becky—who have been involved with the Center and helped make this celebration possible.

Cambridge Center for Christianity Worldwide Seminar, 5 Nov 2025

The Paradoxes of the Regional and the Local in Pacific Theologies and Christianities

Dr Richard Davis, Wesley House, Cambridge

Wednesday 5 November 2025, 4.00–5.30pm GMT

Lightfoot Room, Faculty of Divinity, West Road & Online

Pacific Christianity has an identity crisis. On the one hand, Pacific Christians speak of the “Pacific Way” or a common “Pacific Culture” in their perennial quest for a Pacific contextual theology. Such theologies have been based on the common experience of the sea, the communal, or “relational” nature of Pacific cultures, or the (largely) shared colonial/post-colonial experience. On the other hand, the Pacific region’s diversity makes such commonalities highly questionable, while at the same time ecumenical commitments are waning. The regionalists speak in ideological and regional terms, which cut across ethnographic methods, leading to regional theologies and frameworks which local theologians and churches are expected to adopt. In response, local and parochial theologies and Christian institutions are in the ascendancy, which ultimately threaten the regional institutions that provide the scholars and leaders of national churches. Yet while the regional approaches are failing or intellectually weak, they are needed to support regional and ecumenical Christianity in the Pacific. This paper will explore these questions and ask whether regional theologies can mediate between the universal and the local for the advantage of all.

Dr Richard Davis is the Vice Principal and Director of the Centre for Faith in Public Life​ at Wesley House, Cambridge. A New Zealander, Richard taught theology and ethics for several years at the Pacific Theological College in Fiji Islands. At Wesley House he teaches African contextual theology and supervises PhD students from around the world. His own research is in Decolonial Settler Theology, being a contextual decolonising theology for and by settlers in settler colonial societies. He has authored several publications on themes including Christianity in Oceania, political/public theology, settler colonialism, and climate justice. 

Download a flyer here.

Professor Eugenio Menegon Publishes Two New Essays

The Center for Global Christianity and Mission's Affiliated Faculty member, Professor Eugenio Menegon, recently published two new essays:

1) “Carletti and Religion: Christianity and Asian Traditions in the Ragionamenti,” in Brian Brege, Paula Findlen and Giorgio Riello eds., Trading at the Edges of Empire: Francesco Carletti’s World, ca. 1600, Florence & Cambridge (Ma.): Villa I Tatti - Officina Libraria - Harvard University Press, 2025, pp. 117-137; and,

2) “The Tragic Jesuit Embassy of the Kangxi Emperor to Pope Clement XI, and the Lisbon Experience of ‘Imperial Envoy’ Antonio Provana,” in David Salomoni, Luana Giurgevich, and Henrique Leitão eds., Santo Antão: The Jesuit College in Lisbon and Its History, Leiden: Brill, 2025, pp. 316–38.

THE SIXTH ANNUAL DANIEL J. HARRINGTON, S.J. LECTURE: THE WISDOM OF NYA MODO AND AFRO-GLOBALIZATION

Presenter: Jean Luc Enyegue, S.J., director of the Jesuit Historical Institute in Africa; lecturer in Church History at Hekima University College

Location:Theology & Ministry Library Auditorium, Brighton Campus

Free of charge

In the Ewondo language of Central Africa, a nya mdo, or “mother of man,” refers to a wise person, often an elder, whose social influence fosters communal cohesion, ethical guidance, and a sense of hope. In this lecture honoring nya mdo Fr. Daniel Harrington, S.J., Dr. Jean-Luc Enyegue, S.J. explores how nya modo can be used as a conceptual framework for interpreting African Christianity and its role within the global Church. He argues that this concept provides a compelling model for theological reflection, positioning African Christianity as as source of hope for African communities and the world at large.

Presentation of the Alumni Distinguished Service Award

Sponsored by Boston College Clough School of Theology and Minsitry

Advanced Registration Required - Register here

HDS Yang Visiting Scholars in World Christianity Now Accepting Applications for 2026-27

Apply to the Yang Visiting Scholars Program in World Christianity at Harvard Divinity School!

  Click here to see the full PDF

Please note the following description and eligibility requirements:

Responsibilities

Each visiting scholar teaches one course (either in the fall or in the spring semester) and presents their research in a public lecture, panel discussion, or events during their time at HDS. Yang Visiting Scholars are required to be in full-time residence at Harvard Divinity School while carrying out their proposed research projects and while teaching their course.

Any publication and/or research resulting from the stay at Harvard Divinity School must be credited to the Yang Visiting Scholars Program in World Christianity at Harvard Divinity School.

Eligibility

Positions are open to early career and senior scholars with doctorates in the fields of religion and to those with primary competence in other humanities, social science, and public policy fields who demonstrate a serious interest in World Christianity and hold appropriate degrees in those fields. Selection criteria emphasize the quality of the applicant's research prospectus, teaching experience, publication plans, and the significance of the contribution of the proposed research to the study of World Christianity – its cultural, social and political contexts, viewed globally, and not only through the lens of specific regions. Yang Scholars for the 2026–27 academic year must have received the PhD (doctoral) degree by June 30, 2026.

Applications are only accepted through the Harvard employment website. No hardcopy/regular mail or email applications are possible.

For more information visit our website at https://hds.harvard.edu/faculty-research/research-appointments/yang-visiting-scholars-world-christianity or contact the Yang Scholars Program Office at yangscholars@hds.harvard.edu