Lamin Sanneh (1942-2019) was D. Willis James Professor of World Christianity at Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut. His books include Disciples of All Nations: Pillars of World Christianity, Summoned from the Margin: Homecoming of an African, and Whose Religion Is Christianity?
Reviews in Religion & Theology
"Captivates from beginning to end. . . . A beautifully written,
memorable, and moving autobiography." National Catholic
Reporter
"A wonderful read about the processes of cross-cultural
engagement." Dana L. Robert
-- Boston University
"At once brave, lyrical, and profoundly moving, this book traces
the life of one of the world's great scholars. Lamin Sanneh
illuminates the contours of an African childhood, the relationship
between Islam and Christianity, and the ongoing challenges of
bridging racial and cultural differences. This powerful memoir is
both a timely commentary on issues in world Christianity and a
timeless masterpiece of the human spirit." Jonathan J. Bonk
-- Overseas Ministries Study Center
"A riveting modern-day Pilgrim's Progress by a leading world
Christian intellectual -- eloquent but not verbose, profound but
not obscure, lucid but not clichéd. Rare is the memoir that engages
its reader from beginning to end. Lamin Sanneh's is one of those."
John Sentamu
-- Archbishop of York
"Sanneh's personal journey from childhood roots in the Gambia is
told with refreshing delight in a wonderfully kaleidoscopic account
of people and places along the way. . . . As a multilayered
personal testimony from the place where civilizations meet, this is
truly a captivating read." Philip Jenkins
-- Baylor University
"I've always found Lamin Sanneh one of the very best analysts of
contemporary Christianity worldwide, but my admiration for him
grows still more when I read this disarmingly honest and
instructive autobiography. Read it if you want to learn not just
about Lamin Sanneh himself, or world Christianity, but about West
Africa, Islamic-Christian relations, the process of religious
conversion, and a host of other matters. Or just enjoy a really
well-written autobiography!" Patrick J. Ryan
-- Fordham University
"For most of the four decades I have known Lamin Sanneh, I have
urged him to write a memoir of his personal pilgrimage. At last my
prayer has been answered! I treasure this marvelous addition to the
history of Christian and African autobiography that reaches back to
Saint Augustine." Gavin D'Costa
-- University of Bristol
"Lamin Sanneh's autobiography is moving, humble, and very
thought-provoking. A convert to Christianity from Islam and now a
leading missiologist at Yale, Sanneh speaks simply from a rich and
sensitive Christian faith. . . . He has the rare quality of a top
academic as well as a humane and spiritually discerning
communicator." John B. Carman
-- Harvard Divinity School
"This moving narrative vividly portrays the many stages of Lamin
Sanneh's religious journey, connecting his personal experiences on
four continents with major cultural shifts in the last fifty years.
. . . Sanneh offers a sobering critique of Western Protestantism
and explains his confidence in the progress of African
Christianity, expressed in the mother tongue. His painful memories
of multiple rejections should sharpen our reflection on our
Christian past and present." Touchstone
"Lamin Sanneh, a highly respected professor of World Christianity
at Yale University, presents us with a sketch of his fascinating
life's journey. . . . An important book for all who struggle with
understanding the Christian journey of faith in a world that takes
so much of it for granted." Missiology
"Would you like to meet the Professor of World Christianity at Yale
University in person? ReadSummoned from the Margin where you will
encounter a humble, vulnerable genius. . . . This memoir is a 'must
read' for pastors, missionaries, seminary professors, and
students." Living Church
"The circuitous path of Sanneh's homecoming, as the journey of an
incisive mind and searching spirit, will captivate those interested
in the Gambia and West Africa, interfaith dialogue, religious
conversion, religious history, and world Christianity." Theology
Today
"Sanneh's life journey is well-worth reading." Religious Studies
Review
"An engaging story, a superior conversion narrative and a rich and
irenic discussion of a variety of cultures and religions." Anglican
Theological Review
"Lamin Sanneh's new memoir, Summoned from the Margin, begins the
long process of helping Christians in the West come to terms with
what Christianity means in its new heartland. . . . Sanneh's
outsider status gives him a perch from which to reflect on the
Euro-Atlantic church. His comments are incisive. . . . He makes the
truth come alive in a deeply personal and moving way." Church
Times
"Raised a Muslim in British West Africa, Sanneh converted to
Christianity as a young man. InSummoned from the Margin, he steps
away from academia, and tells the story of his journey into and
through the church. It is a compelling tale." World
"A wonderfully evocative memoir of moving from childhood Islam in
Gambia to a faith in Christ." Christianity Today
"Sanneh, though of royal lineage, grew up in a poor Muslim family
in the colonial Gambian village. . . . Today, however, he is an
accomplished Christian scholars whose influence traverses multiple
continents. . . . In Summoned from the Margin he reflects on the
many steps and divisions that shaped this unlikeliest of
biographies." International Bulletin of Missionary Research
"This remarkable book operates on a variety of levels. It is at
once a personal memoir, a conversion and pilgrimage story; a
running journal of travel and tasks, people and places; and an
intellectual excursion. . . . A remarkable intellectual biography.
. . . It is a valuable gift indeed." Publishers Weekly
"Sanneh, who teaches at Yale, begins this multireligious and
multicultural memoir with stories of his childhood in Gambia in a
Muslim polygamous home. . . . His story is not about race but about
interfaith dialogue, appreciation, and faith." Christian
Century
"Summoned from the Margin is a gentle, constantly engaging, irenic
and revealing story of how North American theological education
received the gift of Lamin Sanneh. . . . Sanneh wants us to read
his life as the work of a God who creates, calls, summons and
evokes. It could well be Sanneh's most enduring work and may well
be destined to take its place as one of the great spiritual
autobiographies of our age." Mission Studies
"Provides the reader a window into Sanneh's intellectual and
spiritual journey. . . . A helpful companion to scholars seeking to
understand world Christianity and interfaith dialogue. It not only
provides a rare insight both into the life and thought of a leading
Christian theologian, but also summarizes the present situation of
world Christianity both as a phenomenon and as an academic field.
Seminarians and students of religion would benefit immensely from
it."
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