About CHRISTE
The Christian Institute for Theological Engagement (CHRISTE) is a gathering of Christian academic scholars and specialised practitioners seeking to:
CHRISTE cultivates an ecumenical Christian orientation to promote a common witness. We embrace a generous theological stance that is guided by reverence for the Great Tradition of the Christian faith, that is, a faith shaped by the ecumenical creeds of the ancient undivided church.
CHRISTE bases its theological interactions on academic research and specialised professional practices. Our academic work and theological reflections are communicated through lectures, interviews, seminars, forums, and writings. These are published either in digital forms through social media or in print and made accessible to people globally.
CHRISTE interacts primarily but not exclusively with the following concerns:
- engage in ecumenical Christian thought with special focus on cross-disciplinary studies relevant to contextual issues impacting contemporary society; and
- promote the study of Christian Theology and Interfaith Dialogue among the Christian populace in order to facilitate a germination of Christian theological reflection.
CHRISTE cultivates an ecumenical Christian orientation to promote a common witness. We embrace a generous theological stance that is guided by reverence for the Great Tradition of the Christian faith, that is, a faith shaped by the ecumenical creeds of the ancient undivided church.
CHRISTE bases its theological interactions on academic research and specialised professional practices. Our academic work and theological reflections are communicated through lectures, interviews, seminars, forums, and writings. These are published either in digital forms through social media or in print and made accessible to people globally.
CHRISTE interacts primarily but not exclusively with the following concerns:
- Ecumenical dialogue
- Interreligious dialogue
- Inculturation
- Women and children in society
- Ecological concerns
- Modernity
- Spirituality
- Morality and ethics
- Socio-economic matters
- Colonial history