Browsing by Author Mwandayi, Canisius

Showing results 1 to 17 of 17
Issue DateTitleAuthor(s)
2020The Bible, sexuality challenges and the development agenda: Zimbabwe’s Tertiary Institutions in Focus
2020The concept of Shiringoma among the Manyika people of Mutasa: navigating the misty horizon between reality and gullibility
2011Disenfranchisement and blessedness: a reading of the Hagar and Ishmael story in the context of the Shona and Muslim communities of Zimbabwe: a liberation approach
2014Dress as a mark of differentiation: the religious symbolism of dress in African initiated churches
2014'Eye for an eye, and tooth for tooth' - in search for lasting peace in Southern Africa
2018A forgiven Sinner? Robert Mugabe and the strained Catholic relations
2014Leviticus 19:33-34 – the forgotten injunction: a case study of ‘alien’ students in Senga and Nehosho suburbs of Gweru, Zimbabwe
2015Masturbation: sexual perversion or an act of sexual freedom? an analysis of the act in relation to the story of Onan (Genesis 38:1-10)
2021Motherhood and biosafety measures: negotiating a compromise between traditional funeral customs and public health needs in Zimbabwe in the wake of COVID-19
2011The queen mother Jezebel: a rebuttal of the deuteronomistic bias.
2013The rise of African christian consciousness: exploring the trajectories in the africanisation of the Catholic Church in Zimbabwe (1934 – 1982)
2014The role of burial markers in the socio-religious life of a People-Shona and Israelite socities in focus.
2018The silent macho man in the home: women in Biblical and African societies
2020‘Suspected killer’: Tamar’s plight (Gn 38) as a lens for illuminating women’s vulnerability in the legal codes of Shona and Israelite societies
2009A theological reflection on the on the reality of HIV / AIDS in the Southern Qudrant of Africa: a pastoral response
2012Towards a new reading of the Bible in Africa - spy exegesis
2017Towards a reform of the christian understanding of Shona traditional marriages in light of ancient Israelite marriages