http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,3604,1390868,00.htmlMany people use Timbuktu to express distance and suggest something beyond a person's experience. I was a teenager before I discovered Timbuktu was in west Africa. In 2000, the city was once more a place of world importance. This time, it was because it had become the statistical centre of Christianity.
In AD 33, a possible date of the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, the statistical centre of Christianity was, not surprisingly, Jerusalem. As the Christian religion spread so its centre shifted. For the first 500 years, it moved around the Mediterranean region. Then, from AD 600 it began a journey north-westwards in a consistent trajectory. By 1000, the centre was near to Constantinople (today's Istanbul), thus coinciding with one of Christianity's great ecclesiastical and spiritual centres. By 1500, the statistical centre reached its northernmost point ever, in Budapest, at which it began a movement south that has continued to this day. In 1600, Zagreb in Croatia hosted the centre; by 1900 it arrived in Madrid, Spain, on its way to Africa. By 1970, the centre was in Morocco; 30 years later it had turned up in Timbuktu.
By 2100, it is predicted that the vast majority - almost 80% of Christians - will live in Africa, Asia, Latin America and Oceania, and that the statistical centre will be even further south, in the northern Nigerian city of Sokoto.
The Christian faith teaches that not only did God become a human being in a specific time (about 2000 years ago) and place (Bethlehem), but that every person can have an individual relationship with God. So, in one sense, every Christian is the centre of God's dealings with the world, and all those who claim to follow Christ should, in their own geographical locations, be centres - to quote St Paul - of love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, humility and self-control. That may not be statistics, but it surely is sense.