The encounter between traditional beliefs in the Sara-Kaba region of Africa and Christianity has always given rise to considerable debate. The reader of this book will be struck by the novelty of the questioning. The first point leads us to raise the question of the sara kaba man (black man), breaking with racist colonial lives, for whom the religious beliefs of the sara -kaba (black people) are "primitive". The second point leads us to consider the possibility of a purely sara-kaba (African) Christology. This leads us to ask the following question: can one become a good Christian while remaining sara-kaba (African)? By way of answer, we propose one possibility: INCULTURATION, as we read it, "is understood as a global process of incarnating the Gospel, the Faith in Christ in every culture, in every non-Christian religious belief, with a view to purifying them in the light of biblical truth".