27.2. Päivi Hasu
Transcription
27.2. Päivi Hasu
Africa at prayer looks for a miracle; it is a daily appeal for the ultimate solution to illness, poverty, and misery. That is Africa of the night, of Saturdays and Sundays. Africa of the week and of the day “manages”, and corrupt and corrupting individuals die between the two worlds, struggling to survive. Kabongo, Revue Canadienne des Études Africaines 18(1),1982, p.18. Task: • In what ways can Pentecostalism possibly be interpreted as an empowering / emansipatory religion? • In which ways does it possibly (re-) produce the dominant economic and social power structures? Public Role of the Christian Churches in Post-Independent Africa I Introduction 1. General remarks about this lecture 2. Significance of Christianity and Christian churches in Africa over the past few decades historical overview Definitions: Mainline churches, AIC = African Initiated Church, Fundamentalism, Evangelicalism, Pentecostalism, neoPentecostalism, Charismatic Christianity Three central features • Faith Gospel • Deliverance theology • Christian Zionism 3. Three transitions to democracy: the role of Christian churches 1) Churches had a limited role in the independence struggles 2) Second democratic transition, multiparty democracy 3) Third democratic transition, third term debates II Christian churches in democratization 1. Domestic and external factors in the demands for democratization • • • Domestic factors a) The role of religious leaders b) Political importance of ‘popular’ and ‘mainline’ religions Church – State relations, a comparative model Francophone Africa Anglophone countries Popular religions III Religious NGOs and faith based organizations in development • Recent developments • The role of the USA? • Some analytical aspects and challenges for future 1 2 Three generations of Christian churches in Africa Pentecostals and charismatics in Africa 1) mission churches 2) African Independent churches that flourished in the 1960s 3) the contemporary charismatic churches • PC is fastest growing sector of Protestant Christianity • Urban and rural areas - emerging middle classes and the poor • Transnational networks Proportion of PCs in different countries INTRODUCTION • Pentecostals and charismatics > 20% of the national population: Zimbabwe, South Africa, Ghana, Congo-Zaire, Nigeria, Kenya, Angola, Zambia and Uganda 10% - 20% : Congo-Brazzaville, the Central African Republic, Malawi, Rwanda, Burundi, Liberia and Mozambique <10% of the population: Ivory Coast, Tanzania, Burkina Faso, Ethiopia, Cameroon, Madagascar and Sudan General developments Factors in Pentecostalism's flood of public activism 1) Democratization 2) "Top-down" mobilization 3) Muslim activism General social, cultural and economic features and characteristics of Pentecostals and Pentecostalism Globalization, modernity, media culture, diaspora, tradition Theology 1) Deliverance 2) Christian Zionism 3) Prosperity gospel KENYA KENYA • Christ Is The Answer Ministry • http://www.citam.org/ • Video 8 min: http://www.citam.org/images/stories/video/video.html • News clips 3 GHANA Religious superstars in Ghana (Paul Gifford, Birgit Meyer) • Bishop Nicholas Duncan-Williams, Action Chapel International http://www.actionchapel.org.uk/main/bishop.htm • Pastor Mensa Otabil, International Central Gospel Church http://www.centralgospel.com/about/index.php • Bishop Charles Agyin Asare, Word Miracle Church International http://www.wordmiracle.com/php/index.php?accesscheck=%2Findex.php • Bishop Dag Heward-Mills, Lighthouse Chapel International http://www.daghewardmills.org/ Ghana 18 million inhabitants, Greater Accra Region 5 million Waves of development in Accra’s new Christianity • Winners’ Chapel International (Living Faith Church Worldwide) http://winnerschapelintgh.org/wcig/testimonies/read.php NIGERIA 1) Faith gospel wave: 1979 Duncan-Williams 2) The wave with preaching – Otabil 3) Miracle healing - Agyin Asare 4) The prophetic wave - gifts of particular anointed men Some generalizations: 1) This Christianity is about success 2) Deliverance theology Nigeria demography • Christian 52% – Pentecostal 11% – Anglican 11% – Roman Catholic 13% – African Christian 18% • Ruth Marshall-Fratani • Redeemed Christian Church of God • http://home.rccg.org/home.html • Muslim 41% • Largest ethnic groups Hausa & Fulani Muslim), Igbo (Christian), Yoruba Christian and Muslim) 4 In pictures: Nigerian Pastor Power (BBC) In pictures: Nigerian Pastor Power (BBC) • Enoch Adeboye • Leader of the Redeemed Christian Church of God which is a worldwide ministry that started in Nigeria in 1952. • Chris Oyakhilome Chris Oyakhilome is one of the most popular of Nigeria's 'men of God.' • Operates in several countries in Africa, Europe and US • Oyakhilome is an accomplished stage performer, and a man of sartorial excellence with a passion for body makeover. • He preaches material prosperity and miracles: "My God is not a poor God and anybody who worships Him truly cannot be poor" • http://www.christembassy.org/ • http://home.rccg.org/home.html DIASPORA: In pictures: Nigerian Pastor Power (BBC) • Matthew Ashimolowo Pastor Matthew Ashimolowo was for a long time regarded as the richest of Nigeria's evangelists. • His Kingsway International Christian Centre (KICC) in London attracted many Nigerians living in the city and raked in a lot of money - until he reportedly attracted the attention of the British tax authorities. • Kingsway International Christian Centre (KICC), London • Pastor Matthew Ashimolowo founded KICC in 1992 with just 200 adults and 100 children. Today they have nearly 12,000 people in attendance at the main church every Sunday, making them the largest independent church in the UK and Western Europe and one of the fastest growing. • The Church is located on a 9.5-acre site in the heart of Hackney, London. The 4,000-seat auditorium has been acknowledged as the largest church to be created in the UK since the start of Christianity. Around 46 nations are represented in the congregation. http://www.kicc.org.uk/our_church.asp • KICC is an independent, interdenominational, international church. Belief: “Bible is the mind of Christ and is the inspired, infallible and authoritative Word of God” DIASPORA: Media ZIMBABWE Kingsway International Christian Centre (KICC), London • Winning Ways is a major KICC outreach programme that encompasses both print and electronic media • Through our international television and radio ministry Winning Ways, KICC is taking the Gospel to Europe, Africa, the Caribbean, the USA, Asia and the Middle East. • The television ministry touches millions of people’s lives with its practical, down-to-earth, humorous, yet biblically based approach to sharing the Word. • Over 340 million people across the globe can watch the programme, and our complement of stations is growing fast. • We are committed to using timely technology for the timeless truth. Today’s changing times has opened up Europe to strange religions and philosophies, preparing people for a God-less eternity, so there is no better time to take our message to this mess-age than now. • Europe, Africa (Nigeria, Zimbabwe, Ghana, Malawi, Zambia, Southern Africa), USA, The Caribbean (Barbados, Jamaica, Trinidad&Tobaco) 5 ZIMBABWE • • • • • • • SOUTH AFRICA David Maxwell Zimbabwe Assemblies of God Africa, ZAOGA Ezekiel Guti http://www.zaoga-fif.org/ http://homepages.uel.ac.uk/u0105669/fif_history.htm http://www.fifmi-scotland.co.uk/flags/index_2.html ZANU / PF (Zimbabwe African National Union Patriotic Front) Literature BEDIAKO, KWAME 2000“Africa and Christianity on the Threshold of the Third Millennium: The Religious Dimension”. African Affairs 99, 303–323. BROUWER, STEVE, GIFFORD, PAUL & ROSE, SUSAN D. eds 1996Exporting the American Gospel: Global Christian Fundamentalism. New York: Routledge. CORTEN, ANDRÉ & MARSHALL-FRATANI, RUTH 2001“Introduction”. Between Babel and Pentecost: Transnational Pentecostalism in Africa and Latin America. Eds. A. Corten & R. Marshall-Fratani. London: Hurst, 1–21. GIFFORD, PAUL 1995“Introduction. Democratization and the Churches”. The Christian Churches and the Democratisation of Africa. Ed. P. Gifford. Leiden: Brill, 1–13. 2001”Complex provenance of Some Elements of African Pentecostal Theology”. Between Babel and Pentecost: Transnational Pentecostalism in Africa and Latin America. Eds. A. Corten & R. Marshall-Fratani. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 62–79. HACKET, ROSALIND 1998”Charismatic / Pentecostal Appropriation of Media Technologies in Nigeria and Ghana”. Journal of Religion in Africa 28(3), 258–277. KARNER, CHRISTIAN & ALDRIDGE, ALAN 2004“Theorizing Religion in a Globalizing World”. International Journal of Politics, Culture and Society 18(1), 5–32. MAXWELL, DAVID 1998”Delivered from the Spirit of Poverty? Pentecostalism, Prosperity and Modernity in Zimbabwe”. Journal of Religion in Africa 28(3), 350– 373. MEYER, BIRGIT ”Commodities and the Power of Prayer: Pentecostalist Attitudes towards Consumption in Contemporary Ghana”. Development and Change 29, 751–776. 2004“Christianity in Africa: From African Independent to PentecostalCharismatic Churches”. Annual Review of Anthropology 33, 447–474. ROBBINS, JOEL 2004“The Globalization of Pentecostal and Charismatic Christianity”. Annual Review of Anthropology 33, 117–143. WEBER, MAX 2004[1930] The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism. London: Routledge. 6