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In this volume, Aurélien Mokoko Gampiot, a sociologist and son of
a Kimbanguist pastor, provides a fresh and insightful perspective
on African Kimbanguism and its traditions. The largest of the
African-initiated churches, Kimbanguism claims seventeen million
followers worldwide. Like other such churches, it originated out of
black African resistance to colonization in the early twentieth
century and advocates reconstructing blackness by appropriating the
parameters of Christian identity. Mokoko Gampiot provides a
contextual history of the religion’s origins and development,
compares Kimbanguism with other African-initiated churches and with
earlier movements of political and spiritual liberation, and
explores the implicit and explicit racial dynamics of Christian
identity that inform church leaders and lay practitioners. He
explains how Kimbanguists understand their own blackness as both a
curse and a mission and how that underlying belief continuously
spurs them to reinterpret the Bible through their own prisms.
Drawing from an unprecedented investigation into Kimbanguism’s
massive body of oral traditions—recorded sermons, participant
observations of church services and healing sessions, and
translations of hymns—and informed throughout by Mokoko
Gampiot’s intimate knowledge of the customs and language of
Kimbanguism, this is an unparalleled theological and sociological
analysis of a unique African Christian movement.
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