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Through the efforts of Western missionaries and home-grown churches and evangelists, Christianity has taken root in Africa with astonishing speed, to the point that Africa is now considered one of the heartlands of world Christianity. In a surprising reversal of the nineteenth-century missionary tradition, Africa no longer merely receives missionaries but is also the source of evangelization as African-influenced Christianity spreads around the new African diaspora. While Africans have wholeheartedly appropriated the symbols, scriptures, and traditions of historical Christianity elsewhere, they have also built on the rich history of the continent's indigenous spiritual beliefs. African Christianity has been influenced by and influences these beliefs and cannot be fully understood outside of this context.In "How God Became African," Gerrie ter Haar focuses in particular on the importance of African beliefs about the spirit world and spiritual power and their relationship with Christianity. Africans have historically acknowledged a distinct but not separate world of spirits existing alongside the material world that human beings can interact with through dreams, visions, spirit possession, and miracles. Also of key importance is the acute awareness among Africans of evil in the world and of witchcraft, the channeling of that evil by humans. Ter Haar continues with a consideration of how these beliefs affect issues of human rights and development in Africa, issues that are seen elsewhere in the world as fundamentally secular.
With Christian revivals (including Evangelicals in the White
House), Islamic radicalism and the revitalisation of traditional
religions it is clear that the world is not heading towards a
community of secular states. Nowhere are religious thought and
political practice more closely intertwined than in Africa. African
migrants in Europe and America who send home money to build
churches and mosques, African politicians who consult diviners,
guerrilla fighters who believe that amulets can protect them from
bullets, and ordinary people who seek ritual healing: all of these
are applying religious ideas to everyday problems of existence, at
every level of society. Far from falling off the map of the world,
Africa is today a leading centre of Christianity and a growing
field of Islamic activism, while African traditional religions are
gaining converts in the West.
After his appointment as RC Archbishop of Lusaka in 1969, Emmanuel Milingo became aware of his healing powers. Members of his congregation believed him to be able to liberate them from evil spirits. This work examines Milingo's life and work and the conflict surrounding his healing ministry.
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