|
english: Articles Nigeria: Pentecostal boom—healing or reflecting a failing state? Richard Cimino - Religion Watch 1 Mar 2010 It has been a puzzle why evangelicals, and particularly Pentecostals, have long had a presence in Africa, and especially Nigeria, but it is only in the past two decades that the religion has taken off and become a major social force on the continent. In her new book Political Spiritualities
Marshall writes that the prosperity gospel, teaching that Christians can claim healing but also financial blessings, came from Pentecostals in the US (and known as the “faith movement”), but it accompanied and answered dilemmas caused by the economic boom in Nigeria during the 1980s and 1990s, such as the growth of individualism and the deterioration of the structure of kinship. Many Pentecostals were no longer willing to forsake the wealth and influence of mainstream society, even after Nigeria suffered a steep economic decline in the 1990s. In fact, the poverty and the related high rate of political corruption and violence in the country only propelled Pentecostalism into a more prominent place in Nigerian society. It was during this time that Pentecostal churches became actual financial empires; the laws (and lack of laws) encouraged prominent clergy to establish their megachurches as businesses where their earnings would be inherited and controlled along family lines. For example, the late pastor and televangelist Benson Idahosa's Church of God Mission International included a stadium, a hospital, a private university and a bank, not to mention the wealth and property owned by family members around the world. Marshall also shows how Nigerian Pentecostalism is a global phenomenon, not only because its churches, such as the Redeemed Christian Church of God, are spread through a growing Nigerian diaspora, but also because of these believers' effective use of media (especially videos and DVDs) to spread their message of miracles and prosperity. Although not unique to Nigerian Pentecostals, their other emphasis on “spiritual warfare” and battling demonic influence has a special meaning in a society where occult ritual crimes and killings occupy the headlines along with gang violence and Internet scams. Marshall writes that the Pentecostal stress on miracles and demonstrating God's power through healings and prosperity exists side-by-side with sorcerers and “witches” claiming similar supernatural powers. In such a situation, Pentecostals can face suspicions-often fanned by rival preachers and churches-that they are colluding with evil forces in their miracle-working--an accusation that had led to cases of mass violence. The fear of the Islamic revival in the north of the country has likewise been cast by many Pentecostals as a force of evil that has to be excluded from the “Christian nation.”
Marshall concludes that it is particularly the growing number of Pentecostals following such leaders as Tony Rapu, of the organization known as This Present House--Freedom Hall, trying to create a third way between the strict separatism of the earlier wave and the prosperity gospel of today who may best be able to create a civil society with a degree of justice for all of Nigeria's citizens. Richard Cimino Ruth Marshall, Political Spiritualities: The Pentecostal Revolution in Nigeria Richard Cimino is the founder and editor of Religion Watch, a newsletter monitoring trends in contemporary religion. Since January 2008, Religion Watch is published by Religioscope Institute. Website: www.religionwatch.com. URL: http://religion.info/english/articles/article_467.shtml |