“I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly.” The Prosperity Gospel in the South African Context By Donald Stuart May 3, 2008 Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of Requirements For the Degree of Bachelor of Arts The Department of Religion Middlebury College Advisor: Felix Asiedu Approved______________________________ Chair, Department of Religion 2 Table of Contents Acknowledgements……………………………………………………………………………….3 Introduction……………………………………………………………………………………….4 Chapter 1: The African Independent Church Movement: A South African Entity……………………………………………………………………………7 Chapter 2: The Gospel of Prosperity…………………………………………………………….35 Chapter 3: A Window into the South African Experience: Four Case Studies………………………………………………………………………………..58 Chapter 4: Why South Africa?.………………………………………………………………….74 Postscript………………………………………………….……………………………………...88 Bibliography……………………………………………………………………………………..92 3 Acknowledgements The lesson that has proved most valuable in writing this thesis has been experiencing the long-term writing and researching process, and I would like to thank the many people who have played an influential role in that process which began last spring as I communicated with my academic advisor, Larry Yarbrough, regarding this topic. Not only did Professor Yarbrough encourage my exploration of this topic, but he has been a constant source of support and guidance throughout my experience at Middlebury. I would also like to thank James Davis who helped me to specify the focus of my thesis and graciously agreed to be second reader. The final and most important faculty link in this process has been Felix Asiedu, who took me on as his fourth thesis student this year. I am particularly indebted to Professor Asiedu for his often enigmatic tactics that forced me to truly take ownership of this project and wrestle with the challenging questions myself. In that, Professor Asiedu provided both support and confidence in my own capabilities which, at times, I doubted. Though I may not have fully appreciated these tactics during the writing process when I would have much preferred direct, clear answers, upon conclusion, I now know that this was a distinct part of Professor Asiedu’s desire to allow me to grow as a researcher and a writer. I would also like to add thanks to three of my friends, Bethany, Jamie and Sarah, whose strong interest in Africa has clearly rubbed off on me. Without their influence, I am sure that I would have never undertaken this project. Finally, I would like to thank my parents whose support of my varied pursuits has always been unwavering. 4 Introduction “Donnie, didn’t you like the way the pastor laid his hands on me and prayed out loud that in Jesus name I would prosper and become rich? Thanks be to God, in Jesus name it will be true. Wasn’t that message powerful?”1 Faced with this question, I did not know how to respond to the woman with whom I was staying in South Africa. No, I did not think the message was powerful; in fact, I was staunchly opposed to the pastor’s words and actions, but could I share this with Thembi? Money had never been a source of concern in my privileged, American life; therefore, despite our shared faith, who was I to challenge my homestay mother’s viewpoint when my financial needs had always been satisfied? It was in this moment that money and religion, two powerful forces in our society, which I had previously encountered as separate entities, became unified. The prosperity gospel represents the confluence of these two forces in a strain of Christianity which preaches that God wants his followers to be rich. The central tenet of this teaching is that those who have enough faith are entitled to receive blessings from God which will make them prosper. Christianity is growing at incredible rates in Sub-Saharan Africa, and prosperity preaching is especially strong in this region. An incredible evangelistic tool, the prosperity gospel offers believers redemption accompanied by monetary gain. This is grace which includes a pot of gold. It is therefore unsurprising that the church is growing rapidly in this region; who would not want to join a movement that has centuries of credibility, upstanding moral principles, and now a promise of financial abundance? With the prosperity gospel, 1 Thembi Khumalo, personal conversation with homestay mother, 21 Feb. 2007. 5 Christianity has joined the materialistic, consumer-oriented bandwagon that defines our world today. One place in which this strain of Christianity has been spreading with great vigor is South Africa. Colored by a convoluted history and the notable relic of the apartheid legacy, South Africa is an especially interesting country in which to analyze the prosperity gospel. Today, South Africa stands as a shining economic star at the base of the African continent with a healthy Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and a stable government only fourteen years after its transition from the end of apartheid. Yet, beneath the surface the plights of poverty that are common throughout Africa remain strewn perilously across the South African landscape. With one of the highest AIDS infection rates in the world, South Africa’s public health system is running on overdrive. Despite its economic successes, there remains incredible disparity between rich and poor. By understanding South Africa’s present situation in light of its past, the goal of this paper is to assess why the prosperity gospel has taken root in South Africa. In order to explore this idea, the first chapter will outline the historical framework for the place of Christianity in South Africa. After assessing the colonial mission efforts, it will turn to the indigenous church movements that developed in the early twentieth century as a result of dissatisfaction with mission churches. Understanding the South African nature of these independent church movements will inform the subsequent analysis of the prosperity gospel. Historicizing the place of Christianity in South Africa will provide an appropriate foundation from which the remainder of this thesis can build. The second chapter will also provide integral support to our foundational understanding by exploring the prosperity gospel in detail. In addition to documenting the history of this movement, this chapter will consider the biblical passages that are used both to justify and 6 criticize the prosperity gospel. In order to place this broad understanding of the prosperity gospel in the South African context, the third chapter will investigate case studies of four prosperity churches in South Africa. Each of these churches offers a distinct perspective and will contribute in a unique way to our understanding of the South African nature of the prosperity gospel. In the fourth chapter, I will address the central question of this thesis by analyzing the specifically South African characteristics of the prosperity gospel. Historical, economic, and religious forces have combined to make the prosperity gospel in South Africa a compelling and viable movement for people of all backgrounds. Given this knowledge, the final objective of this paper will be to determine the implications of these findings for South Africa’s future. Will the prosperity gospel continue to grow? If this movement continues to expand what will be the implications for South African society? Moreover, in closing I will attempt to situate this movement in its broader global context by considering how the force of capitalism may have contributed to the explosion of the prosperity gospel worldwide. 7 Chapter 1 - The African Independent Church Movement: A South African Entity Christianity and Colonization Politically, socially, economically, and religiously, colonialism had a profound effect on native South Africans. Jean and John Comaroff, two historians who have completed a significant amount of respected scholarship on South Africa, note that this encounter was dialectical due to the changes that it brought about for everyone and everything involved in its experience.2 Furthermore, the Comaroffs emphasize the need to place the developments relating to Christianity in Africa within a broader historical, social and cultural context.3 The same sensitivity must be applied to the investigation of the prosperity gospel. By framing the development of Christianity as well as the prosperity gospel against their broader contexts, one can better understand the distinctly South African nature of these movements. In addition to Christianity the Europeans brought the forces of mercantilism and civilization to South Africa.4 Despite the mark of European society left by colonization, South Africans did not neglect their traditions and forget their past. The experience of colonization, rather, was an amalgamation of ideas, practices and beliefs as South Africans incorporated aspects of the Europeans’ message into their lives, but remained decidedly African. Particularly for Christianity this resulted in strains of belief that strayed from those which the missionaries were attempting to cultivate.5 Instead of exploring Christianity through the same lens as a European, South Africans did so through a particular cultural lens, to which the Europeans could 2 John L. and Jean Comaroff, Of Revelation and Revolution, Vol. 2. (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1997): 5-6. 3 Birgit Meyer, “Christianity in Africa: From African Independent to Pentecostal-Charismatic Churches,” Annual Review of Anthropology 2004: 450. 4 Comaroff, 5-6. 5 Comaroff, 85. 8 not necessarily relate.6 This was a natural response to exposure to a new idea. Making sense of the new European ideas would have been impossible if they remained rigidly set in a different cultural context. Thus, one reason for Christianity’s growth in South Africa was its interaction with traditional African practices and beliefs. In order to understand later developments within Christianity in South Africa, it is necessary to first consider its “Africanization.” This transformed, Africanized Christianity broke away from the strictures of mission Christianity and forged its own identity informed by both Christianity and local values.7 The seeds for formal developments within African Christianity lay in the voices of prophets who in the mid-19th century began growing in importance by drawing on both local and Judeo-Christian traditions.8 African Christianity eventually became institutionalized in the forms of the Ethiopian and Zionist churches. Both of these movements directly challenged the authority of the mission churches and attempted to domesticate Christian values into the South African context. The Comaroffs write, “In unyoking the Christian legacy and making it their own African reformers seized its potential and put it to work in the attempt to nurture a sense of collectivity.”9 Though the missionaries initially attracted converts, European practices were not the most effective way to galvanize the South African populace. Christianity had to change and address the specific needs of Africans in order for it to spread its influence to all corners of South Africa. Only native Africans could bring about the change that would allow this to happen. 6 Comaroff, 87. 7 Comaroff, 100. 8 Comaroff, 96. 9 Comaroff, 106. 9 Indigenous South African Church Movements The specific movements of Ethiopianism and Zionism shed light on how, at an institutional church level, this transformation occurred within South African Christianity. Founded in 1892 on the Witwatersrand by a former Wesleyan minister, Mangena M. Mokone, the Ethiopian church was one attempt of African emancipation from mission authority.10 Mokone was frustrated by racism within the Methodist church, and justified the foundation of his Church through the following verse from the book of Psalms: “Ethiopia shall soon stretch out her hands unto God.”11 His interpretation of this verse validated the formation of an African church under the direction of African leaders.12 While this move was directly related to oppression within the Church, it was also a response to broader societal subjugation. In this epoch there was an emerging sense of Pan-African identity and black consciousness that was represented by the formation of an African press and other organizations including the South African Native National Congress (later ANC) in 1912.13 In the context of these “Ethiopian” Churches, black Christians could bind themselves into a community that upheld Christian principles outside of the context of a racial hierarchy. Furthermore, by orienting itself to the Church in Ethiopia, which had been in existence for centuries, Mokone clung to Christianity’s African roots. This African symbolism, in opposition to the white-controlled churches, was an integral feature of the Ethiopian church. The first of the African Independent Church (AIC) movements in South Africa, the Ethiopian churches remained smaller than their Zionist counterparts, and they more closely 10 Bengt G. M. Sundkler, Bantu Prophets in South Africa (London: Oxford University Press, 1964): 38. 11 Psalm 68: 31, NRSV and Sundkler, 39. 12 Comaroff, 100. 13 Comaroff, 106. 10 resembled the Protestant mission churches in structure, doctrine and dress.14 For example, the Presbyterian Church of Africa retained the same constitution, hymnbook, doctrine, and style of service as the mission church from which it separated. This church, like other Ethiopian churches did not remain formally connected to its original mission church.15 The term Ethiopian is more often used by outsiders to classify these types of churches, which do not have one specific name. In addition to the Presbyterian Church of Africa, an example of this type of church is the Zulu Congregational Church.16 Though both of these are “Ethiopian-type” churches, they clearly have different names and mission church roots. Nevertheless, they both represent the movement away from the mission churches that Mokone commenced in 1894 and the forging of an African identity within the church apart from white influence. This separation from the mission churches was the defining feature of Ethiopian churches. These churches were inherently political as they challenged the white authority present within the mission churches.17 Since they were a direct response to churches established by the white authority, they represented a challenge to the existing power structure. This political nature, even though not overt, was greater than that of the Zionist churches. The other branch of AICs that were founded around the turn of the century was the Zionist churches. This church movement was born in the United States when John Alexander Dowie founded the Christian Catholic Apostolic Church in Zion in 1896. In his teaching Dowie emphasized the imminent second coming of Jesus, divine healing and triune immersion. The 14 Martin West, Bishops and Prophets in a Black City: African Independent Churches in Soweto, Johannesburg (Cape Town: David Philip, 1975): 17. 15 Marjorie Hope and James Young, The South African Churches in a Revolutionary Situation (Maryknoll, New York: Orbis Books, 1983): 173. 16 West, 17. 17 The RICSA Report, “Faith Communities and Apartheid,” Facing the Truth: South African Faith Communities and the Truth & Reconciliation Commission, eds. James Cochrane, John de Gruchy, & Stephen Martin (Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press, 1999): 27.
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