Moratorium to Preserve Cultures: A Challenge to the Apostolic Faith Mission Church in Zimbabwe?

Authors

  • Robert Matikiti Christ College of Zimbabwe

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25159/2412-4265/1900

Keywords:

Moratorium, culture, Pentecostal, Azusa Street revival, Christocentric, missiological, Apostolic Faith Mission (AFM)

Abstract

This historical study will demonstrate that each age constructs an image of Jesus out of the cultural hopes, aspirations, biblical and doctrinal interfaces that make Christ accessible and relevant. From the earliest times, the missionaries and the church were of the opinion that Africans had no religion and culture. Any religious practice which they came across among the Africans was regarded as heathen practice which had to be eradicated. While references to other Pentecostal denominations will be made, this paper will focus on the first Pentecostal church in Zimbabwe, namely the Apostolic Faith Mission (AFM). Scholars are not agreed on the origins of Pentecostalism. However, there is a general consensus among scholars that the movement originated around 1906 and was first given national and international impetus at Azusa Street in North America. William J. Seymour’s Azusa Street revival formed the most prominent and significant centre of Pentecostalism, which was predominantly black and had its leadership rooted in the African culture of the nineteenth century. Despite this cultural link, when Pentecostalism arrived in Zimbabwe from 1915 onwards, it disregarded African culture. It must be noted that in preaching the gospel message, missionaries have not been entirely without fault. This has resulted in many charging missionaries with destroying indigenous cultures and helping to exploit native populations for the benefit of the West. The main challenge is not that missionaries are changing cultures, but that they are failing to adapt the Christocentric gospel to different cultures. Often the gospel has been transported garbed in the paraphernalia of Western culture. This paper will argue that there is a need for Pentecostal churches to embrace good cultural practices in Zimbabwe.

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Author Biography

Robert Matikiti, Christ College of Zimbabwe

Lecturer, Church History Department

References

Bakare, S. 1997. The Drumbeat of Life, Geneva: WCC Publications.

Knitter, F. P. 1985. No Other Name, London: SCM Press Ltd.

Knitter, F. P. 2004. Introducing Theologies of Religions., New York: Orbis Books.

Manyoba, C.B. 1991. “The Methodist Church and its Response to Culture.†In Century of Methodism in Zimbabwe, edited by C. S. Banana. Harare: The Methodist Church in Zimbabwe.

Mills, C. 1995. African Traditional Religion, London, SCM Press.

Pobee, J. S. 1998. African Initiatives in Christianity. Geneva: WCC Publications.

Wakatama, P. 1976. Independence for the Third World Church: An African’s Perspective on Missionary Work. Illinois: InterVarsity Press.

Zigomo L. 1998. “Do We Have a Culture of Human Rights in Zimbabwe?†Women Plus (ZWRCH), no. 3 (2).

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Published

2017-07-13

How to Cite

Matikiti, Robert. 2017. “Moratorium to Preserve Cultures: A Challenge to the Apostolic Faith Mission Church in Zimbabwe?”. Studia Historiae Ecclesiasticae 43 (1):138-48. https://doi.org/10.25159/2412-4265/1900.

Issue

Section

Articles
Received 2016-11-10
Accepted 2017-05-23
Published 2017-07-13