Plantatio Ecclesiae in Africa: From Tutelage to Maturity

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25159/2412-4265/7358

Keywords:

Catholic Church, indigenisation, Native clergy, Racism, Colonialism

Abstract

Wladimir d’Ormesson, a French diplomat at the Vatican, in praise of François Méjan’s 1957 book, Le Vatican contre la France d’Outre-Mer, expressed with bitterness and regret that the “civilisation” which French missionaries had helped to spread in mission lands had sadly turned against French interests. “[W]e are showered with ingratitude on all sides. We have spread civilization far and wide,” he wrote. “[A]nd now this civilisation pushes us away in the very name of the doctrine that gave rise to it … it is a bitter cycle.” The bitterness and regret of d’Ormesson were directed against the Vatican’s new missionary policy on Africa. That policy, understood as Plantatio Ecclesiae, was predicated upon indigenisation in terms of allowing African priests to assume positions of authority and leadership in their emerging local churches. It became the bone of contention between the Vatican and some missionary congregations. On the flip side, the desire among some African native clergy, to see the evolution of an African church in an independent Africa, in many instances brought about misunderstanding and tension. This essay intends to highlight the bumpy roads that popped up in attempts to root the local church in the post-missionary era in Africa.

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Author Biography

Valentine Ugochukwu Iheanacho, University of the Free State

Post Doctoral Research Fellow, Department Historical and Constructive Theology

Faculty of Theology and Religion

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Published

2020-08-31

How to Cite

Iheanacho, Valentine Ugochukwu. 2020. “Plantatio Ecclesiae in Africa: From Tutelage to Maturity”. Studia Historiae Ecclesiasticae 46 (1):18 pages. https://doi.org/10.25159/2412-4265/7358.

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Section

Articles
Received 2020-02-17
Accepted 2020-04-27
Published 2020-08-31