Spirit and Spirits in African Religious Traditions
Interdisciplinary and Religio-Cultural Discourses on a Spirit-Filled World January 1, 2013 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1057/9781137268990_4 via Springer Nature
Summary
African religious traditions affirm the reality of a spirit world and engage with it for human survival, health, and longevity. Evil is understood as hyperactive, requiring religious energy to restrain supernatural evil and its influence. Continuities between African beliefs in mystical causality and pneumatic Christian piety are evident: while Western mission Christianity dismissed witchcraft beliefs as nonsensical, African-initiated Christianity affirmed them and provided alternative Christian rituals.
Study at a glance
| Design | theoretical or philosophical paper |
|---|---|
| Population | African peoples |
| Key finding | African religious traditions affirm a real spirit world, view evil as hyperactive, and show continuity with pneumatic Christian practices that affirm and ritualize beliefs in supernatural evil. |
Abstract
This chapter discusses the spirit world in African thought systems and practices. The religious traditions and beliefs of the African peoples have enough differences to merit a study of each in its own right. Nevertheless, they also display enough family resemblances for us to be able to delineate their main features and to a very reasonable extent fall on them to represent the whole. The religious traditions and practices discussed below are informed by African beliefs in the reality of the spirit world and the ardent desire to engage with it for the purposes of human survival, health, fruitfulness, and longevity. Not only are spirits real but also evil is hyperactive and much religious activity and energy goes into restraining sources of supernatural evil and their influence on human life. The continuities between African beliefs in mystical causality and the attractions to pneumatic forms of Christian piety are therefore not too difficult to find. If Western mission Christianity dismissed African beliefs in the evils of witchcraft as nonsensical, African-initiated Christianity of the pneumatic type affirmed such beliefs and provided alternative rituals for dealing with them within a Christian context.