Concerned about Purity and Power: The Zionist Churches in Southern Africa

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Titel: Concerned about Purity and Power: The Zionist Churches in Southern Africa
Autoren: Christoffer H. Grundmann
Quelle: Kulturní Studia, Vol 2, Iss 2025, Pp 3-27 (2025)
Verlagsinformationen: Kulturní studia, 2025.
Publikationsjahr: 2025
Bestand: LCC:Ethnology. Social and cultural anthropology
Schlagwörter: african indigenous churches (aics), zionist churches, prophet-healer movements, faith healing, christianity, southern africa, ritual practice, religion and medicine, intercultural theology, Ethnology. Social and cultural anthropology, GN301-674
Beschreibung: The emergence of African Indigenous Churches (AICs) in sub-Saharan Africa during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries constitutes a paradigmatic case for interdisciplinary inquiry. It has attracted the attention of historians, sociologists, cultural and medical anthropologists, scholars of religion, theologians, and many others. Rooted in a conscious break with the colonial past, while at the same time assimilating elements of the European Holiness movement and the North American Healing movement, the AICs form a highly diverse and dynamic constellation of church-like bodies, today numbering well in excess of 10,000. Approximately thirty per cent of African Christians are affiliated with one of these churches, which are commonly classified according to distinctive characteristics—the defining feature of the Zionist type of AIC being its emphasis on healing. This article first outlines the emergence of Prophet-Healer/Zionist type churches (I), then proceeds to examine their worship, ritual practices, and congregational life (II), and finally highlights issues that invite further interdisciplinary discussion and research (III).
Publikationsart: article
Dateibeschreibung: electronic resource
Sprache: Czech
German
English
Russian
Slovak
ISSN: 2336-2766
Relation: https://kulturnistudia.cz/concerned-about-purity-and-power-the-zionist-churches-in-southern-africa/; https://doaj.org/toc/2336-2766
DOI: 10.7160/KS.2025-02(25).01
Zugangs-URL: https://doaj.org/article/b95d25c8703c45e3adf10999df49c8aa
Dokumentencode: edsdoj.b95d25c8703c45e3adf10999df49c8aa
Datenbank: Directory of Open Access Journals
Beschreibung
Abstract:The emergence of African Indigenous Churches (AICs) in sub-Saharan Africa during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries constitutes a paradigmatic case for interdisciplinary inquiry. It has attracted the attention of historians, sociologists, cultural and medical anthropologists, scholars of religion, theologians, and many others. Rooted in a conscious break with the colonial past, while at the same time assimilating elements of the European Holiness movement and the North American Healing movement, the AICs form a highly diverse and dynamic constellation of church-like bodies, today numbering well in excess of 10,000. Approximately thirty per cent of African Christians are affiliated with one of these churches, which are commonly classified according to distinctive characteristics—the defining feature of the Zionist type of AIC being its emphasis on healing. This article first outlines the emergence of Prophet-Healer/Zionist type churches (I), then proceeds to examine their worship, ritual practices, and congregational life (II), and finally highlights issues that invite further interdisciplinary discussion and research (III).
ISSN:23362766
DOI:10.7160/KS.2025-02(25).01