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Medical Science and Pentecost: The Dilemma of Anglicanism in Africa
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 March 2016
Extract
I begin this paper with some broad generalisations about the history of anglicanism in relation to healing. I shall contend that in East and Central Africa over the last hundred years there were simultaneously present and interacting with each other a number of tendencies which in Europe had developed over a much longer period. Thus in some ways the religious history of colonial Africa is an intensification and telescoping of the religious history of Europe.
I am assuming, then, that in England by the end of the 17th century anglicanism had come to repudiate ‘enthusiasm’ and the visible manifestations of the Holy Spirit, partly for reasons of social control. I am assuming that this more or less closed the door on spiritual healing within 18th century anglicanism and produced the characteristically ‘cool’ anglican tone. Wesley brought back into the Church of England a universe of spirits and spiritual healings and exorcisms but all this went off into early methodism and out of the 19th-century Anglican church. In this 19th-century church, before it reached out into Central African mission, a number of superficially contradictory developments took place. There was an interaction of church and medical ‘establishments’ which led to anglican involvement in public health programmes and to an intellectual commitment to the ‘divine’ origins of modern medical science. At the same time there was a revival, particularly in the countryside, of communal rituals designed to create feelings of solidarity despite the realities of class division.
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References
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41 ‘Letter from the Archdeacon of Mashonaland’.
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45 Hallward to Elaine Lloyd.
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60 T.O.Ranger, ‘Poverty and Prophetism’. In his report for the year 1930 Canon Edgar Lloyd lamented the decline in the status of the first ‘Apostolic’ generation of teachers and catechists: they were ‘men of character, but alas lacking learning, perhaps men not so dissimilar from certain of those first disciples and apostles denominated “unlearned and ignorant men”. (They) are not easily replaced and certainly not replaced adequately for this particular class of rural work, at this particular time, by younger men though they be College bred and better trained for imparting knowledge’. SPG Reports 1929. Lloyd did all he could to keep Nyabadza in the church: the split happened only after he had retired.
61 In Masasi district since Tanzanian independence there has been a great movement of charismatic healing initiated by the Anglican layman, Edmund Anderson, John. W. B., The Church in East Africa (Dodoma 1977) p 158 Google Scholar; interviews with Brenda Stone, Rondo and Bishop Hilary Chigunda, Masasi, August 1975.
62 Bucher, H., Spirits and Power. An Analysis of Shona Cosmology (Cape Town 1980) pp 204–205 Google Scholar. For a very different assessment of the spirit churches see Ndiokwere, N.I., Prophecy and Revolution (London 1981).Google Scholar
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