Intra-African Pentecostalism and the dynamics of power: the Living Faith Church worldwide (Winners’ Chapel) in Cameroon, 1996-2016.
Item Status
Embargo End Date
Date
Authors
Chewachong, Amos Bongadu
Abstract
The embeddedness of Pentecostal/Charismatic tenets within contemporary global
frameworks of transnational power reveals the ability of religion to shape the
sociocultural and spiritual experiences of people on the move from one place to
another. For this reason, sociologists of religion and scholars of World Christianity
have noted the rapid missionary expansion of African Pentecostal/Charismatic
movements to the northern hemisphere. Some have even referred to the missionary
work of non-western forms of Christianity in the western world as the
‘Southernisation of European Christianity’. But if the aggressive strategies adopted
by African Pentecostal/Charismatic churches in the western diaspora are intended to
reawaken Christianity in Europe, what then is the motivation for intra-African
Pentecostal/Charismatic movements in traversing national boundaries, with their
distinctive version of the Christian faith, making Africa a theatre in which Christian
missionaries are both sent and received? This thesis examines the intra-African
missionary praxis of a highly influential Nigerian Pentecostal/Charismatic church,
the Winners’ Chapel, and its accompanying power dynamics in Cameroon from 1996
to 2016. Using a qualitative research approach, the study examines the character of
transnational Pentecostal/Charismatic movements in Africa, using Winners’ Chapel
in Cameroon as a case study.
After an investigation of the emergence of the church, the study examines the
various strategies used to achieve and maintain control of the mother church in
Nigeria over its daughter church in Cameroon, such as the deployment of Nigerian
missionaries, the use of Nigerian-defined Winners’ Chapel tenets in Cameroon, the
place of sermons and testimonies, and the role of the media. The thesis studies the
conflicts of loyalty and contestations that emerge between Nigerian Winners’ Chapel
missionaries to Cameroon and their Cameroonian colleagues in Cameroon. It
concludes with an assessment of how far Winners’ Chapel can be said to contribute
to the provision of social capital and empowerment in Cameroon.
The findings in this study provide a significant and original contribution to the
understanding of how power dynamics can operate within complex relationships
between transnational Pentecostal/Charismatic actors (missionaries), and their
receiving countries colleagues in the continent of Africa. It also contributes to the
literature on African Pentecostalism but offers fresh insights into the encounters,
contestations, and resistance that emerge between ‘founder-owners’ and recruited
workers of intra-African Pentecostal/Charismatic Movements. By appropriating
international relations concepts such as Joseph Nye’s ideas of ‘soft power’ and
concepts in the sociology of religion such as Peggy Levitt’s ‘remittances’,
popularised by Afe Adogame, the study potentially unveils the nexus between
international relations, the sociology of religion and development within
Pentecostalist transnational discourses in Africa.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)

