Survey and theological analysis of the spiritual and Pentecostal-evangelical churches in Freetown, Sierra Leone, with special emphasis on the influences of the indigenous religious pneumatology
dc.contributor.author
Smith, Donald Robert Morrison.
en
dc.date.accessioned
2019-02-15T14:22:24Z
dc.date.available
2019-02-15T14:22:24Z
dc.date.issued
1994
dc.description.abstract
en
dc.description.abstract
Experiencing and obtaining Spiritual power is the primary goal of indigenous religious
activity. The failure of evangelical missionaries to recognise and make use of this primal
praeparatio evangelica, led to the development of an educated and elitist Church in Freetown
from 1815 onwards. Krio Christianity failed to make accommodation for the African spiritual
heritage and thus produced a very alien and exclusive form of African Christianity.
The first form of Christianity to take root in Freetown was that carried across the Atlantic by
the Nova Scotians in 1792. Their Christianity, born in the Great Evangelical Awakening of
the seventeenth century, developed independent of White control. Enthusiasm, emotion and
pneumatological manifestations were major features of their worship. Nova Scotian
Christianity eventually lost its revivalistic fervour and was eventually taken over by Krio
Christianity and British missionary control. Krio Christianity failed, however, to meet the
Krios' own existential needs for spiritual power. Problem -solving power was sought along
indigenous lines. This produced in Krio Christianity a religious dualism and an identity crises.
in 1947, the Nigerian Church of the Lord (Aladura) arrived in Freetown. The "Adejobis"
challenged the Krio Christian community, but by and large, having taken the evangelical
Christianity of the Victorian era as their own traditional religion, they did not receive it. The
Spiritual churches appealed more to the non -Krio residents of the city, and particularly to the
illiterate. The style of Christianity introduced was highly indigenised. In many aspects it
appeared as the indigenous pneumatology expressed in Christian forms and terms. Its main
attractions lay in the areas of healing, problem- solving, and fortune -telling revelations.
The Pentecostal- evangelical movement arrived in Freetown as early as 1905. The first
Pentecostal church was planted among the Km in the early 1920s. After World War 2
Pentecostal- evangelical churches were begun by AOG missionaries among the Temne and
Limba. However, it was not until Pentecostal -evangelicalism took root in Krio society in the
late 60s and 70s with the formation of the "English- speaking Church ", Bethel Temple, that
general growth on a large scale began to take place in Freetown. This Krio Pentecostal - evangelical church became the model church for other Freetown Pentecostal -evangelicals.
In the present expansion of Pentecostal -evangelicalism in Freetown - now a non -Krio
movement in which the Limba are front -runners - an increasingly indigenised form of
pneumatic Christianity is developing. The interaction between the evangelical Gospel and
the indigenous pneumatology is producing a dynamic church that appeals to the whole
spectrum of Freetown society, rich and poor, literate and illiterate, Krio and Provincials. It is
apparent that as the evangelical churches need the indigenous pneumatology to enliven,
revive and make relevant their worship, the indigenous pneumatology itself needs Apostolic
doctrine and evangelical teaching to transform its chaotic unruly elements into powerful
forces for good and the Gospel. From a positive and balanced interaction, the light of Christ
and His Cross shines into the shadowy, darker side of the indigenous spirituality's pneumatic
nature and subjects its turbulent powers to the yoke of Christ and then redirects them to the
benefit and blessing of society. It is at this point that Krio Christianity with its heritage of
evangelical teaching on the nature and character of God, Christ, and the Holy Spirit, have a significant part to play in bringing its own deep insights of a theologia crucis to bear on the
popular theologia pneumatica. Krio Christianity with its unique history, African roots and
evangelical heritage is well placed for making a stabilising and salutary contribution towards
the New Testament, Apostolic development of the present dynamic Sierra Leonean Church.
en
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/33999
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.relation.ispartof
Annexe Thesis Digitisation Project 2019 Block 22
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dc.relation.isreferencedby
Already catalogued
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dc.title
Survey and theological analysis of the spiritual and Pentecostal-evangelical churches in Freetown, Sierra Leone, with special emphasis on the influences of the indigenous religious pneumatology
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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