“During the mission period, 3 out of 4 of the coastal
Indians perished. They’d lived well free, but as soon as we introduced them to a
Christian and community life, they fattened, sickened and died” – a Christian
missionary during the Christianization of the Native American peoples, The West
(Burns).
My mind goes to the parallels of devastation in my own
country, Kenya. I have observed so much of similar fattening, sickening and
dying among present-day Kenyans who have clung to a debilitating form
of Christian thought decades after the colonial missionaries left.
Not all Christian thought is created equal. It’s like wheat
from the fields that is meant to nourish. Some gets chemically altered,
bleached and reduced in nutrients so that eventually it fattens, sickens and
kills; and some is harvested and separated from the chaff just right so that
its consumption strengthens and liberates.
A Cesspool of Heartless Spirituality
But the modern-day industries that monopolize and process
Christian thought have little to no good intention. They are no different from
the missionaries of old who conquered and killed in the name of God. A lot of
modified, bleached and poisoned Christian thought is imported from the American
evangelical industries to African countries, now mostly through social media,
and consumed largely by the poor.
I receive these emaciated over-shared cookie-cutter posts
daily by Kenyan friends on social media who seem clueless about the moral
bankruptcy, greed and political machinations of the American evangelicals they
keep quoting. If these Kenyan believers are aware of this cesspool of
spirituality they keep feeding from, then they've been indoctrinated to not
judge the messenger because - they argue - "after all God uses sinners."
It's drinking from that same cesspool of spirituality that
got Kenyan evangelicals singing the praises of America's dirtiest electoral politics and its outcomes as if the brutish victor were the reincarnation of Christ himself. They were told it's all in God's Armageddon
plan and you Africans need to toe the line lest Jesus finds you unprepared. A
truly vicious gospel.
This vicious gospel is heavily sold by small faith traders
(miracle workers, guilt-peddlers, moral police, end-times preachers and
prosperity gospellers) who thrive off of selling a gospel that leaves others in
greater suffering. Like drugs that dock at the port of Mombasa, seep ghostlike
into society where unassuming consumers get hooked, sicken their minds and die while the shadowy kingpins sit pretty on a mound of dirty wealth.
Prayerful and Peace-loving Citizen
So much of the depression in poor communities comes with a
particular way of thinking and a spirituality that is itself the sting that
carries the poison. A thinking that does not allow the believer to loudly claim
power and personal responsibility to challenge what went wrong, what ails their
society, and what should be done.
It’s a thinking that claws desperately at unseen spiritual
forces that provide believers with the perfect excuses for not taking action
towards healing and freeing their community from the ravages of calculated
poverty and oppression. They leave it all to God. After all - they say - God willed them into these oppressive situations for his glory. And they have the bible to prove it. I would not wish such sickening spirituality upon the mind of a suffering enemy.
When some get tired of the boot on their necks and rise up
in protest, you will find those infected with that debilitating strain of
evangelization saying, “I’m not with those rebellious trouble-makers; I am a
prayerful and peace-loving citizen and I’ll stay in my sanctified corner
praying for calm to return for that is my portion.” As if there ever was calm
in squalor and silent suffering.
Awakening
One would think that this sting afflicts only the uneducated
hoi-polloi. Not so. Slum communities (or as some would prefer, economically
depressed neighborhoods) in Africa are also home to hundreds of
college-educated believers who feverishly share teachings from American
evangelicals while their shacks burn in political turmoil and smolder in
poverty.
One's awakening does not come without the dare to respond to
that gnawing voice in one’s conscience. It bids you read books from competing
philosophies that you’re forbidden to read and scour through critical blogs
that challenge your mind’s comfort zones. Find a leading critical thinker to
follow on social media and challenge them to duels of thought until you’re no
longer terrified of your own mind’s ability to think for itself.
If these resources are unavailable, go into seclusion and
think alone for 3 days, making sure to fast from sugary-sweet prayers of
desperation. Just you and the power of your self-healing mind. If facing your
raw thoughts by yourself scares you, find a friend who thinks very differently
from you; one you can trust to take you through critical thought without
judgement, and spend some quality time together. Do this even while your
chained mind is kicking and screaming against leaving the comfort zones built from years of being told what to believe and how to think.
Sere
2 comments:
Greetings of the day.This article really did get me.A message well written ,that needs to reach alot of ignorant people out there.I woun't deny i have been a victim at some point.Still a work in progress though,Been working on finding myself and realising the true purpose of my being .It has'nt been easy .
To cut it all short,i kindly request of you to share some of the articles and books or people i should listen to ,so as to grow spiritually.I In my learning i have realised Being spirtual is way better than being religious.
T.IA
Greeting. Thanks for reading. Apologies for a late response, I've just seen your post. A few books I'd recommend if you haven't already read them:
1. Meeting Jesus Again For The First Time, by Marcus Borg.
2. A History of God, by Karen Armstrong.
3. The Power of Myth, by Joseph Campbell.
4. Things Fall Apart, by Chinua Achebe.
5. The Healing Wisdom of Africa: Finding Life Purpose Through Nature, Ritual, and Community, by Malidoma Patrice Some.
All the best in your journey!
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