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£47.99

Christian Churches and Nigeria’s Political Economy of Oil and Conflict

Baptist and Pentecostal Perspectives
By: Nkem Emerald Osuigwe

£47.99

Is African evangelical Christianity a-political? This ethnographic study of congregations in Nigeria's Niger Delta challenges that claim, revealing how their spirituality is a potent form of political praxis, not an escape from social responsibility.

The received account on African evangelical Christianity regarding social witness in a section of Western scholarship is that it is anti-development and a-political. Such an…
£47.99
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The received account on African evangelical Christianity regarding social witness in a section of Western scholarship is that it is anti-development and a-political. Such an account heavily draws from an instrumentalist and functionalist assessment of such Christianity without recourse to its emic perspective. Using the case-study method, this book presents an ethnographic examination of this functionalist reading by investigating, describing and analysing evangelical Christian theological and socio-political consciousness within the context of oil and conflict in Nigeria’s Niger Delta region. Adopting approaches from practical theology, congregational studies, and anthropology of religion, the author challenges such a reading using data gathered from three congregations in the region. His discourse revolves around answers to the following four critical questions:

• What are the underlying theological issues and beliefs of Nigerian evangelical Christians within the context of oil and conflict?
• What is their prevalent praxis within the context of Nigeria’s political economy of oil and conflict?
•How accurate is the received account that African evangelical and ‘fundamentalist’ Christianity lacks social responsibility and is a-political and anti-development?
• What would a contextual political theology for Nigeria’s political economy of oil look like?

The theological issues are varied and the prevalent praxis nuanced, which then serves as a veritable critique of the claim that African evangelical Christianity lacks social responsibility due to its preoccupation with soul-winning. Whereas such Christianity places much emphasis on the winning of souls as an expression of its spirituality, it is neither oblivious nor indifferent to its socio-political milieu. Rather it sees such spirituality as a form of political praxis. Some of the trajectories of the spirituality include a theology of conversion, a theology of prayer, and an ethics of crude oil, with Total Freedom as the nomenclature for the specific theological perspective offered for Nigeria’s political economy of oil. While locating this theological perspective within the taxonomy of Liberation Theology, the affinity and dissonance between the two are identified.

Nkem Emerald Osuigwe is a theologian-pastor. He is currently the Senior Pastor of Faith Baptist Church, Port Harcourt, Nigeria. He received his PhD in Theology and Ethics from the University of Edinburgh, Scotland. He has published extensively in journals and collaborative scholarly works. He is also the author of five other books.

Hardback

  • ISBN: 1-4438-6123-5
  • ISBN13: 978-1-4438-6123-6
  • Date of Publication: 2014-08-28

Ebook

  • ISBN: 1-4438-6709-8
  • ISBN13: 978-1-4438-6709-2
  • Date of Publication: 2014-08-28

Subject Codes:

  • BIC: HRAM1, HRAM2, HRCM
  • THEMA: QRAM1, QRAM2, QRM
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