Man of God Prophesy Unto Me: The Prophetic Phenomenon in African Christianity

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The Edinburgh Review of Theology & Religion, [Edinburgh]

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One of the features of African primal religions that has stood the test of time is the practice of seeking the cause of evil occurrences, power to deal with it or to avert any future reoccurrence and the search for one's destiny through divination which has been designated 'prophetism' in Christianity. The African Indigenous Churches were the first to build the bridge between primal religion and African Christianity by appropriating resources from the gospel to deal with this typical African religious practice. This essay looks at the phenomenon in primal religion, African Indigenous Churches (AICs), the older or Classical Pentecostalism, and contemporary Pentecostal movements. One can establish a continuum from primal religion to the current renewal movements with regards to prophetism, due to the deep-seated quest of the phenomenon in African worldview, which indeed was predicted by Professor C. G. Baëta, Ghana's foremost distinguished scholar who studied the phenomenon more than four decades ago

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Omenyo, C.N. (2011). Man of God Prophesy Unto Me: The Prophetic Phenomenon in African Christianity Studies in World Christianity: The Edinburgh Review of Theology & Religion, [Edinburgh] Vol 17:1, pp. 30-49.

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