961100 IBM0010.1177/2396939320961100International Bulletin of Mission ResearchAmenga-Etego et al.
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Language, Literature, Prayer, Mission Research2021, Vol. 45(2) 111 –120
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Spirituality and Values
Rose Mary Amenga-Etego
Department for the Study of Religions, University of Ghana, Legon, 
Ghana, and University of South Africa (UNISA)
Abraham Nana Opare Kwakye
Department for the Study of Religions, University of Ghana, Legon, 
Ghana
Ngozi Emeka-Nwobia
Department of Linguistics, Ebonyi State University, Abakaliki, Nigeria
Paul Onovoh
Minister and independent scholar, Atlanta, GA, USA
Sara Fretheim
Institute for Missiology and the Study of Theologies beyond Europe, University of Münster, Münster, 
Germany
Abstract
Every interreligious encounter produces a cross-fertilization of ideas and values. 
To what extent is the Christian-African indigenous religious encounter mutually 
impacting? And what aspects of the African worldview make it receptive to 
Christianity? This article addresses these questions by engaging the underexplored 
phenomena of African literature, music, and prayer as sources of African values and 
Corresponding author:
Rose Mary Amenga-Etego, Department for the Study of Religions, University of Ghana, Legon, Ghana, 
and University of South Africa (UNISA). 
Email: rosem.etego@gmail.com
112 International Bulletin of Mission Research 45(2)
spirituality, as well as of Christian theology. Through in-depth interviews, focused 
group discussions, participant-observation, along with archival data and African 
literary works, it argues that the wealth of African metaphors and values therein 
richly express African spirituality, values, and Christian theology.
Keywords
African spirituality, Christian theology, values, language, literature, orality
This article reports on an interdisciplinary study that challenges the current overlooked 
and undervalued state of literature, music, and prayer in the study of African 
Christianity. The authors argue that contemporary orality and literature constitute 
important expressions and resources of African spirituality and values.
Background
In 2001 British theologian Andrew Shanks argued that the Christian faith is not a 
matter of opinion but, rather, “a community-building or community-transformative 
appropriation of the very deepest poetic truth.”1 Shanks further argued that any reli-
gion that is “poetically impoverished” is insufficiently religious.2 Christianity in 
Africa faces no such impoverishment but offers an abundance of linguistic riches 
that serve as important sources of African spirituality and values. While much cur-
rent scholarship that engages African Christianity focuses on the incredible growth 
and diverse expressions of the faith, both on the continent and in the diaspora, the 
role of language and literature as significant articulations of African spirituality and 
values and as a rich resource for African Christian theology remains largely unex-
plored. This is a serious oversight, especially if one considers that “literature is a 
leading but unexamined influence in nearly everyone’s life and in culture as a 
whole.”3 This article addresses this gap, engaging literature, music, and prayer rep-
ertoires as sources of African values and spirituality, and as critical resources for 
Christian theology.
Ghanaian theologian Mercy Amba Oduyoye argues that in “traditional Africa”—
that is, Africa apart from Christianity, Islam, or Western ideologies—God is experi-
enced as “an all-pervading reality,” a “constant participant in the affairs of human 
beings.”4 This reality is expressed in the day-to-day language and interactions of West 
African communities. Oduyoye further underscored the role of language in the context 
of religious encounter when she observed that “the way we experience God is por-
trayed in the language we use about God, especially the names by which God is 
known.”5 In the context of Christianity and African indigenous religions, she argued 
that names are the embodiment of the contemporary experiences and descriptions of 
people’s perceptions of God. Expanding upon this insight, we could say that African 
literature, proverbs, songs, prayers, and appellations are not only repositories of these 
Amenga-Etego et al. 113
names but also fuller expressions of African experiences and perceptions of God and 
important expressions of spirituality and values.
In the extemporaneous praises of Afua Kuma, a Ghanaian oral theologian, Kwame 
Bediako saw “evidence of a theological articulation within Ghanaian Christianity . . . 
rarely mentioned in the usual discussions about African theology, but important for 
our understanding of what has happened and is happening in the life of many Christian 
communities in Africa.”6 Similar claims can be made about the popular gospel music 
by Suzzy and Matt or the worship songs heard in various Christian gatherings. From 
this study, we see evidence of what might variously be called grassroots, oral, sponta-
neous, or implicit theology, each of which represents a type of “reflective theology” in 
its own right.7
Theory and method
The research group found the following statement and question to be fundamental to 
its work: “One cannot separate African values from African spirituality, which suf-
fuses human experience, animates the natural world, and richly populates all planes of 
existence. How have these traditional spiritual traits survived in the contemporary 
scene and modulated within Christianity?”8 In our study we thus explored how these 
traits appear in contemporary African Christianity, focusing on the critical role of lan-
guage, literature, and oral forms as repositories and vehicles of these values. This 
article addresses these and other questions, strategically engaging interdisciplinary 
perspectives and utilizing wide-ranging sources to produce our conclusions.
The study engaged theories of performance and of identification, finding perfor-
mance theory as the most significant. Although early anthropological studies focused 
on ritual and ceremony, recent studies are interested in how performance informs and 
is informed by religious experiences and activities.9 The study was anchored in 
Richard Schechner’s theoretical framework,10 which views performance as everyday 
life, involving rituals, plays, dance, music, theater, language use, and identities of 
“doing,” not just “being.” The interdisciplinary nature of performance theory ranges 
from J. L. Austin’s and J. R. Searle’s linguistic performatives, Judith Butler’s perfor-
mance of identities, Jean-François Lyotard’s societal performativity, and Richard 
Bauman’s performance-oriented verbal art to Jacques Derrida’s postmodern perfor-
mance studies and David Rhoads’s performance criticisms.
Methodologically, the research was qualitative, making use of ethnographic inter-
views, focus-group discussions, observations, and participant-observation in selected 
church and worship settings. Ethnographic data were gathered from this field research. 
Geographically, our research was divided between Ghana and Nigeria; chronologi-
cally, it involved the mid-nineteenth and the late-twentieth centuries, as well as the 
present. Specifically, the fieldwork was conducted in Ghana (Accra, Tema, Akropong, 
Nsawam, Abetifi, and Kumasi) and Nigeria (Abakaliki, Owutu Edda, Akwete, Amichi, 
Nnewi, and Enugwu Ukwu). In addition to interviews, the main field data-gathering 
tool, focus-group discussions were carried out at Owutu Edda.
114 International Bulletin of Mission Research 45(2)
The other aspects of the project made use of textual analysis, involving the anal-
ysis of historical archives and other literary works. The archival study took place in 
Akropong, Accra, Ghana, and Basel, Switzerland (Basel Mission archival docu-
ments were consulted in March 2019), while recorded songs and the other forms of 
documented oral materials by Afua Kuma took place in Ghana and the United 
States. Significantly, even though Kwakye’s research was originally designed to be 
an archival study, once he discovered the insufficiency and lack of depth in the 
archival data that were at his disposal, he joined the rest of the team by including 
some ethnographic field research. In all, the project involved a lot of transcription, 
translation, and interpretation, yielding data that will continue to produce publica-
tions far beyond the life cycle of this project. The overarching methodology in this 
project is ethnographic fieldwork, which further stresses the fundamental role of 
orality in research, not only in African Christianity, but in all aspects of Africa life 
and values.
African spirituality and values in context
As indicated above, the study was primarily focused on the role of literature and 
orality as important yet underexplored sources for African spirituality and values, 
which are significant resources for the study of African Christian theology. The five 
individual researchers brought expertise in African literature, theology, history, 
religious studies, Christianity, and indigenous religious traditions. As such, each 
became responsible for unique yet complementary aspects of the research project. 
Although the research team worked individually on the various trajectories of the 
project, their findings can be generally grouped into two areas: the orality theme 
and the historical theme.
The two teams
The three women constituted the orality team: Rose Mary Amenga-Etego, with her 
research on the Ghanaian gospel duo Suzzy and Matt and their songs “Appellation” 
and “Jehowa”; Sara Fretheim, with her focus on the praise poems of Afua Kuma; and 
Ngozi Emeka-Nwobia, with her examination of church-based worship music and 
prayers among the Igbo of Nigeria. Collectively, their research illustrates how music, 
praise, and prayers permeate almost every aspect of African life, not just for aesthetic 
or entertainment purposes but also for conveying spirituality and values.11 Orality thus 
remains a critical factor that can explain how traditional spiritual traits have survived 
and taken on new forms and meanings within contemporary African Christianity, 
especially through praise poems, prayers, storytelling, and music.12 This observation 
suggests that the near-total absence of oral theologies from academic scholarship on 
African Christianity is a serious oversight, also that much work remains to be done to 
preserve and analyze oral theologies in order to better grasp the complexities of con-
temporary African Christian spirituality and values.
Amenga-Etego et al. 115
The two men constituted the historical team: Abraham Nana Opare Kwakye, who 
researched Paulo Mohenu (1809–86), a Gold Coast traditional priest who became a 
Basel Mission evangelist; and Paul Onovoh, who studied Chinua Achebe’s novel 
Anthills of the Savannah (1987). Onovoh traced the Igbo Holy Sabbath movement to 
its founder, Dee Ekeke Lolo, and discovered he was the priest of Nwaiyieke in Akwete, 
Nigeria. The team provides ways of studying and understanding African history. Their 
research also demonstrates how literature or biographical studies can unearth data that 
show how West African indigenous priests have contributed to and transformed what 
is currently referred to as African Christianity. Thus, through examining orality, litera-
ture, and African agency within Christian mission history, the project has shown inno-
vative ways in which African spirituality and values have survived and influenced 
Christianity in the continent.
Amenga-Etego
Apart from the above overarching themes, the project produced specific, significant 
findings in relation to each distinctive focus. Amenga-Etego’s transcription, transla-
tion, and analysis of Suzzy and Matt’s songs, which were carried out in conjunction 
with ethnographic field interviews, revealed that even though the songs contain ele-
ments of the indigenous Akan female song genre nnwonkoro, they embody many 
more elements of other indigenous song genres. Therefore, they should be described 
broadly as African music and not specifically as nnwonkoro.13 In addition, the songs 
are richly embedded with references to the Creator God and to royal praise poetry. 
They are also a rich repository of views regarding other important life circumstances, 
including death and war. The research therefore revealed that some aspects of the 
indigenization and inculturation of the gospel were actually at variance with the 
indigenous religiocultural worldview, thereby transforming the latter within contem-
porary Ghanaian society.
The research showed how contemporary social change has affected African indig-
enous values and spiritual proclivities, doing so through the examination of concepts 
and terminologies used by Suzzy and Matt in their songs, as well as the translation, 
interpretation, and analysis provided by the interviewees during the field study. 
Additionally, the research highlighted the role of women in the processes of indigeni-
zation, the inculturation of the gospel, and the internationalization of Akan (Ghanaian) 
gospel music, as well as illustrating the dynamism, transformation, innovation, and 
revitalization of the indigenous religions of Africa.14 The group’s international reach 
shows the global growth, not only of gospel music alongside the worldwide growth of 
Pentecostalism, but also of African spirituality and values.15
Fretheim
Fretheim’s study of Afua Kuma’s praise poetry led to similar results. Fretheim consid-
ered how the traditional values and spiritual traits initially conveyed within praise 
songs have been reinterpreted and innovatively incorporated into Christian worship 
116 International Bulletin of Mission Research 45(2)
within women’s oral praise traditions. Her research also discovered the prayers of two 
other female praise poets, Esther Asantewa and Hannah Darkoa, and how such female 
performances subverted a traditionally male-held role and transformed a performative 
genre intended to honor chiefs into a vibrant form of Christian praise and worship. 
Additionally, her research evaluated the reception and lasting impact of these women’s 
praises within contemporary Christian circles, with considerations as to how such 
expressions may be seen as a continuance of traditional traits, while also pointing to 
the creative flourishing of African women’s oral spiritualities within contemporary 
Ghanaian Christianity.
Emeka-Nwobia
Also arguing that in Igboland, a southeastern Nigerian society, songs and prayers 
reflect the people’s spirituality, values, history, and cosmology, Emeka-Nwobia states 
that such expressions constitute an encounter between people and divinity.16 As such, 
they are creatively patterned with indigenous imageries, metaphors, repetitions, and 
paralinguistic renditions, which transmit extraordinary powers and emotions across 
the three different Christian churches she studied. Consequently, she conceptualized 
song as a form of prayer rendered in melodious tunes that may be fast or slow in deliv-
ery. She notes that across the churches visited, “Various forms of traditional values and 
spiritual traits were visible: they have survived and modulated within contemporary 
Igbo Christianity.”17
Emeka-Nwobia’s research also revealed the synergizing of African religiocultural 
practices with Christianity, especially in the Roman Catholic Church. Some indige-
nous practices that were portrayed as demonic and unacceptable are presently making 
inroads into the church. For example, practices like Igbo traditional title-taking and 
African cannon salutes (mkponani or nkuruali, gun salutes used to herald the entry or 
exit of a dignitary), which are usually accompanied by appellations, music, and dance, 
are now used during intense praise and worship sessions to celebrate the presence of 
the Supreme God. Overall, songs are seen as an inevitable instrument of expressing an 
intense Christian spirituality among the Igbo people.18
Kwakye
As indicated above, Kwakye’s work on Paulo Mohenu, a traditional priest in the 
Gold Coast who became a Basel Mission evangelist, added a theological-historical 
perspective to the project and focused on African agency within the work of the 
Basel Mission. Mohenu converted to Christianity in the mid-nineteenth century and 
became an African agent of the Basel Mission church. Kwakye discovered that only 
after Mohenu’s conversion was the Basel Mission able to expand into Ga territo-
ries, a region that had previously blocked mission efforts. One major revelation was 
that Mohenu’s evangelistic work in the Accra plains dynamized the work of the 
Basel Mission in Ghana. The difficulties of the Basel missionaries in the Ga com-
munities of La, Teshie, and Tema were soon overcome once Mohenu had entered 
Amenga-Etego et al. 117
the sphere.19 As indicated above, although Kwakye’s research was meant to be an 
archival one, he discovered during the study that he needed to augment his data 
with some fieldwork. Eventually, he relied more heavily on the oral tradition than 
on archival sources.
Kwakye’s research demonstrated that incorporating Mohenu’s traditional spirit-
ual traits and values into his Christian faith had a positive influence on the work of 
the Basel Mission. Mohenu could be regarded as a nineteenth-century African 
prophet who employed his knowledge of African cosmology to bring many to the 
Christian faith. Although Mohenu, unlike other African agents of the Basel Mission, 
did not receive formal Western education, his gifts were recognized by the church 
and led to significant church growth. The work demonstrated that before the appear-
ance of early twentieth-century prophets in West Africa, such as William Wadé 
Harris, John Swatson, and Sampson Oppong, others such as Mohenu, who were 
willing to serve with the Western missions, had preceded them. This aspect of the 
study has also brought to the fore how Western missionaries frequently relegated 
these oral sources to the background, while African Christians (both past and present) 
bring them to the fore, further highlighting the critical role of language as a source 
for African Christian scholarship.
Onovoh
Onovoh’s work on Chinua Achebe’s Anthills of the Savannah not only unearthed the 
historical background of African spirituality and religious innovation within the Igbo 
Holy Sabbath movement but also provided the link with its prophetic and healing 
ministry. Thus, from its initial conception from Achebe’s novel, this aspect of the 
team’s project explored the roots of the Igbo Holy Sabbath movement, evaluating its 
uniqueness and harmonization of African spiritualities, religious symbolism, and val-
ues, as well as its interaction with contemporary life in Africa and the larger Christian 
world. Hence, from this illustration, this dimension of study shows the value of using 
African literature as an important source for revealing African spirituality and values 
and their encounter and interaction with Christianity.
Summary
In its engagement of the themes of orality and history, the project bridged theology, 
social sciences, and the arts, making creative contributions through the analysis of 
selected literary works, gospel songs, prayers, oral histories, and praises from selected 
societies and individuals in Ghana and Nigeria. These literary works have helped the 
research team to discern some of the ways in which African Christian spirituality and 
values are perceived, embodied, and expressed by the members of these communi-
ties. This study has unearthed issues of gender, ethnicity, identity, and colonialism/
postcolonialism through the interviews, focus-group discussions, and participant-
observation among the selected groups and Christian communities in these two West 
African countries and from their text-based sources. In doing so, the research team 
118 International Bulletin of Mission Research 45(2)
has demonstrated the ways in which these linguistic works are indeed sources of 
“reflective theology” in and of themselves, while also elucidating the importance of 
these oral and written forms as critical resources for wider theological reflection and 
scholarship. Additionally, this study has demonstrated the importance of inter- and 
cross-disciplinary scholarship between the arts, humanities, and social sciences for a 
holistic engagement with African theology.20
It is important to note that such grassroots theology is neither a replacement nor a 
competitor for academic theology. Rather, when the two function in tandem, “theol-
ogy acquires its authentic character—as a task, not of scholars alone, but of a com-
munity of believers who share in a common context, and are committed to the task of 
bringing the Gospel into contact with the questions and issues of their context.”21 
This is not to deny that academic theology also sprang from oral data. Within the 
scope of this article, and as a community of theological scholar-practitioners our-
selves, we have elucidated multiple ways in which African writers, singers, histori-
ans, and church laypeople theologize.
Conclusion
Capturing various oral, stylistic, and linguistic performances in selected Nigerian 
churches, analyzing unpublished transcripts of earlier female “oral theologians” in 
Ghana, and reconstructing African agency through archival studies, this project has 
contributed to the deeper understanding of African Christianity in a number of ways. 
It has raised awareness of the significant role of textual literature and orality within 
African Christianity, showing that they are important expressions of African spiritu-
ality, as well as a rich resource for African theological studies. In so doing, it has 
challenged its currently ignored and undervalued status in these study areas. Currently, 
some of the books, field data, and theoretical and methodological lessons from field 
studies are already making significant inputs to our teaching. Other contributions 
include the expansion of interdisciplinary horizons within the study of African 
Christianity; capturing, analyzing, and preserving oral resources for future scholar-
ship; audio and video documentation and dissemination fieldwork and oral data; and 
expanding the international scholarly network and collaboration.
This international, cross-cultural, ecumenical scholarly network from Ghana, 
Nigeria, Canada, and the United States will have a lasting impact within and beyond 
African theological discourse. As Mercy Amba Oduyoye states, “In lyrics, traditional 
and modern, [Africans] sing about the God who says and does and they invite all to 
come and see what God has actually done. . . . To respond to these expectations and 
experiences of God in Africa is to build up the Body of Christ, not only in Africa, but 
worldwide.”22
Funding
The research project received a grant from the Nagel Institute for the Study of World Christianity, 
Calvin University, Grand Rapids, MI, USA, which was funded for the African Theological 
Advance initiative by the Templeton Religion Trust, Nassau, Bahamas.
Amenga-Etego et al. 119
Notes
 1. Andrew Shanks, What Is Truth? Towards a Theological Poetics (London: Routledge, 
2001), 5.
 2. Ibid., 140.
 3. Leland Ryken, “Literature in a Christian Perspective,” in God and Culture: Essays in 
Honor of Carl F. H. Henry, ed. D. A. Carson and John D. Woodbridge (Grand Rapids: 
Eerdmans; Carlisle: Paternoster, 1993), 215–16.
 4. Mercy Amba Oduyoye, “The African Experience of God through the Eyes of an Akan 
Woman,” http://www.crosscurrents.org/african.htm, section “The Living God,” paragraph 2.
 5. Ibid., paragraph 5.
 6. Kwame Bediako, Jesus in Africa: The Christian Gospel in African History and Experience 
(Yaoundé, Cameroon: Éditions Clé; Akropong, Ghana: Regnum Africa, 2001), 8.
 7. Ibid.
 8. African Theological Advance Project Topical Areas and Key Questions, African Values 
and African Spirituality, https://calvin.edu/centers-institutes/nagel-institute/projects/african 
-advance/.
 9. Andrey Rosowsky, “Religious Classical Practice: Entextualisation and Performance,” 
Language in Society 42, no. 3 (June 2013): 307–30, https://doi.org/10.1017/S00474045130 
00250.
10. Richard Schechner, Performance Theory, rev. and exp. ed. (London: Routledge Classics, 
2003).
11. Bolaji Idowu, Olódùmarè: God in Yoruba Belief (London: Longmans, 1962).
12. Mercy Amba Oduyoye, Introducing African Women’s Theology (Sheffield: Sheffield 
Academic, 2001). See also her book Hearing and Knowing: Theological Reflections on 
Christianity in Africa (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 1986).
13. Kwasi Ampene, Female Song Tradition and the Akan of Ghana: The Creative Process in 
Nnwonkoro (Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2005).
14. Abamfo Atiemo, “‘Singing with Understanding’: The Story of Gospel Music in Ghana,” 
Studies in World Christianity 12, no. 2 (2006): 142–63, https://doi.org/10.3366/swc.2006 
.0009.
15. Damaris S. Parsitau, “‘Then Sings My Soul’: Gospel Music as Popular Culture in the 
Spiritual Lives of Kenyan Pentecostal/Charismatic Christians,” Journal of Religion and 
Popular Culture 14, no. 1 (Fall 2006): 3, https://doi.org/10.3138/jrpc.14.1.003.
16. Emefie Ikenga Metuh, God and Man in African Religion: A Case Study of the Igbo of 
Nigeria, 2nd ed. (Enugu, Nigeria: SNAAP Press, 1999).
17. Femi Adedeji, “Singing and Suffering in Africa: A Study of Selected Relevant Texts in 
Nigerian Gospel Music,” Matatu 40, no. 1 (December 2012): 411–25.
18. Matthew Ojo, “Indigenous Gospel Music and Social Reconstruction in Modern Nigeria,” 
Missionalia: Southern African Journal of Mission Studies 26, no. 2 (August 1998): 210–31.
19. Toyin Falola, The Power of African Cultures (Rochester, NY: Univ. of Rochester Press, 2003).
20. This perspective was underscored by the presentations made at the project’s confer-
ence—the International Conference on Literature, Music, and Prayer as Sources of African 
Spirituality and Values—held in July 2019 at the University of Ghana, Legon. The confer-
ence attracted national and international scholars and students from the areas of music, 
theater arts, linguistics, philosophy, history, sociology, and psychology.
21. Bediako, Jesus in Africa, 18.
22. Oduyoye, “The African Experience of God,” section “Building Up Christ’s Body,” 
paragraph 7.
120 International Bulletin of Mission Research 45(2)
Author biographies
(Left to right: top) Rose Mary Amenga-Etego, Abraham Nana Opare Kwakye, Ngozi Emeka Nwobia; 
(bottom) Paul Onovoh, Sara Fretheim.
Rose Mary Amenga-Etego is an associate professor of religious studies in the Department for the 
Study of Religions, University of Ghana, Legon, Ghana. She is also a fellow of the Research 
Institute for Theology and Religion, University of South Africa (UNISA).
Abraham Nana Opare Kwakye is a senior lecturer in the Department for the Study of Religions, 
University of Ghana, Legon, Ghana.
Ngozi Emeka-Nwobia is a lecturer in the Department of Linguistics, Ebonyi State University, 
Abakaliki, Nigeria.
Paul Onovoh is a minister and independent scholar, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Sara Fretheim is an assistant lecturer/researcher at the Institute for Missiology and the Study of 
Theologies beyond Europe, University of Münster, Münster, Germany.