(By Leo Igwe)--It cannot be overemphasized that churches in Africa are
instrumental to the witch craze in the region. Programs and activities of faith
organizations continue to fuel witchcraft suspicions with sometimes horrific
consequences on alleged witches. There is an urgent need to counteract this
dark and destructive process. We must call witch-finding churches to order or
rue it!
The main issue remains: How do we put this vicious
campaign to an end? How do we restrain witch-imputing churches that exist and
operate across Africa? Getting African churches to join the campaign against
witchcraft accusation is important because if this horrific trend must stop,
the process will start in the churches, from the churches, with the churches,
and by the churches. Christian groups must lead the way. They must champion the
cause of making witch-hunting history in the region.
Unfortunately, this is not yet the case. Pentecostal
churches are still in the business of hunting witches. They invoke and exorcise
witches and wizards. Witchcraft evangelism is still the ‘religious order’ of
the day in the region.
For a better understanding of how Christian churches
have turned into witch finding fronts, let us take
a critical look at a leaflet
that was published by the Living Faith Church in Abuja, Nigeria. The leaflet
was meant to promote a church event where people would be freed from the yoke
of occult forces. The theme of the event was: ‘Come and See… Jesus Destroys All
Oppressions”
The information on the leaflet surely appealed to people
in the country especially millions who were experiencing all sorts of difficulties
such as hunger and starvation, poverty, unemployment, business failure and
disease. The Church used a quotation from Isaiah 54:14 to scripturally situate
their program. Then it went ahead to use witchcraft to frame the message:
“Are you being oppressed by the wicked forces of
darkness, witches, and wizards? Are you harnessed by the occultic forces that
makes (sic) you live a life of uncertainty?”
Then it went ahead to assure the readers of the reality
of the oppression: “Let me tell this: Wickedness is real! Satanic oppression is
real!” The leaflet enjoined the reader to surrender to Jesus in order to gain ‘total
freedom from all oppressions of the devil.
It is important to note that the whole idea of asking
people if they were oppressed by witches and wizards was suggestive and very
likely to lead to imputations of witchcraft.
This is because, given the desperate quest for solutions
to myriads of problems, people are likely to reply in the affirmative, even if
such a response would lead to some momentary psychological relief. People are
likely to begin seeing their problems through the lens of occultism and
ascribing responsibility to imagined occult agents in their families and
communities. This is how such church messages are connected to witch hunts.
Church members and the general public need to understand
that witches and wizards are creations of the mystical and superstitious minds
of pastors and churches. Occult forces do not have a real existence and are not
capable of oppressing anybody. Life’s challenges and difficulties which people
face and encounter have nothing to do with witches and wizards. They are
problems and challenges which can be rationally explained and require
evidence-based measures to tackle and address.
The public needs to know that the alluded ‘oppression by
wicked forces of witches and wizards’ is a make-believe which pastors, godmen
and women use as a power base. Attributing problems to occult forces is a
device for the exploitation of gullible ignorant folks.
Wake up Africans Wake up!
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