Africa needs God

matthew_parris

Matthew Parris, political journalist and former Tory MP

As an atheist, I truly believe Africa needs God

Missionaries, not aid money, are the solution to Africa’s biggest problem – the crushing passivity of the people’s mindset

by Matthew Parris

Before Christmas I returned, after 45 years, to the country that as a boy I knew as Nyasaland. Today it’s Malawi, and The Times Christmas Appeal includes a small British charity working there. Pump Aid helps rural communities to install a simple pump, letting people keep their village wells sealed and clean. I went to see this work.

It inspired me, renewing my flagging faith in development charities. But travelling in Malawi refreshed another belief, too: one I’ve been trying to banish all my life, but an observation I’ve been unable to avoid since my African childhood. It confounds my ideological beliefs, stubbornly refuses to fit my world view, and has embarrassed my growing belief that there is no God.

Now a confirmed atheist, I’ve become convinced of the enormous contribution that Christian evangelism makes in Africa: sharply distinct from the work of secular NGOs, government projects and international aid efforts. These alone will not do. Education and training alone will not do. In Africa Christianity changes people’s hearts. It brings a spiritual transformation. The rebirth is real. The change is good.

I used to avoid this truth by applauding – as you can – the practical work of mission churches in Africa. It’s a pity, I would say, that salvation is part of the package, but Christians black and white, working in Africa, do heal the sick, do teach people to read and write; and only the severest kind of secularist could see a mission hospital or school and say the world would be better without it. I would allow that if faith was needed to motivate missionaries to help, then, fine: but what counted was the help, not the faith.

But this doesn’t fit the facts. Faith does more than support the missionary; it is also transferred to his flock. This is the effect that matters so immensely, and which I cannot help observing.

First, then, the observation. We had friends who were missionaries, and as a child I stayed often with them; I also stayed, alone with my little brother, in a traditional rural African village. In the city we had working for us Africans who had converted and were strong believers. The Christians were always different. Far from having cowed or confined its converts, their faith appeared to have liberated and relaxed them. There was a liveliness, a curiosity, an engagement with the world – a directness in their dealings with others – that seemed to be missing in traditional African life. They stood tall.

At 24, travelling by land across the continent reinforced this impression. From Algiers to Niger, Nigeria, Cameroon and the Central African Republic, then right through the Congo to Rwanda, Tanzania and Kenya, four student friends and I drove our old Land Rover to Nairobi.

We slept under the stars, so it was important as we reached the more populated and lawless parts of the sub-Sahara that every day we find somewhere safe by nightfall. Often near a mission.

Whenever we entered a territory worked by missionaries, we had to acknowledge that something changed in the faces of the people we passed and spoke to: something in their eyes, the way they approached you direct, man-to-man, without looking down or away. They had not become more deferential towards strangers – in some ways less so – but more open.

This time in Malawi it was the same. I met no missionaries. You do not encounter missionaries in the lobbies of expensive hotels discussing development strategy documents, as you do with the big NGOs. But instead I noticed that a handful of the most impressive African members of the Pump Aid team (largely from Zimbabwe) were, privately, strong Christians. “Privately” because the charity is entirely secular and I never heard any of its team so much as mention religion while working in the villages. But I picked up the Christian references in our conversations. One, I saw, was studying a devotional textbook in the car. One, on Sunday, went off to church at dawn for a two-hour service.

It would suit me to believe that their honesty, diligence and optimism in their work was unconnected with personal faith. Their work was secular, but surely affected by what they were. What they were was, in turn, influenced by a conception of man’s place in the Universe that Christianity had taught.

There’s long been a fashion among Western academic sociologists for placing tribal value systems within a ring fence, beyond critiques founded in our own culture: “theirs” and therefore best for “them”; authentic and of intrinsically equal worth to ours.

I don’t follow this. I observe that tribal belief is no more peaceable than ours; and that it suppresses individuality. People think collectively; first in terms of the community, extended family and tribe. This rural-traditional mindset feeds into the “big man” and gangster politics of the African city: the exaggerated respect for a swaggering leader, and the (literal) inability to understand the whole idea of loyal opposition.

Anxiety – fear of evil spirits, of ancestors, of nature and the wild, of a tribal hierarchy, of quite everyday things – strikes deep into the whole structure of rural African thought. Every man has his place and, call it fear or respect, a great weight grinds down the individual spirit, stunting curiosity. People won’t take the initiative, won’t take things into their own hands or on their own shoulders.

How can I, as someone with a foot in both camps, explain? When the philosophical tourist moves from one world view to another he finds – at the very moment of passing into the new – that he loses the language to describe the landscape to the old. But let me try an example: the answer given by Sir Edmund Hillary to the question: Why climb the mountain? “Because it’s there,” he said.

To the rural African mind, this is an explanation of why one would not climb the mountain. It’s… well, there. Just there. Why interfere? Nothing to be done about it, or with it. Hillary’s further explanation – that nobody else had climbed it – would stand as a second reason for passivity.

Christianity, post-Reformation and post-Luther, with its teaching of a direct, personal, two-way link between the individual and God, unmediated by the collective, and unsubordinate to any other human being, smashes straight through the philosphical/spiritual framework I’ve just described. It offers something to hold on to to those anxious to cast off a crushing tribal groupthink. That is why and how it liberates.

Those who want Africa to walk tall amid 21st-century global competition must not kid themselves that providing the material means or even the knowhow that accompanies what we call development will make the change. A whole belief system must first be supplanted.

And I’m afraid it has to be supplanted by another. Removing Christian evangelism from the African equation may leave the continent at the mercy of a malign fusion of Nike, the witch doctor, the mobile phone and the machete.

{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }

1 Mathi January 12, 2009 at 11:56 pm

An interesting article.

I was born and bred in Africa. I am fully fledged African.

I do not agree with the way you define us. You tend to generalise and put all Africans in one basket.

Yes I am a Christian. Some of my relatives are not Christian. Some will fall under what is generally called African Traditional Religion.

In fact my father became a Christian long after I was baptised.

Neither my father nor myself has ever used a machete. We have never appealed to witchcraft.

My non-Christians friends and family are peaceful people.

All of us value other human beings. A human being in my language is described as a person who regonsises the humanity and dignity of another person. Motho ke motho ka batho easily translates into a person is a person through other people.

When I have challenges or problems, people do not ask what religion I belong to. They will see in me a brother or a sister.

Africans that I know and grew up with are spiritual. They lived the commandments long before they heard of the Jewish Decalogue.

Please respect Africa.

God did not make a mistake when he created us.

We are human and we are divine.

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2 Lawrence January 13, 2009 at 1:31 am

Mathi, thank you for your comment. Like you, I was born and raised in Africa – in Zimbabwe, as you’ll see from the ‘About’ page. Let me tell you why I posted this, because I didn’t read Matthew Parris as saying what you clearly ‘hear’ in the article.

We in the west have lost our way. Our post-Thatcherism consumerism means that we no longer know how to live in community. We are witnessing social disintegration on a massive scale.

Like you, I believe Africans to be intensely spiritual in ways in which we Europeans are not. I for one look to places in Africa for inspiration and example. Africa has not yet bought into postmodern consumerism; the trouble is that it appears to be wanting to do so! My conviction – and, I believe, Parris’ – is that there needs to be an alternative to this consumerism for everyone’s sake, and that Africa has a genuine opportunity to develop it by refusing to abandon its spiritual resources. That is the mistake we in the west made.

I’m not sure how far I’d go with him in his assessment of the African world-view; the point I take from him is that evangelism, conversion and the reality of the Holy Spirit is a vital ingredient that we have lost and Africa hasn’t. He fears that it will be replaced by ‘development’, as though this will achieve the same end without the attendant ’superstition’. I think that he’s right in this description of people’s thinking over here.

In other words, as I read the article, Parris, like me, is looking to Africa for a new way of living and ‘doing’ society. I assume that his final sentence is his own (metaphorical) description of African secularism.

“We are human and we are divine”. Amen to that! ‘Nkosi sikelele iAfrika.

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