In die Skriflig / In Luce Verbi
ISSN: (Online) 2305-0853, (Print) 1018-6441
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Original Research
Competing with Christ? A critical Christological analysis
of the reliance on Pentecostal prophets in Zimbabwe
Authors:
Vhumani Magezi1
Collium Banda1
Affiliations:
1
Faculty of Theology,
North-West University,
South Africa
Corresponding author:
Vhumani Magezi,
vhumani@hotmail.com
Dates:
Received: 25 May 2017
Accepted: 31 July 2017
Published: 28 Sept. 2017
How to cite this article:
Magezi, V. & Banda, C., 2017,
‘Competing with Christ? A
critical Christological analysis
of the reliance on Pentecostal
prophets in Zimbabwe’, In die
Skriflig 51(2), a2273. https://
doi.org/10.4102/ids.
v51i2.2273
Copyright:
© 2017. The Authors.
Licensee: AOSIS. This work
is licensed under the
Creative Commons
Attribution License.
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How can we make Christological sense of the Zimbabwean Pentecostal prophets’ mediatory
role? This article analyses the domineering and mediatory role of the Pentecostal prophets
from a Christological perspective. The mediatory role of the Pentecostal prophets is riddled
with competition against the mediatory role of Christ between God and humanity (1 Tm 2:5)
as it tends to usurp Christ’s role over the church. Instead of being channels that lead people to
depend only on Christ for their spiritual security, prosperity Pentecostal prophets present
themselves as super spiritual authorities who must be relied upon by the believers in addition
to Christ. Prosperity Pentecostalism, also known as the gospel of wealth and health, emphasises
that prosperity in material wealth and good health is an integral component of the Christian
faith. As super spiritual authorities, Pentecostal prophets project themselves as uniquely
anointed by God. This places them closer to God than other people and, in turn, they receive
spiritual power and authority over other believers. The prophets mediate their presence in the
lives of their followers through anointed objects such as their personal pictures, anointed oil
and armbands. This article analyses the distorted views about Christ created by the reliance on
the prophets. The article concludes by proposing steps that should be taken to empower
Christians to dissuade themselves from reliance on such prophets.
Introduction
Although the existence and operations of prophets in Zimbabwe can be traced to the initial rise of
pioneer African indigenous prophets such as Samuel Mutendi, Johanne Marange and Johanne
Masowe in the early 1900s, contemporary Zimbabwe is ‘under the grip of a “prophetic craze”’
(Chitando, Gunda & Kügler 2013:10). The catalyst in the prophetic craze is prosperity Pentecostal1
prophets distinguished by their gospel of wealth and health as well as their emphasis on material
and health prosperity as an integral component of the Christian faith. They distinctively hold the
title ‘Men of God’ which they use ‘extensively and exclusively either through self-propagating or
by accepting the title when it is issued by their followers’ (Gunda & Machingura 2013:17).
Masculinity dominates the Zimbabwean prophetic terrain (Biri & Togarasei 2013:82; Chitando &
Biri 2016:75), because, although there are ‘women of God’, most of them are married to the ‘men
of God’ and generally exercise their prophetic calling, not independently, but in tandem with, and
within, the prophetic ministries of their prophet-husbands. Furthermore, paternalism and
patriarchy seem to mark the prophetic turf, as the prophets are relied upon as authoritative father
figures whose voices cannot be disobeyed by their followers. This is illustrated in the common
practice of the followers to glue stickers on their private cars bearing the portraits of the prophets
(in some cases, the prophet and his wife) with inscriptions such as: ‘I am a child of the prophet’
(Gunda & Machingura 2013:23). This demonstrates the serious extent to which some Christians
are heavily reliant on the prophets.
While the Zimbabwean prophetic turf is dominated by popular prophetic figures such as
Emmanuel Makandiwa, Walter Magaya and Urbert Angel, and international acclaimed figures
like TB Joshua and Shepherd Bushiri, the number of Pentecostal prophets in the country is too
high to quantify. Furthermore, new prophetic figures continually emerge into the scene. The
prophetic movement is controversial, as some prophets have been charged in the courts for
abusing their followers of which the most common charges are rape and fraud (Chingarande 2016;
Dube 2017; The Herald 2017; Zanamwe 2016). Interestingly, many people continue to fall victim to
unscrupulous prophets and consult them despite the wide publicity of such cases. This
demonstrates that many people are in desperate need of their services. The desperation is so high
that many people are willing to take risks despite of many reported cases of abuse by prophets.
1.A key distinction between prosperity and classical Pentecostals is the following: whereas classical or traditional Pentecostals focus on
holiness, self-denial and hold to a suspicion of the ‘things of this world’, prosperity Pentecostals affirm material wealth and good health
as spiritual rights to be possessed and enjoyed by all true believers (Martin 2008:14; Maxwell 2006:9).
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Various scholars attribute the growing dominance of
Pentecostal prophets to the prevailing poor socio-economic
and political contexts in Zimbabwe that cause many desperate
people to rely on the miraculous intervention of prophets
(Biri & Togarasei 2013; Chitando et al. 2013; Chitando & Biri
2016; Magezi & Manzanga 2016; Maxwell 2006; Togarasei
2005). This means that prophetic Pentecostalism is a ‘coping
mechanism in the poverty and suffering context of Zimbabwe
[and Africa]’ (Magezi & Manzanga 2016:1).
However, despite many demonstrable merits in functioning
as a coping mechanism, prophetic Pentecostalism promotes a
serious overreliance on the prophets that turns them into
mediators of God’s blessings to their followers. This article
investigates this domineering and mediatory role of the
Pentecostal prophets from a Christological perspective,
because this often leads to competition with the mediatory
role of Christ between God and humanity (1 Tm 2:5). Indeed,
the Pentecostal prophets under review in this article also
preach the gospel of material and health prosperity. However,
because the focus of this article is on their mediatory role as
channels of God’s blessings and not their message of
prosperity, a detailed analysis of the prosperity gospel falls
outside the scope of this article.2 This article will argue that the
mediatory role of the prophets usurps Christ’s mediatory role
over the church, because it creates a parallel structure through
which both Christ and the prophets are needed as channels of
God’s blessings. Rather than channels that lead people to
depend on Christ only for their spiritual security and blessings,
Pentecostal prophets impose themselves as super spiritual
authorities who must be relied upon by the believers in
addition to Christ. The belief that they are uniquely anointed
by God often grants them super spiritual status which implies
that they are considered to be closer to God than all other
believers. Eventually, the ministry of Pentecostal prophets is
filled with the contradiction of proclaiming faith in God as a
requirement for blessing and healing, and yet, in the very next
breath, an emphasis is laid on the need to seek the real personal
presence of the anointed men of God. This mixed message
ends up either undermining personal faith in God and
individual reliance on God or creating a personal faith
and reliance on God that must be augmented by a reliance and
dependence on the input of the prophets. It is argued that this
nature of mediatory role by prosperity Pentecostal prophets
threatens the Christological integrity of African Christianity,
because it does not proclaim absolute and exclusive reliance
on Christ. Therefore, this article reflects on the following basic
question: How do prosperity Pentecostal prophets play a
mediatory role and what Christological problems are created
by the undergirding theology of this mediatory role?
Original Research
role between God and humanity resulting into believers
placing greater dependence on the prophets than on Christ.
Channels of encountering God
Pentecostal prophets present themselves as so closely
connected to God that they function as channels of
encountering the presence of God. This is indicated in the
words of the Archbishop Ezekiel Guti of the Zimbabwe
Assemblies of God Africa (ZAOGA) recorded by Biri (2012)
as follows:
[H]ow many of you dreamt me [sic] when they had challenges?
It is not me but God [who] sends angels to you, that personify
themselves as me. But they will be angels to deliver you. Then
your problems will be gone! (p. 6)
In this statement Guti portrays himself as so intimately
connected to God that he can personify the angels sent by
God to troubled Christians. By these words attributed to him,
Guti is a channel of encountering God. In prophetic
Pentecostalism, the unique calling and anointing of prophets
qualifies them to bridge the chasm between God and ordinary
human beings.
News reports in Zimbabwe have shown the desperate
measures taken by many people to gain access to the presence
of Pentecostal prophets. In one unfortunate incident, the
stampede for a close personal encounter with the prophets
resulted in several deaths and injuries (Bulawayo24News
2011; News24 2014). In another reported incident, Prophet
Uebert Angel had to abandon his meal at a popular fast-food
outlet in Gweru as a large crowd jostled to be touched by him
(The Chronicle 2012). A lucky man who managed to shake
Prophet Angel’s hand was quoted celebrating: ‘Thank God, I
am now a new man. I am blessed to have been greeted by this
great man of God’ (The Chronicle 2012). These reported
incidents demonstrate that people yearn for personal proximity
to the prophet, because it is viewed as closeness to God.
The nature of the reliance on the
mediation of Pentecostal prophets
In some cases, as Biri (2012:5) shows in an incident where the
portrait of Ezekiel Guti was used to drive out a stubborn
demon that refused to be exorcised, various paraphernalia
associated with the prophet is considered to have healing
powers. This shows that Pentecostal prophets either directly
act as agents of encountering God’s redemptive presence or
are treated as such channels by their followers. The serious
problem in treating prophets as channels of encountering
God is that people end up depending more on the prophets
and their anointed paraphernalia than on God. The stampedes
for personal access to the prophets indicate a greater
dependence on the prophets than on God. The danger is that
people seem more interested in the personal presence of the
prophet than in working on developing a personal reliance
on God.
It is important to begin by describing how Pentecostal
prophets’ mediatory role overshadows Christ’s mediatory
Channels of receiving God’s blessings
2.Some useful analyses of the prosperity gospel in Africa have been provided by
Balcomb (2007); Gifford (1993:146–189; 1998; 2004); Haynes (2012); Horn (1989);
Marshall (2009); Martin (2008); Wariboko (2012).
Interrelated to the above point is that Pentecostal prophets
are channels through which God’s blessings are transmitted
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Original Research
to the seeking believers. Therefore, many Christians feel
they need the mediation of the prophet to experience
God’s blessings. One of Zimbabwe’s prominent Pentecostal
prophets, Uebert Angel (2013), announces:
possess the authority of God resulting in many Christians
fearing to question their words and actions. Hence, many
Christians unquestioningly submit to the prophets.
You see there is a time you have to understand that there are men
of God who are good ground for every seed. When you find
them they will be able to sustain every seed, sown by their
anointing. These are Men of God with great anointing and you
don’t have to guess who they are. Look at their substance. What
do they have? Do they have plenty or less? What achievements
do they possess? What is the impact they have made on earth?
(pp. 86–87)
However, Christians’ fearful submission to Pentecostal
prophets is not a uniquely Zimbabwean problem. The
journalist, Ntando Makhubu (2016), shows some Christians
in South Africa submitting to the prophets’ instructions to be
sprayed by insecticide, to drink toxic substances like petrol
and antiseptics liquids, to eat grass and snakes and even
allow the prophets to drive over them. The abusive nature of
these events has attracted the intervention of the South
African Commission for the Promotion and Protection of the
Rights of Cultural, Religious and Linguistic Communities
who have objected to the commercialisation of religion and
the abuse of people’s belief systems (CRL Rights Commission
2016:3, 7–8). These events demonstrate that fear of the
authoritative nature of Pentecostal prophets and the
consequent fearful submission to them may be a widespread
problem in the church in Africa. The ease with which many
African Christians readily submit themselves to the authority
of the prophets may be attributed to the African background
of highly authoritative nature of the words of African
Traditional Religion (ATR) practitioners such as izinyaga
[traditional healers] and izangoma [diviners]: to disobey the
words of spiritual practitioners is tantamount to disobeying
one’s ancestors who are guardians of the living descendants.
The content of Angel’s message implies that God has a ‘get
rich quick scheme’ for his people that can only be accessed
through a few prophets chosen and anointed by God. This
means that the uniquely anointed prophets are the ‘fertile
soil’ upon which Christians who want a fast way to material
wealth must sow their ‘seeds’3, which is their investment of
faith. In this light, the prophets are viewed as mediators of
God’s blessings to the people by virtue of possessing
unrivalled spiritual powers to heal and to bless materially
(Gunda & Machingura 2013:24). As mediators of God’s
therapeutic blessings, African Pentecostal prophets proclaim
that when people heed God’s voice and make financial and
material contributions to them their suffering will end and
blessings will flow (Biri & Togarasei 2013:83). Zimbabwe has
witnessed many controversial practices from Pentecostal
prophets acting as conduits to God’s blessings, such as the
case where Prophet Makandiwa’s spokesperson, Pastor
Prime Kufa, was reported to have encouraged people to
prepare for a blessed 2017 by sowing ‘seed’ (money ranging
between $77, $770, $7700 and $77 000 (The Sunday Mail
2017). In this reported incident, the prophet is clearly
emerging as a channel towards God’s blessings. The essence
of the message is that when the prophet receives the money
(‘seed’) he will open the door that leads to God’s blessings.
This is tantamount to abuse and even commercialisation of
religion. Apart from the abuse, they are forced to develop an
affinity towards the prophet – who is a conduit towards
blessedness – instead of empowering people to develop a
closer walk with God.
Possessing the authority of God
Flowing directly from the above point is the highly
authoritative nature of the Pentecostal prophets deriving
from their claim that they are uniquely called and anointed
by God. As Gunda and Machingura (2013:21) explain:
Pentecostal prophets are viewed ‘as descendants of the line
of the specially chosen few who stood before God and who
shared in God’s authority’. This status of being the chosen
and anointed by God places them in a unique relationship
and role between God and humanity that grants them
absolute authoritative power over their followers. This often
turns Pentecostal prophets into quasi-divine beings who
3.‘Sowing a seed’ is a popular concept in prosperity Pentecostal churches, referring to
the giving of monetary and property offerings to the prophets as an act of planting
a seed in faith anticipating that God will bless the giver and cause what has been
given to the prophets to return to the giver in multiplied form.
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Some Pentecostal believers assert and defend the absolute
authority of their prophets. For example, a member of
Prophet Makandiwa’s church, Takura Rukwati (2012), wrote
an article entitled ‘Prophets Mustn’t Be Questioned’ in the
Zimbabwean daily newspaper The Herald. Rukwati (2012)
asserted: ‘A prophet is a man4 of insight to the will and
purposes of God.’ Substantiating how the prophet has insight
into God’s will and purposes, Rukwati (2012) declared:
[A] prophet is a man who seats [sic] in the cabinet with the
Almighty and can hear the discussion of heaven and can bring
them to men … Our father in the Lord, Prophet Emmanuel
Makandiwa, in United Family International Church, is a typical
example of a prophet of that calibre whom the Lord has given to
us as a gift … The Prophets therefore are said to be among
members that seat [sic] in the council of God … The prophets are
the eyes and minds of God, members of the heavenly cabinet.
That is why there is always a violent reaction from the heavens
when his prophets are touched, embarrassed, harassed,
persecuted or killed. Touching a prophet is a shortcut to the
grave according to Psalms 105:14–15, graves of sicknesses,
poverty, misfortunes, even spiritual and physical death.
In view of the high regard of the Bible as supreme authority
among Christians in Zimbabwe (Gunda 2012:31; 2015:24–25),
it is peculiar that Rukwati presents Prophet Makandiwa as
deriving his insights into the will and purposes of God by
sitting in God’s heavenly council, and not from a deeper
understanding of the Scriptures. The resultant image of the
prophet is of an infallible individual that is uniquely closely
4.It is interesting to observe that despite an acknowledgement (although very brief)
of Prophet Makandiwa’s wife, Prophetess Ruth Makandiwa, the article is written
with a heavy masculine tone.
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connected to God and that his words and actions should
actually just be accepted as God’s words. In this perspective,
Pentecostal prophets possess the power of God – not in the
sense of the radical and transformative aspects of their
insightful preaching or ministry. Rather, they are viewed as
intrinsically endowed with God’s authority that places them
above biblical authority. In essence, the prophet is the conduit
through which God’s authority is extended to the believer.
Sadly, this creates opportunities for prophets to abuse their
followers, because they are feared as beyond questioning.
The Pentecostal prophet’s prey on
African spiritual insecurity
Viewed from an ATR perspective, it can be argued that
Pentecostal prophets take advantage of the high sense of
spiritual insecurity in African believers. This section will
discuss the high sense of fear and insecurity in the ATR and
how Pentecostal prophets prey on this sense of spiritual
vulnerability among African Christians.
The factor of fear in Zimbabwean
Pentecostalism
Observably, fear dominates Pentecostalism in Zimbabwe.
Prophetic Pentecostal Christianity emphasises the Christians’
vulnerability to Satan and his evil malevolent forces. This can
be seen in the following incident recorded by Biri (2012):
In spite of the claims of being ‘born-again’ and undergoing
several deliverance sessions, many members still point to
witchcraft activities, haunted by evil spirits even within the
church. In one incident, a pastor scolded a teenage girl: ‘You like
your demon of witchcraft, why is it refusing to go? You are
failing to maintain your deliverance I am leaving you like that’.
(p. 3)
This recorded incident shows that born again Pentecostal
believers live in danger of being repossessed or re-haunted
by the evil spirits from which they have been delivered. In
the noted example, Pentecostals express a fear of bondage to
evil spirits. There is heightened fear of vulnerability to acts of
witchcraft among Zimbabwean Pentecostals, particularly in
the form of Satanism (Biri & Togarasei 2013:85). Beyond
Zimbabwe, Ezenweke (2013:101) observes that Nigerian
Pentecostal home movies (which have large following across
Africa) contain an ‘excessive emphasis on occult, demonic
influence and wrath of angry God’. Furthermore, the
dominance of fear is demonstrated by the fact that deliverance
from bondage from evil spirits is a prominent feature in the
worship services of Pentecostal prophetic churches (Maxwell
1998:360–361) that can be witnessed in the daily televised
services of prophets like TB Joshua of Nigeria. Mass media in
Zimbabwe has, among many other things, reported on
manifestations of Satanism in schools (DailyNews 2015; The
Chronicle 2017) and evils spirits called ‘spiritual spouses’
that are believed to sexually harass people (Chidavaenzi
2015). Prophet Uebert Angel’s book Defeating the demon of
poverty (2016) treats poverty as a demon. This shows that
prophetic Pentecostalism is a religion of fear. These fears
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Original Research
raise the profile of Pentecostal prophets, as they are relied
upon as security agents against evil forces. It is further
observed that these are the same fears that have been known
to prompt mainline mission Christians into religious
syncretism of placing ‘one foot’ in the church while retaining
the other in the ATR (Maimela 1991:9; Mugabe 1999:240).
The adoption and incorporation of African
traditional religious worldview
A critical analysis of the prophetic Pentecostalism in
Zimbabwe reveals an adoption and incorporation of the
ATR worldview of spiritual security. Biri’s study of
Zimbabwean Pentecostalism (2012) highlights the serious
influence of the ATR beliefs and practices on some
Zimbabwean Pentecostal churches. Biri (2012:10) observes
that Zimbabwean Pentecostals ironically reject the ATR
practices and condemn them as belonging to darkness, and
yet still maintain a religious outlook and practice embedded
in the ATR worldview. In essence the Pentecostals condemn
the ATR and supposedly abandon it, but adopt a religious
life constructed not in biblical categories, but in the ATR
categories that included spiritual vulnerability and fear of
evil spiritual powers.
Vulnerability to evil spiritual powers is a strong notion in the
ATR (Bhebhe 2013:52). According to Mbiti (1969:99), ‘African
peoples are much aware of evil in the world and in various
ways they endeavour to fight it’. In essence, African
traditionalists ‘perceive and approach life like a hunted
animal under the watchful eye of a hunter waiting an
opportune moment to take a decisive pounce’ (Banda
2005:23). The ATR feared evil powers that permeate human
existence include evil spirits that function independently,
acts of witchcraft and sorcery commissioned by envious and
jealous people or ones’ enemies, avenging spirits called
uzimu (in Ndebele) or ngozi (in Shona), and severe disciplinary
actions by one’s ancestors (Amanze 1998:14; Banda 2005:23;
Magezi & Myambo 2011:164–166; Nyathi 2001:121).
Therefore, as Bhebhe (2013:53–56) shows, in the ATR
dichotomous worldview religious life focuses on winning
the protective favour of the good spirits that include one’s
ancestral spirits and wading away the harmful evil spirits.
Naturally, this causes a heavy reliance on the mediation of
the ancestral spirits, traditional practitioners and objects
conferred with magical power.
The excessive reliance on prophets in Zimbabwean
Pentecostalism resembles what is common in the ATR.
Prophetic Pentecostals place their faith in prophets who, in
similar fashion as in the ATR, play a mediatory role and
prescribe things with magical value such as the anointed oil,
anointed clothes and various paraphernalia as defence
mechanism from evil forces. Pentecostal Christians address
their insecurity by placing confidence in the prophets who
are considered the mighty anointed of God, but who operate
in near similar fashion as the ATR healers (Biri 2012:2). This
shows serious contradictions and inconsistencies in the
Pentecostal understanding of Christian conversion. It would
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be expected that conversion is yielding to the lordship of
Jesus Christ and confidence in his shepherding power – he
who victoriously conquered death and the devil’s evil
kingdom. Yet, prophetic Pentecostals conversion often does
not translate into abandoning the ATR worldview dominated
by the fear of malevolent spirits and adopting a new
worldview informed by and based on Christ’s victory over
all evil forces, and thus induce a dependence on Christ for
protection from the feared evil powers.
Furthermore, like in the ATR, prophetic Pentecostalism
approaches God from an appeasement perspective rather
than worshipping and glorifying him. Tithes, seed offerings
and intense religious activities function as means of securing
blessings and protection from malevolent powers God’s
presence and actions are seen as regulated by the believer’s
religious activity. This reflects a superstitious view of God,
found in the ATR, where God is ‘sometimes believed to be the
Lord of magic, and Himself subject to its influence, His true
image is blurred by exaggerated anthropomorphism’
(Nyamiti 1997:58). Nyamiti (1997:58) points out that the
outcome of this view of God is ‘confusion, pessimism,
mistrust and a feeling of insecurity’. For, rather than a religion
of freedom, what results is a religion of fear. In her tribute to
the late ATR lecturer, Chirevo Kwenda, Melissa Browning
(2013) records that he classified the ATR as ‘deal-making’. In
other words, the ATR has ‘high utility value’ (Nyathi 2001:6).
This means that ‘[e]nergy in the religious effort is channelled
towards warding off the evil effects of the negative side, that
is the evil ancestral spirits and their mediums’ (Nyathi
2001:6). Therefore, the prompting for religious ceremonies
and rituals in the ATR does not seem to be a reverence for
God, but a quest for security of life, maintenance of peace
and the defence for prosperity (Banda 2005:24; Imasogie
1985:226; Mbiti 1969:196). Through critical lenses, one will
find the same principle in prophetic Pentecostalism, as
worship of God seems to be not necessarily out of reverence
and awe to his majesty, but as a protective mechanism against
the malevolent forces that bring destruction in one’s life. Like
in the ATR, the prophets have emerged as mediators between
the physical and spiritual world, essentially as mediators of
God’s power needed by the believer to be victorious over all
threats and impediments to a successful existence in this
present life.
The adoption of the African indigenous
prophets systems
Apparently, Zimbabwean Pentecostalism shares some traits
of African indigenous prophets who broke away from
mainline mission Christianity in protest due to its lack of
relevance to the African context (Amanze 1998:62–82).5 The
African indigenous prophets addressed the foreign European
nature of Christianity by adopting and creatively
Christianising the ATR elements. It is as if the ATR elements
5.Daneel (1987:100) finds no evidence to support the idea that the Shona AIC were a
protest movement against mission Christianity. However, considering that some
Africans who joined the Shona AICs were products of mission school education
where some had undergone catechism classes, their turning to AICs was tantamount
to protest, because, in doing so, these Africans were turning against religious
heritage received in mission schools (Daneel 1987:99–100).
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Original Research
were baptised into Christianity. Daneel (1987:100) comes to
the conclusion that the Shona African Initiated Churches
(AIC) ‘real attraction for members and growth derive from
their original, creative attempts to relate the good news of the
gospel in a meaningful and symbolically intelligible way to
the innermost needs of Africa’. Often, the AIC prophets
retained the main the ATR structures in recreated Christianised
form. For instance, as Daneel (1977:186–187) highlights,
Bishop Samuel Mutendi banned his followers from
participating in the ATR rain ceremonies conducted at the
Njelele shrine in Matopos and, in its place, instituted a parallel
rain ceremony, Ungano yembewu [seed conference], at the
church’s headquarters that kept similar aspects of the ATR
rituals, but in Christianised form. This highlights the extent to
which the AICs ‘have modelled their practices on traditional
patterns’ (Daneel 1977:189). The concept of the ceremony to
pray for the rains and bless the seed to be planted was
retained, but the prophetic bishop replaced the priestly and
mediatory role of the ATR priests and spirit mediums. The
prophet’s headquarters replaced the Matojeni (Njelele) shrine
and became the centre of all the major Christianised rituals.
In the AIC perspective the prophetic leader function as a
‘mediator’ ‘whose representative function goes far beyond
the biblical concept of intercession and who interferes with
the individual’s free access to the presence of God’ (Daneel
1988:23–24). This resulted in a greater reliance on the
prophetic leader by the members as a channel to God (Daneel
1988:109–110).6 The same approach is seen among Pentecostal
prophets who are constantly bombarded with requests for
prayers in a manner that suggests they are the only effective
channel to the throne of God. Although it is undisputable
that Pentecostal prophets do indeed preach Jesus Christ as
the One who has victoriously demolished Satan and his evil
kingdom, they ultimately contradict the zeal with which they
make this proclamation by continuously holding onto a
worldview dominated by fears and associated with witchcraft
and harmful evil powers, the very same fear-filled worldview
that dominates African traditionalists. Overall, prophetic
Pentecostalism is challenged to transform its worldview
according to the victorious reign of the resurrected Christ.
A Christological evaluation of the
mediatory role of Pentecostal
prophets
Christological evaluated, the mediatory role played by the
prophets gives them the charge of competing with Christ and
usurping his mediatory role in the lives of the believers. In
order to entirely understand this phenomenon, the following
facets are illustrated.
Proclaiming Christ as Lord while promoting
practical atheism
Indubitably, the Pentecostal prophets do indeed proclaim
Jesus Christ as Lord and Saviour. Most Pentecostal church
6.For a detailed discussion of the mediatory function of AIC prophets, see Daneel
(1988:23–24, 109–117).
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auditoriums are adorned with banners inscribed with some
form of affirmation of Jesus Christ as Lord and Saviour. The
healings and deliverances are conducted in Jesus Christ’s
name as he is proclaimed redeemer and liberator. The
prophets generally project themselves as in service of Christ.
However, as already indicated in the preceding discussion,
the prophets portray themselves to their believers in a
manner that creates parallel soteriological structurers that
ultimately undermines Christ’s liberating, securing and
empowering lordship on the believer. This undermines
Christ’s deity and breeds practical atheism among prophetic
Pentecostal believers. By practical atheism is meant that
while Pentecostal Christians cognitively believe in the power
of Christ, they heavily rely on prophets and their prescriptions
as if Christ does not exist at all or is powerless to sufficiently
help them. In other words, while proclaiming the Lordship of
Christ, the Pentecostal prophets play a mediatory role in the
lives of their followers that ends up undermining Christ’s
mediatory role. The prophets give much greater prominence
to their role in the lives of the Christians to such an extent
that they create a spiritual parallel structure where Christ
and the prophets eventually compete for controlling the
believer.
Christ, as presented by the Pentecostal prophet, lacks
sovereign power and independence, because he is either
inadequate to stand alone or is subject to the aid of magical
charms in the form of anointed water and seeded offerings –
to name but a few. Instead of a divine and omniscient Jesus
Christ with a sovereign will who searches the intentions of all
human beings, ‘the Jesus of Pentecostal prophets’ can be
manipulated through anointed objects and rich tithes and
offerings. Rather than causing God to work in one’s life by
prayer and faithful dependence on him, Pentecostal prophets
prescribe various anointed paraphernalia and sacrificial
actions to sway God to work in one’s favour. When prophets
implement structures and solutions that usurp God’s unique
role among Christians as they place their confidence in
anointed water, anointed armbands and anointed oil given
by the prophet, ‘recourse to God [becomes] rather rare, and in
most cases the general attitude is almost “practical atheism”’
(Nyamiti 1997:58). Ultimately, Christ ends up being seen as
powerless and needing the back-up of the prophets with
their anointed charms. The end result is a Christ who has no
sovereign control over the affairs of the world and therefore
needs the mediatory assistance of the anointed prophets.
Furthermore, the emerging ‘Christ’ from Pentecostal prophets
in Zimbabwe is rather partial and subject to religious
manipulation. The above-noted concern of Nyamiti (1997:58)
about the superstitious view of God in the ATR as ‘the Lord
of magic, and Himself subject to its influence’ is also
applicable to this discussion. Rather than sovereignly
gracious, independent and impartial, the Christ in Pentecostal
prophetic churches appears as the Lord of anointed objects
and seems subject to their influence. This further implies that
his special blessings are only reserved for those who sow
their valuable incomes and makes him a partial Christ that is
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Original Research
far from the Saviour who opts for the poor as demonstrated
in passages such as Matthew 25.
Ultimately, the mediatory role of Christ is undermined as
Christians end up depending on the miraculous and piety of
the prophet for all of their spiritual needs and security.
Furthermore, as already pointed out, the matrix of faith
among Pentecostal prophets instils a dependence on magical
manipulation of Christ rather than a dependence on faith in
Christ’s gracious acceptance of the Christian. Instead of
yielding to Christ’s redemptive work on the cross, the
Christians undertake efforts of appeasing Christ by religious
activities and sacrificial giving of material gifts. Therefore, a
major Christological challenge in prophetic Pentecostalism is
the proclamation of Christ as Lord while pursuing religious
practices that ironically promote practical life that is not
dependent on him.
Proclaiming Christ as Saviour while undermining
his soteriological work
The ripple effect of the above-noted problem is the
undermining of Christ’s soteriological work. Indeed, we
have already affirmed that Pentecostal prophets do
undeniably proclaim Christ as the Lord and Saviour.
However, these prophets impose themselves in the lives of
their followers in a manner that ultimately contradicts and
undermines the Lordship and soteriological work of Christ
in the lives of the believers by prescribing, to desperate
believers, items such as anointed oil (Rupapa & Shumba
2014), anointed regalia branded with their names, anointed
branded bottled water (Chaya 2017), anointed cucumbers
(Chaya 2016), anointed pens for exams (Bulla 2016), anointed
condoms (Mbanje 2015) and even spraying insecticides.
When believers have to undertake pilgrimage to the
prophets’ shrines to be healed, instead of praying and even
fasting in dependence to Christ only as the healer of all
illnesses, the end result is the undermining of Christ’s
soteriological work. Ultimately Christ’s soteriological
prominence in the troubled believer is overshadowed and
usurped by the prophet. It gives the impression that one can
just rely on the prophet for their salvation and healing. It also
means that the prophet performs Christ’s soteriological
functions. This imposes an ATR framework where trust can
be indirectly given to God by directly trusting the ancestors.
This prompts the veneration of the prophets as saviours and
securers of the Christian. The already noted example from
Biri (2012:3) highlights a dependence on the pastor that
undermined the soteriological work of Christ. It is disturbing
to note that the delivered girl was left undisciplined to grow
in her relationship with Christ so that she would not
constantly depend on her pastor. In some cases, people
unreasonably submit to the authority of Pentecostal prophets
in fear that they will be condemned and abandoned to fight
their battles alone. In such cases the prophets force themselves
on their followers and undermine the soteriological work of
Christ. Seemingly, falling out of favour with the prophet can
withhold the soteriological work of Christ to the believer.
This has resulted in serious abuse of power by Pentecostals
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prophets who use (false) prophetic predictions to manipulate
people to submit to their authority and taking advantage of
them materially and even sexually (Chingarande 2016; Dube
2017; The Herald 2017; Zanamwe 2016). It seems that once
doubt has been cast on the sufficiency of Christ as the only
Saviour in all situations, believers easily fall prey to
manipulation and abuse by the prophets.
The unreasonable validation and promotion of
the African Traditional Religious view of
spiritual insecurity
As pointed out already, fear is a dominating factor in the
ATR (Bhebhe 2013:52–74). Instead of challenging the ATR
worldview of spiritual insecurity, Pentecostal prophets
affirm it as true and leave it unchallenged and
untransformed by Christ’s victory on the cross. Instead of
challenging the superstitious tendencies in the ATR,
Pentecostal prophets authenticate them as real. A
significant problem related to practical atheism in Africa is
the notion of ‘limited cosmic good’ (Van Rooy 1999:238).
This means that the good spiritual power – the cosmic vital
source of life – that causes good things to happen in an
individual is limited and therefore individuals must make
all attempts necessary to possess, control and deploy it to
their exclusive advantage (Van Rooy 1999:238). The use of
magical charms, religious activities and good works are
ways of maintaining the limited cosmic good to oneself
and manipulating it to exclusively bless the concerned
individual. This effectively means manipulating it to
withhold blessings from other people so that all the
blessings remain with the concerned individual. In African
traditional life, witchcraft essentially blocks other people
from accessing this vital cosmic source of life. Prophetic
Pentecostalism in Zimbabwe displays signs of operating
under the notion of limited cosmic good.
The ATR view of spiritual insecurity must be challenged in
accordance to Christ’s mission and work to save and bless
the believers. Christ must not be compared to some form of
limited magical cosmic power that can run out or be
manipulated to work against his will, holiness and goodness.
It is true that the devil’s kingdom of darkness is powerful
and should not be taken lightly. However, it must be noted
that in light of the mightiness of Christ, who conquered death
by his resurrection and who now reigns supremely on the
right hand of the Father, has power over kingdoms of
darkness and prophets.
Towards a framework of
Christological security that
addresses reliance on the mediation
of Pentecostal prophets
How should Christ’s provision of spiritual security be
understood in order to instil, among African Christians, a
certain reliance on Christ that replaces the reliance on the
mediation of Pentecostal prophets?
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Original Research
Teaching African Christians to recognise the
adequacy of Christ to their unique African
context
Pentecostal prophets thrive on the African Christian’s lack of
confidence in the sufficiency and relevance of Christ in their
unique African context. To a large extent, the prominence of
Pentecostal prophets in Africa is a manifestation of the old
Christological problem of the Western white foreignness and
remoteness of Jesus Christ in Africa that left him irrelevant to
the unique contextual of felt needs (Banda 2005:5–6; Magezi &
Magezi 2017:1–2; Taylor 1963:16). This shows that even
before the arrival of Pentecostal prophets with their
mediatory role, the problem of Christological insecurity had
already become rampant in African Christianity, as many
African Christians wrestled with Christ’s relevance to their
African identity. However, rather than solve the problem,
Pentecostal prophets have exacerbated and complicated it.
Effectively, the Pentecostal prophets create a distance
between believers and Christ, and then set themselves as the
only effective priests that can bridge the gap between Christ
and humanity. The perennial problematic Christological
issue in Africa continues to be the one posed by Taylor
(1963:16) several decades ago: ‘But if Christ were to appear as
the answer to the questions that Africans are asking, what
would he look like?’ The answer to this question is that an
appropriate Christ in Africa is one that would be reachable to
Africans, be interested in the unique African problems and
adequately address these unique African fears. Such a Christ
must be adequately present in several situational crises of the
African life, birth, puberty, marriage, illness and death,
politics and economics (Appiah-Kubi 1997:65).
Therefore, an important practical step towards addressing
the reliance on the mediatory role of the Pentecostal prophets
is presenting biblical and theological knowledge that
empowers Christians to be connected to Jesus Christ as
personal Lord and Saviour who is relevant to their unique
African context. Through appropriate biblical and theological
studies Christians must discover that Jesus Christ is not an
abstract power that can be manipulated through certain
specially anointed prophets. Rather, Christ is a personal
Saviour, with whom all Christians can relate in personal
terms. Bediako (1994) says:
Jesus Christ is unique not because he stands apart from us; rather
he is unique because no one has identified so profoundly with
the human predicament as he has done, in order to transform it.
The uniqueness of Jesus Christ is rooted in this radical and,
direct significance for every human and every human context and
every human culture. (p. 114)
In light of Bediako’s statement, Pentecostal Christians must
be helped to be grounded in Jesus as a personal being who
understands their African uniqueness.
In concert, Imasogie (1985) affirms the relevance of Christ to
the African context as follows:
Christ must be proclaimed as the cosmic Lord who is more than
able to supply all human needs within the context of each
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individual. Christ’s saving concern must be seen as transcending
narrow spiritual salvation to include liberation from human
oppression and the reconciliation of [hu]man[ity] to God, to
fellow humans, and to nature. Given the traditional religious
and the African worldview … any apologetic endeavour that
does not present Christ, as being able to respond to all areas of
human experience cannot command a total commitment of the
African who has a holistic view of reality. (p. 228)
Imasogie highlights that Christ is interested in the whole
spectrum of African life. If Christ is keenly interested in the
African affairs, prophetic Pentecostals must be helped to seek
a personal relationship with Christ through true personal
faith instead of trying to invoke and manipulate Christ’s
presence and attention by anointed objects from the prophets.
This means that Pentecostal Christians must be taught to
realise the essence and implications of important biblical
statements such as the Apostle Paul’s declaration that: ‘God
was in Christ reconciling the world to Himself’ (2 Cor 5:19)
which show that a relationship with Christ ultimately leads
to a personal relationship with triune God. Prophetic
Pentecostal believers must be helped to realise that the triune
God interacts with all classes of society in their unique
cultural contexts, including the Africans. The incarnation
means that it is the triune God that secures the believer and is
present and at work in every aspect of the believer’s life
(Banda 2005:46–48). Therefore, rather than pursue Pentecostal
prophets, African Christians should pursue Christ as the
only perfect and sinless mediator between God and humanity
– the One who now reigns on the right hand of the Father and
who guarantees the active presence of God.
Implementing Christian discipleship that instils a
Christocentric worldview of reality
The logical conclusion of the biblical and theological training
in the church is discipleship. Instead of validating and
promoting the fear oriented African worldview dominated
by terrifying malevolent evil spirits, Pentecostal prophets
must undertake a programme of discipleship that instils a
Christocentric worldview in their followers. Among other
things, a Christocentric worldview of reality views life from
the perspective of Christ’s victory on the cross and his
enthronement at the right hand of the Father (Eph 1:20).
Moreover, the Scriptures present Christ as the Creator and
Maintainer of the universe (Col 1:17). It means that the occult
glorifying home movies that instil and reinforce fear in many
African Christians (Ezenweke 2013:101) must be discarded
and replaced by those that affirm the victorious reign of the
resurrected Christ. In other words, the primary requisite in
the quest for Christological security in the African church is a
life disciple according to the image of Christ and what he has
accomplished for every believer (Banda 2005:42).
A Christocentric worldview values spiritual disciplines such
as personal Bible study, personal prayer and fasting that
foster personal relationship and dependence on God.
Therefore, rather than the common Pentecostal use of Jesus’s
name as an incantation to produce signs and wonders, Christ
must be related to as a personal Being who is sovereign,
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independent, omniscient, omnipotent, omnipresent among
many other attributes. This means that Pentecostals must
operate from a worldview of Christ as a divine personal
being and not a magical charm. Therefore, instead of leading
believers to be attached to anointed objects such as oil and
armbands, Pentecostal prophets should lead the believers
into a personal attachment with Christ who desires to relate
to his people personally and not magically. This requires that
Pentecostal Christians should be assisted to realise the full
extent of biblical imagination of salvation such as ontological
newness (2 Cor 5:17), being delivered from the kingdom of
darkness into the kingdom of life (Col 1:13), of being ‘in’
Christ (Rm 8:1; Col 2:6–7), of being adopted into the family of
God (Jn 1:12) and be a temple of God (1 Cor 3:16; 6:19). These
motifs of the new state and status of the Christians calls
believers to constantly view themselves as in a personal
relationship with God. Pentecostals must consider themselves
as recreated, new and planted into Christ who also dwells in
them through the Holy Spirit which biblically and
theologically makes it illogical for Christians to uncritically
fear inheriting the spiritual curses of their ancestors. They
need to understand that in Christ they receive a new spiritual
state and status that gives them a new life.
Christian discipleship must instil a Christocentric worldview
of reality by enabling Pentecostal Christians to view their
present sufferings and disappointments eschatologically. The
full measure of the reign of Christ’s unshakable eternal
kingdom (Mt 12:28–29; Rv 21:1) will come at his final come
when all reality will be recreated anew and gloriously. This
means that what may appear as the devil’s victory over the
believer will in the end turn out to be a false victory. Pain and
disappointments are important reminders that Christians
must eagerly expect Christ’s glorious return.
Believer’s spiritual responsibility rooted within
the victorious kingdom of God
The Pentecostal prophets can be credited for highlighting
that Christians are involved in a spiritual battle. Indeed, the
Bible presents Christians as soldiers in a spiritual warfare
that pits God’s kingdom of the light against Satan’s
kingdom of darkness. However, a serious problem of the
Pentecostal prophets lies in failing to ground the believers’
spiritual responsibility within the victorious kingdom of
God. First, while Christ has conquered the kingdom of
darkness, he never promises his followers a trouble-free life
in this side of the eschaton. Christ assures believers that
while he has conquered the kingdom of darkness, in this
world they will indeed encounter various troubles (Jn
16:33). Similarly, the Apostle Peter warns Christians that
they have an adversary who prowls seeking to crash them
(1 Pt 5:8). It is therefore biblically incorrect for Pentecostal
prophets to promise Christians in this world a perfect life
free from any hardships. It is equally biblically incorrect for
Pentecostal prophets to present physical and emotional
struggles encountered by Christians in this world as curses
that can be avoided by intense religiosity, by using anointed
objects and seeded offerings. Christian spirituality, no
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matter how intense it may be, ‘is not a ticket exempting us
from the consequences of the fall’ (Letham 1993:152). In
other words:
since we live in an imperfect world and our physical bodies are
in an imperfect state – in a fallen nature, suffering and trials do
not always indicate demonic harassment or witchcraft and not
even ancestral curses. (Banda 2005:82)
Therefore, there is need to emphatically root the believer’s
spiritual responsibility within the victorious kingdom of
God. The Christian is commanded to be alert and strong in
the power of Christ the Lord (Eph 6:10; 1 Pt 5:8) and to put on
the full armour of God to fight and resist the schemes of the
devil (Eph 6:11). The implication of these passages is
unpacked by O’Brien (1999) who highlights that:
Christ’s triumph over the powers has ‘already’ occurred (Eph
1:21), so believers no longer live in fear of them. But the fruits of
the victory have ‘not yet’ been fully realised, so Christians must
be aware of the conflict and be equipped with divine power to
stand against them. (pp. 458–459)
Implied in O’Brien’s statement is that, while the enemy
against God’s people is already defeated, Christians still
need to respect him and not take him for granted. However,
rather than fearing him, they must arm themselves with
Lord’s full armour. Therefore, instead of the anointed oils,
anointed water, branded armbands and other such anointed
objects by prophets who actually promote reliance on the
prophets, Christians must arm themselves with the amour of
the Lord and resist the devil.
Conclusion
This article has attempted to grapple with the Christological
implications of the mediatory role of the prophets among
Zimbabwean Pentecostals. The critical analysis reveals
that Pentecostal prophets end up competing with Christ
instead of enabling believers to rely on him only for their
needs. The article observed that Pentecostal prophets in
Zimbabwe are viewed as possessing the authority of God
and Pentecostal Christians rely on them as channels of
encountering God and of receiving God’s blessings. It was
also noted that Pentecostal prophets build on the ATR
worldview that is dominated by fear. The mediatory role
played by Pentecostal prophets promotes practical atheism
in that it leads Christians to depend on the prophets in a
manner that denies the existence of God. The mediatory
role of the prophets further undermines Christ’s salvific
work and fails to challenge the African worldview of fear.
A Christological framework, which will meaningfully
respond to reliance on the mediatory role of the Pentecostal
prophets, must realise the sufficiency of Christ in the
African context and instil a Christ-controlled view of
reality and empower Christians to put on the armour
of the Lord instead of reliance on anointed objects.
Pentecostals prophets are challenged to critically examine
their ministerial roles in the life of their followers in order
to avoid enacting parallel spiritual structures that end up
competing with Christ.
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Original Research
Acknowledgements
Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no financial or personal
relationships which may have inappropriately influenced
them in writing this article.
Authors’ contributions
Both authors equally contributed to authorship. They both
conceptualised, researched and wrote and edited the article.
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