Abstract

This article maps the vital debate on Prosperity Gospel in Africa and its relevance for socioeconomic change. Prosperity Gospel centres mainly on speech acts surrounding faith, wealth and victory, combined with ritual enactments around secondary evidences of divine blessings. Claiming this-worldly success and material well-being as signs of grace it has captured public spheres and has created African religio-scapes of prosperity. The survey on the socioeconomics of African prosperity-oriented Pentecostalism firstly traces the historic genealogy of Prosperity Gospel as transposable message. It appears as a generic formula in paradigmatic reinventions of Pentecostalism in post-second and/or cold war America and in its globalisation in postcolonial Africa. The double resignification of Pentecostal theology - a rereading of ‘mammon’ alongside a new ethic of being in the world - relates to the question of socioeconomic agency. Academic discourse connects Prosperity Gospel social capital with interpretations of its ritual texture thriving around rituals of tithings and offerings. Prosperity Gospel economies are profiled as forms of sacral consumption or sacrificial economy, or else as Pentecostal kleptocracy. Contrarily Prosperity Gospel is portrayed as a variant and porter of African social change. The contextualisation of Prosperity Gospel highlights diverse social agency in different milieus. Rural and peri-urban theologies of survival differ from urban progressive and metropolitan business management Prosperity Gospel. The findings defy generalised views on Prosperity Gospel socioeconomics. African Prosperity Gospel indicates a transformative potential in immediate social relationships, whereas claims of impacting structural parameters of society remain, with a few exceptions, part of Pentecostal imagination.

Highlights

  • Mapping African Prosperity GospelAfrican Pentecostal theologising has captured centre-stage in present-day public spaces by a disputed language of desire

  • The survey on the socioeconomics of African prosperity-oriented Pentecostalism firstly traces the historic genealogy of Prosperity Gospel as transposable message

  • An exemplary description comes from the Lausanne Theology Working Group Statement on Prosperity Gospel published in 2010

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Summary

Charting African Prosperity Gospel economies

Affiliations: 1Dean of Research (Forschungsdekan), Theologische Fakultät, Universität Basel, Switzerland. Dr Andreas Hauser is Forschungsdekan (Dean of research) and Professor für Ausseuropäisches Christentum (Professor for ‘Extra-European Christianity with focus on Africa’), Theologische Fakultät, Universität Basel, Switzerland and is part of the research project, ‘Ecodomy’, directed by Prof Dr Nelus Niemandt, Department Science of Religion and Missiology, Faculty of Theology, University of Pretoria, South Africa. The survey on the socioeconomics of African prosperity-oriented Pentecostalism firstly traces the historic genealogy of Prosperity Gospel as transposable message. It appears as a generic formula in paradigmatic reinventions of Pentecostalism in post-second and/or cold war America and in its globalisation in postcolonial Africa. It will work in Africa, India, China, or anywhere else where God’s people practice the truth of His Word.

Mapping African Prosperity Gospel
Open Access
Genealogy of a transposable message
Transformational social agency
Full Text
Published version (Free)

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