There is an important if largely unremarked diversity within African Christianity; on the one hand, an enchanted Christianity that views the world as pervaded by spiritual forces, and on the other a disenchanted Christianity that discounts them.
An enchanted Christian sees his glorious destiny threatened by witches, spirits, and ancestral curses. Churches catering for this worldview lay bare the workings of this spirit world, deliver those suffering from spirit attacks, and equip members to combat them. This enchanted imagination, along with the prosperity gospel, and emphasis on the pastorâs âanointingâ, are the principal characteristics of much African Pentecostalism.
Gifford argues that the enchanted religious imagination militates against development by encouraging fear and distrust, and diminishing human responsibility and agency. The prosperity gospel of âcovenant wealth from tithes and offeringsâ is the antithesis of Weberâs Protestant ethic; and to magnify the person of the pastor is to perpetuate the curse of the âBig Manâ.
Official Catholicism, totally disenchanted, long associated with schools and hospitals, is now involved in development, from microfinance to election monitoring, from conflict resolution to human rights. This âNGO-isation of Catholicismâ, made almost inevitable by funding from secular donors like the EU and the UN, even if defended theologically, comes at the price of failing to address the âreligiousâ needs of so many African Christians.