IBIYEMI VICTOR ‘WALE
INTRODUCTION
In
recent time, it is not obscure to attribute the failure of the full
assimilation of the Christian message on the African soil to the “war”
experienced when the Christian faith comes in contact with African traditional
values. However, there is not escape of such battles because the same man who is a Christian is also the same
who is African. He cannot strip himself off the African mentality or format his Africanness to become a new slate. For those who have tried to do
this “formatting” of the African identity have only ended up joggled in the
middle with no identity they could call theirs. In the same vein, the same man
cannot jettison or reject his Catholic faith because he is African, if he tries
this, he would be in perpetual darkness and spiritual debasement. Hence, many
have cowardly crawled or dovetailed into what is regarded as syncretism or
neopaganism which are two of the biggest troubles bedevilling the African man
in recent times. What should therefore be the way out? If there is going to be any
liberation from syncretism or neoganism? The only reliable solution I what is
often regarded as inculturation which I vehemently think is a way of seeing the
catholic Faith in the eyes of African Tradition. This paper transverse the idea
of inculturation only in liturgy but ideally inculturation in every aspects of
the people’s life.
THE CATHOLIC FAITH AND THE AFRICAN PEOPLE: THE
EVANGELISATION OF A PEOPLE
It is
indubitable to remark that the contact of the Catholic Faith with the African
world was staged in Evangelisation. In fact, evangelisation is still an ongoing
task in the continent. And more importantly, with the elapsing effects of the
Year of Faith, what registers is that, there is need for actual
re-evangelisation of all peoples.
When
the Faith was received, it wasn’t received in a vacuum as the early white
missionaries would want to claim. It was in truth received, overlapping
traditional cultural values with are very unique to the African experience.
Sequel to the above, is the fact that the process of evangelisation came in
with strands and elements of other agenda, therefore making the whole
evangelical experience, a bunch of many coagulated ideologies.
The
faith in so many Africans was not sunk deeply enough. Because, the faith was
proven to be very different from what the Africans could normally conceive of
their natural environment. After all, it is
a foreign religion. That foreignness
eventually became a perennial missing-link to identify the tenets of the
Catholic religion to the African existence. What many did in those African
settings was to just adopt Catholicism even without a full understanding of
what it fully entails.
In the
final analysis therefore, what is discovered is that, there is a huge gap
between the faith of these people and culture. The result of this is living
double lives. A life that is quite distinct when they are in the Church and
another totally distinct life-style in social-cultural engagements. Is that not
what we experience even with modern day Christians? This situation begs for
solution and for a synergy between the religious and social expressions of
Catholics.
In the
consideration of this nagging problem, the solution has been a term vehemently
invoke in mostly liturgical and theological spheres called- Inculturation.
INCULTURATION: INCARNATING THE GOSPEL INTO OUR CULTURE
Inculturation
is a recent coinage in the vocabulary of the Church’s magisterium. Basically,
it implies the incarnation of the Gospel in native cultures and also the
introduction of these cultures into the life of the church.[1]
Pope Paul VI also made the remark that “what matters is to evangelise man’s
culture and cultures (not in a purely decorative was, as it were, by applying a
thin veneer, but in a vital way, in depth and right to their very roots), in
the wide and rich sense which these terms have in Gadium et Spes (50), always taking the person as one’s starting
point and always coming back to the relationships of people among themselves
and with God.[2]
For
Blessed John Paul II, inculturation means “the ultimate transformation of
authentic cultural values through their integration in Christianity and the
insertion of Christianity in the various human cultures.[3]For
any effective conversion to be wrath, Africa needs an evangelization of her
culture. On the African soil, this has taken different dimensions and is in the
process, what we can hope for is that it is properly done for effectiveness.
AN AFRICAN UNDERSTANDING OF THE FAITH: TOWARDS AN AFRICAN
THEOLOGY
The
Popes have continued to warn and advise that there must be an African
Christianity.[4]
When we talk of an African Christianity, it does not translates into a juju worship or a juju-based Christianity. It is understanding the Catholic Faith
purely from our African scenes. In that light, we will not be living aloof of
our religion. The question that must then be asked is: how truly can we create
an African-catholic worship?
The most
visible expression of that integration is the Liturgy. Indeed Sacrosanctum Concillium
notes that the liturgy is the culmen et
fons; the source of the Church’s life
and existence. Therefore, Anscar Chupungco remarks that “inculturation is a
process hereby pertinent elements of a local culture are integrated into the
worship of a local Church. Integration means that culture will influence the
way prayer formularies are composed and proclaimed, ritual actions are
performed, and the message is expressed in art forms. Integration could also
mean that local rites, symbols and festivals, after due critique and Christian
reinterpretation, will become part of the liturgical worship of a local Church.[5]
Hence, one thing is sure, liturgical texts, symbol, gestures and feast will
evoke some sentiments from the people’s history, traditions, cultural patterns
and imaginative genius. In effect, some areas that involve inculturation in the
liturgy include: Language, music, ritual gestures, symbols and material
elements.[6]
CONCLUSION: THE SWEETNESS OF BEING AN AFRICAN CHRISTIAN
There is
abundance of joy when we truly worship the way we should- that we worship in
our culture and tradition. By that, we promote God with what we have and in
what we are. In fact, the idea of foreignness is abolished and worship becomes
livelier and more appreciable. Let’s do it!
[1] John Paul II Encylical, SlavorunApostoli ,21
[2] Paul VI, EvangeliiNuntiandi, 20
[3] John Paul, encyclical, redemptorisMissio, 52
[4]Ude, Francis Arinze and Paul Ochada, “Inculturation and the Ongoing
Dialogue: Implications for Liturgy” in Fifty
Years After Vatican II: Challenges, Faith and Culture- A Journal of African
Theology Vol. 23 Published by the NACATHS, Nigeria. (March, 2013), p. 2
[5]Anscar J. Chupungco, OSB, Liturgical Inculturation: The Future that
awaits us in www.valpo.edu/ ...chupungco2.pdf
Accessed on 17th Nov, 2013.
[6]Ude, Francis Arinze and Paul Ochada, Op.cit. p. 7
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