Luo Ancestor Veneration and the Christian Doctrine of the Communion of Saints

preview-18
  • Luo Ancestor Veneration and the Christian Doctrine of the Communion of Saints Book Detail

  • Author : Thomas Ochieng Otanga
  • Release Date : 2013
  • Publisher :
  • Genre : Ancestor worship
  • Pages : 483
  • ISBN 13 :
  • File Size : 45,45 MB

Luo Ancestor Veneration and the Christian Doctrine of the Communion of Saints by Thomas Ochieng Otanga PDF Summary

Book Description: This monograph examines the belief of the Luo people of Kenya about their ancestors in light of the Christian doctrine of Communion of Saints. The objective of the study is to discover ways by which the veneration of African ancestors can be understood as similar to the belief in the Christian doctrine of Communion of Saints. Furthermore, this monograph seeks to suggest creative ways by which an African ancestral framework can become a point of departure for promoting an authentic engagement between the Gospel of Christ and the indigenous African cultures in developing an African Christian theology of ancestors. A brief background of the monograph may be described as follows. Communio sanctorum, the tripartite Church of the living, the Church in purgatory, and the triumphant Church in heaven, can be compared to the relationship of African peoples with their ancestors, with God, and with nature. The monograph begins with a study of the origins and theological foundations of the communio sanctorum. It then uses the methodologies of qualitative research and social historical research to examine the Luo funeral rituals in order to study the ancestor cults and ancestor veneration that pervade the cultures of sub-Saharan Africa. The ancestral beliefs and practices have been construed as both obstacles to the Gospel and preambles to it. In studying the Luo funeral rites, we glean the Luo's attachment to their ancestors. Furthermore, the funeral rites demonstrate the Luo belief that death is basic to the understanding of the significance of their ancestors. The Luo perform the funeral rituals together with other cultural rites to ensure the incorporation of their deceased kin into the ancestral world. The Luo believe that the ancestors, although deceased, remain a part of the community. The ancestors have such a resilient and pervasive role in life and thought of the Luo that a Luo Christian is inclined to think of his ancestor as being with God in the same manner that a canonized saint is believed to dwell in the courts of God. There are also similarities between the Luo people and other African ethnic groups; in fact we can apply some of the major observations and conclusions from the Luo to the other African peoples in order to draw important conclusions for a Christian theology of African ancestors. Early Christian missionaries discouraged African funeral rituals (and many other African traditional customs) and encouraged Christian burial rites. However, Christian rituals alone fail to satisfy the cultural and spiritual needs of the African Christian believers. Consequently the African Christian believers very often publicly assent to orthodox Christian beliefs and join in the denunciations of the ancestor rites, but privately retain their loyalty to their indigenous traditions. Their traditions affords them the means by which they can live in communion with their ancestors whose commemoration they have always regarded as indispensable and beneficial or even redemptive for their earthly existence. This dual or multi-faith practice is a spiritual dilemma that if unexamined may become a problem that stifles the spiritual development of African Christians, weakens the entire enterprise of evangelization and could in the long run hamper the growth of authentic Christian faith. In this study I argue that African ancestral veneration is on par with communio sanctorum. Moreover, since African ancestral beliefs and practices are fundamental pillars of religion for many ethnic groups in Africa, I propose that we use them to open up broad possibilities for defining pastoral strategies responsive to the African Christian believers' spiritual needs. The monograph ends by proposing that if Christianity is to become firmly rooted in the rich African spiritual traditions, certain theological parameters must be delineated to enable African Christians to relate their ancestral beliefs to the salvific work of Christ. Ancestral beliefs and practices can therefore be viewed through a single theological lens that serves as a hermeneutical tool for critiquing Western and Christian hegemonic forces as well as responding to the cultural legacies of colonialism and of imperialism.

Disclaimer: www.yourbookbest.com does not own Luo Ancestor Veneration and the Christian Doctrine of the Communion of Saints books pdf, neither created or scanned. We just provide the link that is already available on the internet, public domain and in Google Drive. If any way it violates the law or has any issues, then kindly mail us via contact us page to request the removal of the link.

Remembering the Dead

Remembering the Dead

File Size : 61,61 MB
Total View : 2086 Views
DOWNLOAD

Remembering the dead is a topic which connects various cultures and traditions. The reception of the African tradition of ancestorship is a theological enrichme

The Communion of Saints

The Communion of Saints

File Size : 98,98 MB
Total View : 8894 Views
DOWNLOAD

Christian churches, divided and scattered over the earth, need to rediscover that there is one catholic and apostolic Church, the Communion of Saints. The autho