President Paul Kagame |
Few weeks back,
headlines were viral after a religious leader in South Africa who goes
by the name Prophet Alph Lukau performed a “resurrection” miracle in
which he supposedly raised a dead man. The spectacle that occurred in
Johannesburg was derided and condemned by many, who viewed it as
blatantly fake.
“There are no such things as miracles,” the Commission for the Promotion and Protection of Cultural,
Religious and Linguistic Communities (CRL Rights Commission) told South
Africa’s national broadcaster. “They are made up to try to get money
from the hopelessness of our people.”
It was
such a farce. It betrayed the devastating effects that come when
religion is abused and it brings to the fore the issue of Paul Kagame
closing down churches. Should this be the precedent to be followed in
order to curb the rise of unscrupulous religious leaders, mostly in the
form of “prophets”?
However, sometime in January, Paul Kagame, who is the president of Rwanda, disclosed that he will be shutting down over 6000 churches and mosques, claiming that churches were playing with the faith of the people and were just being turned into businesses.
With
the rise of the prophetic age in Africa, one may ask a question – is
this all genuine, or it’s purely fake, with the sole intention of
manipulating people? Religion, of late, has often blinded people from
seeing sense, it is mainly the desperation that leads people to do
absurd things as said by their respective religious leaders.
Contrary
to Prophet Alph Lukau’s claims, three companies that offer funeral
services stepped up claiming that they had been duped by Prophet Lukau
into the “scheme” and it made the church backtrack on its proclamation
of the miracle, saying that the man “was already alive” when his body
got to the church where the miracle was performed. The church, Alleluia
Ministries, said that Lukau had only “completed a miracle that God had
already started”.
So should some of these
scammers masquerading as prophets be banned? Last year we saw Botswana
banning Prophet Shepherd Bushiri’s church from operating in the country.
When banning churches in Kigali, Kagame said, “700 churches in Kigali?
Are these boreholes (deep wells) that give people water? I don’t think
we have as many boreholes. Do we even have as many factories? This has
been a mess!”
The argument in Rwanda was that
the religious outfits had become too many, often operating from
makeshift houses that posed a danger to people. Critics say the move was
aimed at silencing the religious community in Rwanda, basing on
Kagame’s poor human rights record. Six Pentecostal pastors who protested
the church closures were arrested and accused of “illegal meetings with
bad intentions.”
There is now more
formalization for religion in Rwanda, with proposed legislation
requiring pastors to have a theology degree before they start their own
churches so that they teach correct doctrine, said those familiar with
the discussions. The aim is to regulate the Pentecostal churches that
often spring up under leaders who claim to have received a call to
preach. Not everyone has the money for the degree as some observers
noted.
Should this be the yardstick used
especially for the “prophets”? It would be fashioned in a way that these
prophets have to go through a rigorous set of guidelines just to run a
church.
Credit – BBC
No comments:
Post a Comment
Disclaimer: Comment expressed do not reflect the opinion of African Parliamentary News