When is Prayer Misplaced?
I recently picked
up fellow anthropologist Tanya Luhrmann’s much regarded book titled When God talks Back (2012) in which she
seeks to establish how Americans at Vineyard Church, which she has studied for
a number of years, “can hear the voice of God replying to their questions, even
the most mundane and everyday.” Tanya is not alone in the quest to understand
Christianity from an anthropological perspective. Christianity, a subject left
out of anthropology’s study of societies and cultures for a long time, has recently
become an important topic that has even led to the emergence of an area
referred to as the “anthropology of Christianity,” complete with specialists
(think here of Joel Robbins) and a very active bibliography blog (www.anthrocybib.net) that posts entries almost every week.
So I got wondering about what it takes to study Christianity as a Christian and
found myself going back to some of my own qualms with the way sometimes the
faith is operationalized in our daily lives or the ways in which people may
attribute Christianity to certain cultural practices that (in my humble
opinion) seem quite unrelated to the faith itself. I want to explore one such
practice here—the ways sometimes prayer or what some call “giving things to
God” can be misplaced. I ask that as you read this bear with me here before you
start thinking that I am bashing my own faith. While we may agree with some
observers that prayer is central to the every day life of Christians, we might
want to critically look at how some of the things we want to “put to prayer”
say a lot about our willingness to allow reason and common sense to fly away
than really about matters of faith. Let me share some examples.
I am aware of two cases in 2014 and 2012 where Pentecostal pastors in the US southern States (Kentucky and West Virginia) where snake-handling pastors have died of snake bites after believing that they will be healed of those bites through prayer.In June 2003 members of staff from Ghana’s national airline, Ghana Airways, held a “prayer vigil” as their desperate response to the ailing corporation that had continually been facing many financial and management challenges. They brought in a prominent Pentecostal preacher to spiritually “heal” and “deliver” the public corporation from the evils besetting it. As Ghanaian scholar J Kwabena Asamoah-Gyadu has shown in his paper titled,“"’Christ Is the Answer": What Is the Question?’ A Ghana Airways Prayer Vigil and Its Implications for Religion, Evil and Public Space,” there were many indications that the airline was run poorly. It was leasing old jets that were not fuel efficient, could not keep regular schedules, had rude counter clerks, and over-issuance of complimentary tickets. The airline management had also been politicized and there were claims of corruption in its operations. How then was prayer going to respond to these matters?
Further south
in Tanzania there was a parliamentary debate focused on the country’s 2012
national budget. Honorable Rev. Peter Msigwa who represents Iringa (Central
Tanzania, Southwest of Dar es Salaam) was contributing to the government’s
proposed budget for the fiscal year 2012/2013 when one of his colleagues
mentioned the need for prayer as a way of responding to the socioeconomic
challenges facing the nation. In response, Hon Msigwa (right) said,
“I
see no economic theory that states, if you want to solve economic problems you
pray. Even Paul says whoever does not work should not eat [He was referring to 2
Thessalonians 3:10], not that he/she be prayed for, he/she is denied food, but
the contributor says we should pray for him. As a reverend we pray for
fornicators, those caught with other people’s wives. As a reverend we pray for
those who are possessed by evil spirits. What we are doing here is apply an
economic principle: there are more consumers than there are producers so we
have to produce more. We should find ways of producing more. You don’t have to
pray about this.”[1]

I do not know
what to make of these stories other than wonder when does one decide that
prayer allows one to use interventions available or as I would see it, made
available to one for use, instead of making what is clearly a dangerous and
many times irrational decisions. Why would someone want to assume that God does
not work through biomedicine that one gets at a hospital for snake bites, or
through economic theory that shows the specific gaps created by specific social
and cultural practices that hinder a company’s profitability? How do I
emphasize the value of prayer and yet look at the reality of what we have been
given to work with?
[1] video of his
presentation (mostly in Kiswahili) can be watched here https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T3wgDb2PRAI
[2] Video interview with
Larry Madowo of Nation Television’s #Trend found here http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iXb8-k2ppJ8 posted online Mar 3,
2013 and accessed December 3, 2013.
No comments:
Post a Comment