26 years of my life, i have met only four atheists in Africa. We Africans seem
naturally networked to religion. All meetings — on politics, sport and even
business — begin with a prayer. God is invoked on every occasion, private or
public. Religion is comfortably woven into daily life. Amid the current
economic boom that most African countries are enjoying, huge new numbers of
churches are being built, some of them vast halls.
The Catholic Church, the largest Christian
denomination, is part of the fabric of all African societies. Its schools,
community centers and health clinics are trusted far more than state ones and
often closer to the people. In wars in Africa it can be found that Catholic parishes become refuges in
which food and medicine are provided — like the monasteries in the chaos of
early medieval Europe.
The priests, nuns and church workers who run them are
often the best informed about what is happening and the most committed to the
local community, unlike foreign aid agencies, which are forced to pull out when
there is danger.The Catholic Church in Europe used to be like that,
part of the warp and weft of society. And if it wanted to become so again, it
should send for an African Pope.
The numbers and the zeitgeist dictate that the next
Pope should come from Africa. The percentage of practicing Catholics in Europe
and North America has declined steeply. According to a study conducted by the
Pew Research Centre, since the 1960s four American-born Catholics have left the
Church for every new member. In contrast the number of Catholics in Africa has
grown from 55 million in 1978 to more than 150 million today. By 2025 that
figure is expected to be 230 million. In the past five years, the number of men
training to be Catholic priests in Europe and America has fallen by 10 per
cent. In Africa it has risen by more than 14 per cent.
African history is largely untroubled by religious
wars. Wherever religious wars are reported in Africa the cause is usually a
dispute over land rights involving two communities that happen to be of
different faiths. Religion per se is rarely the cause. That traditional
tolerance however is now under pressure – not from atheism – but from
externally-funded, exclusive fundamentalist religions in the form of Wahabi
Islam exported from Saudi Arabia and evangelical Christian fundamentalism
funded from the United States.
In Europe and the US the Church has become self and
sex-obsessed, out of touch with modern views on sexuality and the rights of
individuals and discredited by its failure to face up to its child-abuse
scandals — the inevitable product of a celibate priesthood. That has undermined
its credibility.
In Africa, where polygamy is still accepted, many
priests have wives and children but that is often an open secret, not an issue
that seems to trouble their communities.
Spiritual leaders have more pressing
and essential issues to confront. In a rich continent full of poor people,
death and disease are never far away. At a national level, Catholic leaders are
respected and trusted when they speak out on social and economic justice —
which many of them do with far more passion and credibility than their Western
counterparts.
Would an African pope change the Church’s attitude
to homosexuality? Highly unlikely but on social justice, both local and
international, expect a far more forthright and vigorous voice. Above all an
African pope could bring a revitalizing spiritual enthusiasm and passion. There
are 16 African cardinals to choose from — though in theory the cardinals do not
have to choose one of their number. The names of Cardinals Francis Arinze of
Nigeria and Peter Turkson of Ghana have been mentioned.
The last two Popes have tried to restore — even
recreate — the Church as a conservative, European-centred institution, maintaining
all the trappings of a secretive and authoritarian ecclesiastical monarchy.
An African Pope would be freed from this baggage.
He could restore the Church’s universal vision by moving out of the Vatican and
bequeath its magnificent — but almost exclusively European Renaissance —
treasures to the world.
He could then rebase the spiritual, emotional and
geographical centre of the Church somewhere closer to a crossroads of modern
humanity, a region where Judaism, Christianity and Islam began, a place where
religion is most intensely felt, where the destiny of humanity itself may be
forged: Jerusalem.
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