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“Has God left Africa?”
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong, Ghanadot
Why will Ghana’s Health Minister, Mr. Courage Quashigah,
ask “Has God left Africa?” Despite its complexity and
its implications in divinity, theology
and African cosmology, the question practically borders
on the historical
and the material. If we accept that God is a referee in
human’s endeavours,
having given humankind the intelligence to use to live a
prosperous life,
then either African cosmology or Western theology or
divinity will not
answer Mr. Quashigah’s question that God has left
Africa. Why has God left Africa? Where the question does
arises from? It is in attempting to answer these
questions that we precede to the historical and the
material - still God is not left out, still God is the
arbitrator.
Mr. Quashigah is part of the emerging Ghanaian thinkers
who envision a Ghana which progress is driven
simultaneously by its cultural values and the
global neo-liberal ones. Africans and their cosmology
didn’t supposed that
“God has left Africa,” but rather the colonialists and
their notion of
“God.” And apart from the damages of the slave trade,
colonialism and the
clutches of neo-colonialism, helpless Africans, Mr.
Quashigah argues, are
now under the barrage of number of Western films which
the lead characters, who might have spoken to their
“God,” constantly affirm that “God had left Africa long
ago,” “God already left Africa” and “This God-forsaken
place.”
This makes Africa either bad or evil in the face of the
colonialists’ “God,”
that’s why their “God” has forsaken Africa. In this
sense, the problem “Has
God left Africa” is a colonialists’ one and not African.
And both as a
material and a metaphysical issue, the supposition “God
has left Africa” is
a problem for the colonialists’ theology and divinity to
deal with.
Western theologians have struggled for long with
theodicy – the problem of
good God and the reality of evil. This is seen more in
Thomas Aquinas’
“Summa Theologiae,” that confesses the existence of evil
is the best case
against the existence of God. Theologians see this as
unconvincing in the
struggle to understand evil. Emmanuel Kingsley Larbi, a
renowned Ghanaian theology scholar, argues that African
cosmology with its Supreme Being and the basic idea of
Deity is metaphysically not all that different from that
of the Western world, and may explain why Christianity
boomed quickly in Africa than elsewhere in the world.
Like Western theology, African cosmology says that “the
forces of evil are always at work against human beings
in order to prevent them from enjoying abundant life.”
This explains the African value of cosmological balance
between the metaphysical and the physical. In African
cosmology, as Zambia Roman Catholic Archbishop Emmanuel
Milingo explains, material progress comes from this
balance.
In this case, to explain what underlies “God has left
Africa” may be more of
material power, for historical reasons, than the
metaphysical, given that it
may be fruitless to attempt to understand whether “God
has left Africa”. It
is this state of theological struggles and immanence in
divinity that inform
Quashigah’s assertion of the colonialists and Hollywood
saying God has left
Africa – making Africa riddled with not only material
predicaments, despite
being blessed with immense material resources, but also
metaphysical
perplexity. The inference is that if God has left
Africa, is it because
Africa has either offended God or God does not like
Africa - and why would
God do that? Again, it is fruitless struggle to
understand that. Perhaps God
has not left Africa but might have “retracted himself,”
as the American
thinker and Nazi Holocaust survivor Mr. Elie Wiesel
would say, in the matter
of Africa. How should Africa handle this? Mr. Quashigah,
according to Ghana
News Agency (Aug. 23), argues that African Christians
have to “counter this
subtle strategy of Satan,” of “God has left Africa,”
through positive
messages like “God was still in Africa and had given
Africans the greatest
wealth in this world.” This should be done, Mr.
Quashigah suggests, largely
through “research and gathering intelligence on the
activities of Satan…You
need to strategize and plan.”
Simplistic but interesting. But that “God has left
Africa” is not only a
metaphysical conundrum but also material puzzle. A more
objective level of
“God has left Africa” has more to do with the material
state of Africa –
never-ending poverty, the poorest continent in the
world, as the ranks of
African states ranked on the United Nations Human
Development Index (2006),
which data measures global human well-being such as
living a long and
healthy life, being educated, and having a decent
standard of living
indicates. However, most Africans will tell you that
most of their material
predicaments are due to colonialism and its appendages
that ripped them off,
subjected them to unfair international trade system,
stirred civil wars,
imposed their development paradigms on them without
considering their
traditional cultural values, and helped their elites to
loot Africa’s
wealth. Pretty sad!!! Pretty unspiritual!!! Where was
God when all these
damages, if not evil, were happening to apparently
helpless Africa and why
did Africa sat down to go through all these? Perhaps, it
is this material
state of Africa that demonstrates that “God has left
Africa,” and the West
might have helped God, may be their “God,” to leave
Africa dry and “empty.”
Despite this uncomfortable material state, Africans will
tell you that they
are the most religious and spiritual, that they are the
most forgiving, and
that means God is fully in Africa than anywhere else.
This might have helped
neutralize Africans material troubles.
But the central issue is not that Africans are more
religious than anybody
else but rather Africans’ ability to tap God’s abundant
gift given them for
prosperity – still, through balancing the metaphysical
with the physical.
Primate S.K. Adofo, Spiritual Head of Ghana’s
Brotherhood Church, sees God
not only as giver but also argues that the blame of
Satan, or evil forces or
“God has left Africa,” as responsible for the stifling
of Africa’s progress
is not only wrong, “but also unacceptable…the tendency
for people to always
blame all evil deeds and misfortunes that come their way
on Satan or the
devil" and that "most of such evils and misfortunes, are
created by people
themselves and not necessarily by the devil as always
alleged.”
God hasn’t left Africa. God is deeply in Africa, as the
immense wealth of
continent show. If anything at all, it is Africa which
has left Africa and
God – if we are to go by Africa’s biting poverty and not
any complicated
metaphysical struggles. It is up to Africa to use God,
through His gift of
intelligence to Africans, for Africa’s material
progress. And as Mr.
Quashigah suggests, largely through “research and
gathering intelligence on
the activities of Satan…You need to strategize and
plan.”
Kofi Akosah-Sarpong
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