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African-initiated church

An African-initiated church (AIC) is a Christian church independently started in Africa by Africans rather than chiefly by missionaries from another continent.

Nomenclature

A variety of overlapping terms exist for these forms of Christianity: African-initiated churches, African independent churches, African indigenous churches, and African-instituted churches.[a][2] The abbreviation AIC covers them all. The differences in names correspond to the aspect that a researcher wishes to emphasise. For instance, those who wish to point out that AICs exhibit African cultural forms, describe them as indigenous. These terms have largely been imposed upon such groups and may not be the way they would describe themselves.

The term African refers to the fact that these Christian groupings formed in Africa, but AICs differ from one another. Not all African cultural systems are the same. Regional variations occur among West, East, and Southern Africans, and the AICs will reflect these. AICs can now be found outside Africa.

Location

African-initiated churches are found across Africa; they are particularly well-documented in southern Africa and West Africa. Pauw suggests that at least 36 per cent of the population of Africa belong to an African-initiated church.[3]

Origins

During the colonial era starting in the 1800s, when European powers took control of most of the African continent, black converts to Christianity were unable fully to reconcile their beliefs with the teachings of their church leaders, and split from their parent churches. The reasons for these splits were usually either:

  • Political – an effort to escape white control
  • Historical – many of the parent churches, particularly those from a Protestant tradition, had themselves emerged from a process of schism and synthesis
  • Cultural – the result of trying to accommodate Christian belief within an African world view

Some scholars argue that independent churches or religious movements demonstrate syncretism or partial integration between aspects of Christian belief and African traditional religion. Often these churches have resulted from a process of acculturation between traditional African beliefs and Protestant Christianity,[4] and have split from their parent churches.[citation needed] Bengt Sundkler, one of the most prominent pioneers of research on African independent churches in South Africa, initially argued that AICs were bridges back to a pre-industrial culture.[5] Later, he recognized instead that AICs helped their affiliates to adapt to a modernizing world that was hostile to their cultural beliefs.[citation needed]

Classification and taxonomy

There are thousands of African-initiated churches (more than 10,000 in South Africa alone) and each one has its own characteristics. Ecclesiologists, missiologists, sociologists and others have tried to group them according to common characteristics, though disagreements have arisen about which characteristics are most significant, and which taxonomy is most accurate. Though it is possible to distinguish groups of denominations with common features, there is also much overlap, with some denominations sharing the characteristics of two or more groups.

Many AICs share traditions with Christians from other parts of the Christian world, and these can also be used in classifying them. So there are AICs which share some beliefs or practices with Anglican, Methodist, Pentecostal, and Orthodox traditions. Some are Sabbatarian, some are Zionist, and so on.

Ethiopian churches

Ethiopian churches generally retain the Christian doctrines of their mother church in an unreformed state. Ethiopian African-initiated churches, which are recently formed Protestant congregations, mostly in southern Africa, arose from the Ethiopian movement of the late nineteenth century, which taught that African Christian churches should be under the control of black people. They should not be confused with the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church or Coptic Orthodox Church, which have a much longer and an utterly distinct doctrinal history. Some denominations that arose from the Ethiopian movement have united with these earlier denominations.

Zionist churches

Zionist Churches such as the Zion Christian Church, trace their origins to the Christian Catholic Apostolic Church in Zion, founded by John Alexander Dowie, with its headquarters at Zion, Illinois, in the United States. (It is now called Christ Community Church). Zionist Churches are found chiefly in Southern Africa. In the early 1900s, Zionist missionaries went to South Africa from the United States and established congregations. They emphasised divine healing, abstention from pork, and the wearing of white robes.

The Zionist missionaries were followed by Pentecostal ones, whose teaching was concentrated on spiritual gifts and baptism with the Holy Spirit, with glossolalia as the initial evidence of this. The predominantly white Apostolic Faith Mission of South Africa arose out of this missionary effort and emphasises the Pentecostal teaching.

The black Zionists retained much of the original Zionist tradition. The Zionists split into several different denominations, although the reason for this was more the rapid growth of the movement than divisions. A split in the Zionist movement in the US meant that after 1908 few missionaries came to southern Africa. The movement in southern Africa and its growth has been the result of black leadership and initiative. As time passed some Zionist groups began to mix aspects of traditional African beliefs, such as veneration of the dead, with Christian doctrine. Many Zionists stress faith healing and revelation, and in many congregations the leader is viewed as a prophet.

Messianic churches

Some AICs with strong leadership have been described by some researchers as Messianic, but opinions also changed. The churches that have been called "Messianic" focus on the power and sanctity of their leaders; often the leaders are thought by their followers to possess Jesus-like characteristics. Denominations described as Messianic include Kimbanguism in the Democratic Republic of the Congo; the Nazareth Baptist Church of Isaiah Shembe in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa; and the Zion Christian Church of Engenas Lekganyane with headquarters in Limpopo, South Africa, and the Ibandla Lenkosi Apostolic Church in Zion of South Africa and Swaziland.

Aladura Pentecostal churches

The Aladura Pentecostal churches originated in Nigeria. They rely on the power of prayer and in all effects of the baptism of the Holy Spirit. Today such churches include Christ Apostolic Church, Cherubim and Seraphim movement, Celestial Church of Christ and Church of the Lord (Aladura). The first Aladura Movement was started in 1918 at Ijebu Ode, now in Ogun State, Nigeria, by Sophia Odunlami and Joseph Sadare, respectively a school teacher and a goldsmith. They both attended St. Saviour's Anglican Church. They rejected infant baptism and all forms of medicine, whether western or traditional. In consequence, they initiated the "Prayer Band", popularly called Egbe Aladura. Joseph Sadare was compelled to give up his post in the Synod and others were forced to resign their jobs and to withdraw their children from the Anglican School. The Aladura began as a renewal movement in search of true spirituality.

A revival took place during the 1918 flu pandemic. This consolidated the formation of the prayer group and the group was named Precious Stone and later the Diamond Society. By 1920, the Diamond Society had grown tremendously and had started to form branches around the Western region of Nigeria. In particular, David Odubanjo went to start the Lagos branch. The group emphasised divine healing, Holiness, and All Sufficiency of God, which form the three cardinal beliefs of the Church today. For this reason, the group had association with Faith Tabernacle of Philadelphia and changed its name to Faith Tabernacle of Nigeria.

The Great Revival in Nigeria started in 1930 where the Leaders of the Cherubim & Seraphim, The Church of the Lord (Aladura) and the Faith Tabernacle played important roles. Adherents believe that these leaders – Joseph Sadare of "Egbe Aladura", David Odubanjo of "Diamond Society", Moses Orimolade of "Cherubim & Seraphim", and Josiah Ositelu of "The Church of the Lord (Aladura)" performed several miracles. The revival started in Ibadan in the South-West of Nigeria and later spread to other parts of the country.

The Revival group went through several name changes until, after 24 years of its formation, it finally adopted the name Christ Apostolic Church (CAC) in 1942. Today, CAC has spread worldwide and is the precursor of Aladura Pentecostal Churches in Nigeria. The Church has established several educational establishments at all levels of Nigerian society, including Joseph Ayo Babalola University and a series of primary and secondary schools.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Philomena Njeri Mwaura wrote:

    These African responses to Christianity have been described variously as African initiatives in Christianity, African Independent, African Indigenous, African Initiated or African Instituted Churches. The term "African Independent" indicates that these churches have originated in Africa and have no foreign financial or ecclesiastical control. "African Initiated Churches" indicates that they were started as a result of African initiative in African countries but they may be affiliated to wider bodies that include non-African members. African indigenous indicates that they have retained an African ethos and that their ideology has a distinctive African flavour. "African Instituted Churches" hints that their establishment and growth have taken place on African soil, under the initiatives of Africans.[1]

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ Mwaura 2005, p. 161.
  2. ^ Mwaura 2005, p. 161; Oduro 2008, p. 181.
  3. ^ African Initiated Christianity and the Decolonisation of Development. e book: Routledge. 2020. pp. 95–100. ISBN 978-0-367-82382-5.
  4. ^ Juergensmeyer, M.; Oxford University Press (2005). Religion in Global Civil Society. Oxford scholarship online. Oxford University Press, USA. p. 17. ISBN 978-0-19-518835-6. Retrieved 2023-03-01.
  5. ^ Pobee & Ositelu 1998.

Bibliography

  • Marcus, Harold G. (1994). A History of Ethiopia. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. ISBN 9780520081215.
  • Mwaura, Philomena Njeri (2005). "African Instituted Churches in East Africa". Studies in World Christianity. 10 (2): 160–184. doi:10.3366/swc.2004.10.2.160. ISSN 1354-9901.
  • Oduro, Thomas (2008). "Water Baptism in African Independent Churches: The Paradigm of Christ Holy Church International". In Best, Thomas F. (ed.). Baptism Today: Understanding, Practice, Ecumenical Implications. World Council of Churches Faith and Order Paper. Vol. 207. Collegeville, Minnesota: Liturgical Press. pp. 181–191. ISBN 978-0-8146-6221-2.
  • Pobee, John S.; Ositelu, Gabriel, II (1998). African Initiatives in Christianity: The Growth, Gifts, and Diversities of Indigenous African Churches: A Challenge to the Ecumenical Movement. Risk Book Series. Vol. 83. Geneva: WCC Publications. ISBN 978-2-8254-1277-0.

Further reading

  • Anderson, Allan (2000). Zion and Pentecost: The Spirituality and Experience of Pentecostal and Zionist/Apostolic Churches in South Africa. African Initiatives in Christian Mission. Vol. 6. Pretoria, South Africa: University of South Africa Press. ISBN 978-1-86888-143-7.
  • Barrett, David B. (1968). Schism and Renewal in Africa: An Analysis of Six Thousand Contemporary Religious Movements. Nairobi: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-690374-3. OCLC 780456736.
  • Byaruhanga, Christopher (2015). The History and Theology of the Ecumenical Movement in East Africa. Kampala, Uganda: Fountain Publishers. hdl:20.500.11951/184. ISBN 9789970252855.
  • Daneel, M. L. (1987). Quest for Belonging: Introduction to a Study of African Independent Churches. Gweru, Zimbabwe: Mambo Press. ISBN 978-0-86922-426-7.
  • Hayes, Stephen (2003). "Issues of 'Catholic' Ecclesiology in Ethiopian-Type AICs". In Cuthbertson, Greg; Pretorius, Hennie; Robert, Dana (eds.). Frontiers of African Christianity. African Initiatives in Christian Mission. Vol. 8. Pretoria, South Africa: University of South Africa Press. pp. 137–152. ISBN 978-1-86888-193-2.
  • Öhlmann, Philipp; Frost, Marie-Luise; Gräb, Wilhelm (2016). "African Initiated Churches' Potential as Development Actors". HTS Teologiese Studies / Theological Studies. 72 (4). doi:10.4102/hts.v72i4.3825. ISSN 2072-8050.
  • Olowe, Abi (2007). Great Revivals, Great Revivalist: Joseph Ayo Babalola. Omega Publishers.
  • Oosthuizen, G. C. (1968). Post-Christianity in Africa: A Theological and Anthropological Study. London: C. Hurst and Co. OCLC 1017765202.
  •  ———  (1996). "African Independent/Indigenous Churches in the Social Environment: An Empirical Analysis". Africa Insight. 26 (4): 308–324. hdl:10520/AJA02562804_1467. ISSN 0256-2804.
  • Ositelu, Rufus Okikiola Olubiyi (2002). African Instituted Churches: Diversities, Growth, Gifts, Spirituality and Ecumenical Understanding of African Initiated Churches. Münster, Germany: LIT Verlag. ISBN 978-3-8258-6087-5.
  •  ———  (2009). The Journey So Far: Visionary and Result-Oriented Leadership. Ogere, Nigeria: TCLAW Publishers. ISBN 978-978-900-478-2.
  • Pauw, C. M. (1995). "African Independent Churches as a 'People's Response' to the Christian Message". Journal for the Study of Religion. 8 (1): 3–25. ISSN 2413-3027. JSTOR 24764145.
  • Sundkler, Bengt G. M. (1961). Bantu Prophets in South Africa. London: International African Institute.
  • Venter, Dawid, ed. (2004). Engaging Modernity: Methods and Cases for Studying African Independent Churches in South Africa. Westport, Connecticut: Praeger. ISBN 978-0-275-96903-5.
  • Welbourn, Frederick Burkewood (1961). East African Rebels: A Study of Some Independent Churches. London: SCM Press. OCLC 1140589.

External links

  • African Christians, focus on African Initiated Orthodoxies
  • African initiated churches ( 2009-10-24)
  • Brotherhood of the Cross and Star

african, initiated, church, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, 2019, learn, when, remove, this, template, message. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations May 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message An African initiated church AIC is a Christian church independently started in Africa by Africans rather than chiefly by missionaries from another continent Contents 1 Nomenclature 2 Location 3 Origins 4 Classification and taxonomy 4 1 Ethiopian churches 4 2 Zionist churches 4 3 Messianic churches 4 4 Aladura Pentecostal churches 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Footnotes 7 2 Bibliography 8 Further reading 9 External linksNomenclature EditA variety of overlapping terms exist for these forms of Christianity African initiated churches African independent churches African indigenous churches and African instituted churches a 2 The abbreviation AIC covers them all The differences in names correspond to the aspect that a researcher wishes to emphasise For instance those who wish to point out that AICs exhibit African cultural forms describe them as indigenous These terms have largely been imposed upon such groups and may not be the way they would describe themselves The term African refers to the fact that these Christian groupings formed in Africa but AICs differ from one another Not all African cultural systems are the same Regional variations occur among West East and Southern Africans and the AICs will reflect these AICs can now be found outside Africa Location EditAfrican initiated churches are found across Africa they are particularly well documented in southern Africa and West Africa Pauw suggests that at least 36 per cent of the population of Africa belong to an African initiated church 3 Origins EditDuring the colonial era starting in the 1800s when European powers took control of most of the African continent black converts to Christianity were unable fully to reconcile their beliefs with the teachings of their church leaders and split from their parent churches The reasons for these splits were usually either Political an effort to escape white control Historical many of the parent churches particularly those from a Protestant tradition had themselves emerged from a process of schism and synthesis Cultural the result of trying to accommodate Christian belief within an African world viewSome scholars argue that independent churches or religious movements demonstrate syncretism or partial integration between aspects of Christian belief and African traditional religion Often these churches have resulted from a process of acculturation between traditional African beliefs and Protestant Christianity 4 and have split from their parent churches citation needed Bengt Sundkler one of the most prominent pioneers of research on African independent churches in South Africa initially argued that AICs were bridges back to a pre industrial culture 5 Later he recognized instead that AICs helped their affiliates to adapt to a modernizing world that was hostile to their cultural beliefs citation needed Classification and taxonomy EditThere are thousands of African initiated churches more than 10 000 in South Africa alone and each one has its own characteristics Ecclesiologists missiologists sociologists and others have tried to group them according to common characteristics though disagreements have arisen about which characteristics are most significant and which taxonomy is most accurate Though it is possible to distinguish groups of denominations with common features there is also much overlap with some denominations sharing the characteristics of two or more groups Many AICs share traditions with Christians from other parts of the Christian world and these can also be used in classifying them So there are AICs which share some beliefs or practices with Anglican Methodist Pentecostal and Orthodox traditions Some are Sabbatarian some are Zionist and so on Ethiopian churches Edit Ethiopian churches generally retain the Christian doctrines of their mother church in an unreformed state Ethiopian African initiated churches which are recently formed Protestant congregations mostly in southern Africa arose from the Ethiopian movement of the late nineteenth century which taught that African Christian churches should be under the control of black people They should not be confused with the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church or Coptic Orthodox Church which have a much longer and an utterly distinct doctrinal history Some denominations that arose from the Ethiopian movement have united with these earlier denominations Zionist churches Edit Zionist Churches such as the Zion Christian Church trace their origins to the Christian Catholic Apostolic Church in Zion founded by John Alexander Dowie with its headquarters at Zion Illinois in the United States It is now called Christ Community Church Zionist Churches are found chiefly in Southern Africa In the early 1900s Zionist missionaries went to South Africa from the United States and established congregations They emphasised divine healing abstention from pork and the wearing of white robes The Zionist missionaries were followed by Pentecostal ones whose teaching was concentrated on spiritual gifts and baptism with the Holy Spirit with glossolalia as the initial evidence of this The predominantly white Apostolic Faith Mission of South Africa arose out of this missionary effort and emphasises the Pentecostal teaching The black Zionists retained much of the original Zionist tradition The Zionists split into several different denominations although the reason for this was more the rapid growth of the movement than divisions A split in the Zionist movement in the US meant that after 1908 few missionaries came to southern Africa The movement in southern Africa and its growth has been the result of black leadership and initiative As time passed some Zionist groups began to mix aspects of traditional African beliefs such as veneration of the dead with Christian doctrine Many Zionists stress faith healing and revelation and in many congregations the leader is viewed as a prophet Messianic churches Edit Some AICs with strong leadership have been described by some researchers as Messianic but opinions also changed The churches that have been called Messianic focus on the power and sanctity of their leaders often the leaders are thought by their followers to possess Jesus like characteristics Denominations described as Messianic include Kimbanguism in the Democratic Republic of the Congo the Nazareth Baptist Church of Isaiah Shembe in KwaZulu Natal South Africa and the Zion Christian Church of Engenas Lekganyane with headquarters in Limpopo South Africa and the Ibandla Lenkosi Apostolic Church in Zion of South Africa and Swaziland Aladura Pentecostal churches Edit The Aladura Pentecostal churches originated in Nigeria They rely on the power of prayer and in all effects of the baptism of the Holy Spirit Today such churches include Christ Apostolic Church Cherubim and Seraphim movement Celestial Church of Christ and Church of the Lord Aladura The first Aladura Movement was started in 1918 at Ijebu Ode now in Ogun State Nigeria by Sophia Odunlami and Joseph Sadare respectively a school teacher and a goldsmith They both attended St Saviour s Anglican Church They rejected infant baptism and all forms of medicine whether western or traditional In consequence they initiated the Prayer Band popularly called Egbe Aladura Joseph Sadare was compelled to give up his post in the Synod and others were forced to resign their jobs and to withdraw their children from the Anglican School The Aladura began as a renewal movement in search of true spirituality A revival took place during the 1918 flu pandemic This consolidated the formation of the prayer group and the group was named Precious Stone and later the Diamond Society By 1920 the Diamond Society had grown tremendously and had started to form branches around the Western region of Nigeria In particular David Odubanjo went to start the Lagos branch The group emphasised divine healing Holiness and All Sufficiency of God which form the three cardinal beliefs of the Church today For this reason the group had association with Faith Tabernacle of Philadelphia and changed its name to Faith Tabernacle of Nigeria The Great Revival in Nigeria started in 1930 where the Leaders of the Cherubim amp Seraphim The Church of the Lord Aladura and the Faith Tabernacle played important roles Adherents believe that these leaders Joseph Sadare of Egbe Aladura David Odubanjo of Diamond Society Moses Orimolade of Cherubim amp Seraphim and Josiah Ositelu of The Church of the Lord Aladura performed several miracles The revival started in Ibadan in the South West of Nigeria and later spread to other parts of the country The Revival group went through several name changes until after 24 years of its formation it finally adopted the name Christ Apostolic Church CAC in 1942 Today CAC has spread worldwide and is the precursor of Aladura Pentecostal Churches in Nigeria The Church has established several educational establishments at all levels of Nigerian society including Joseph Ayo Babalola University and a series of primary and secondary schools See also Edit Christianity portalApostles of Johane Maranke Celestial Church of Christ Deeper Life Bible Church Church of the Lord Aladura Christ Apostolic Church Legio Maria of African Church Mission Kimbanguist Church Zion Christian Church List of Christian denominationsNotes Edit Philomena Njeri Mwaura wrote These African responses to Christianity have been described variously as African initiatives in Christianity African Independent African Indigenous African Initiated or African Instituted Churches The term African Independent indicates that these churches have originated in Africa and have no foreign financial or ecclesiastical control African Initiated Churches indicates that they were started as a result of African initiative in African countries but they may be affiliated to wider bodies that include non African members African indigenous indicates that they have retained an African ethos and that their ideology has a distinctive African flavour African Instituted Churches hints that their establishment and growth have taken place on African soil under the initiatives of Africans 1 References EditFootnotes Edit Mwaura 2005 p 161 Mwaura 2005 p 161 Oduro 2008 p 181 African Initiated Christianity and the Decolonisation of Development e book Routledge 2020 pp 95 100 ISBN 978 0 367 82382 5 Juergensmeyer M Oxford University Press 2005 Religion in Global Civil Society Oxford scholarship online Oxford University Press USA p 17 ISBN 978 0 19 518835 6 Retrieved 2023 03 01 Pobee amp Ositelu 1998 Bibliography Edit Marcus Harold G 1994 A History of Ethiopia Berkeley California University of California Press ISBN 9780520081215 Mwaura Philomena Njeri 2005 African Instituted Churches in East Africa Studies in World Christianity 10 2 160 184 doi 10 3366 swc 2004 10 2 160 ISSN 1354 9901 Oduro Thomas 2008 Water Baptism in African Independent Churches The Paradigm of Christ Holy Church International In Best Thomas F ed Baptism Today Understanding Practice Ecumenical Implications World Council of Churches Faith and Order Paper Vol 207 Collegeville Minnesota Liturgical Press pp 181 191 ISBN 978 0 8146 6221 2 Pobee John S Ositelu Gabriel II 1998 African Initiatives in Christianity The Growth Gifts and Diversities of Indigenous African Churches A Challenge to the Ecumenical Movement Risk Book Series Vol 83 Geneva WCC Publications ISBN 978 2 8254 1277 0 Further reading EditAnderson Allan 2000 Zion and Pentecost The Spirituality and Experience of Pentecostal and Zionist Apostolic Churches in South Africa African Initiatives in Christian Mission Vol 6 Pretoria South Africa University of South Africa Press ISBN 978 1 86888 143 7 Barrett David B 1968 Schism and Renewal in Africa An Analysis of Six Thousand Contemporary Religious Movements Nairobi Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 690374 3 OCLC 780456736 Byaruhanga Christopher 2015 The History and Theology of the Ecumenical Movement in East Africa Kampala Uganda Fountain Publishers hdl 20 500 11951 184 ISBN 9789970252855 Daneel M L 1987 Quest for Belonging Introduction to a Study of African Independent Churches Gweru Zimbabwe Mambo Press ISBN 978 0 86922 426 7 Hayes Stephen 2003 Issues of Catholic Ecclesiology in Ethiopian Type AICs In Cuthbertson Greg Pretorius Hennie Robert Dana eds Frontiers of African Christianity African Initiatives in Christian Mission Vol 8 Pretoria South Africa University of South Africa Press pp 137 152 ISBN 978 1 86888 193 2 Ohlmann Philipp Frost Marie Luise Grab Wilhelm 2016 African Initiated Churches Potential as Development Actors HTS Teologiese Studies Theological Studies 72 4 doi 10 4102 hts v72i4 3825 ISSN 2072 8050 Olowe Abi 2007 Great Revivals Great Revivalist Joseph Ayo Babalola Omega Publishers Oosthuizen G C 1968 Post Christianity in Africa A Theological and Anthropological Study London C Hurst and Co OCLC 1017765202 1996 African Independent Indigenous Churches in the Social Environment An Empirical Analysis Africa Insight 26 4 308 324 hdl 10520 AJA02562804 1467 ISSN 0256 2804 Ositelu Rufus Okikiola Olubiyi 2002 African Instituted Churches Diversities Growth Gifts Spirituality and Ecumenical Understanding of African Initiated Churches Munster Germany LIT Verlag ISBN 978 3 8258 6087 5 2009 The Journey So Far Visionary and Result Oriented Leadership Ogere Nigeria TCLAW Publishers ISBN 978 978 900 478 2 Pauw C M 1995 African Independent Churches as a People s Response to the Christian Message Journal for the Study of Religion 8 1 3 25 ISSN 2413 3027 JSTOR 24764145 Sundkler Bengt G M 1961 Bantu Prophets in South Africa London International African Institute Venter Dawid ed 2004 Engaging Modernity Methods and Cases for Studying African Independent Churches in South Africa Westport Connecticut Praeger ISBN 978 0 275 96903 5 Welbourn Frederick Burkewood 1961 East African Rebels A Study of Some Independent Churches London SCM Press OCLC 1140589 External links EditAfrican Christians focus on African Initiated Orthodoxies African initiated churches Archived 2009 10 24 Brotherhood of the Cross and Star Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title African initiated church amp oldid 1142216865, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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