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The sovereignty of the African Districts of the African Methodist Episcopal church: A historical assessmentBooyse, Adonis Carolus January 2002 (has links)
Philosophiae Doctor - PhD / The worldwide African Methodist Episcopal Church (AME Church) is divided into 20 regional districts. These include thirteen districts in the United States of America (Episcopal Districts 1-13), six districts on the African continent, namely Episcopal Districts 14, 15 and 17-20 and one that comprises Suriname-Guyana, South America, the Caribbean, Windward Islands, Virgin Islands, Dominican Republic, Haiti Jamaica,
London and the Netherlands (Episcopal District 16). Each of these districts is administered by a bishop assigned at the seat of the General Conference which is conducted every four year. The General Conference is the highest decision-making body of the AME Church. This research project focuses on the relationship between the American and the African districts of the African Methodist Episcopal Church during the period from 1896 to 2004. It investigates the factors which led to the tensions emerged in the relationship between the American districts and the African districts. It specifically investigates the reasons for the five secession movements that took place in the 15th
and 19th Districts of the AME Church in 1899, 1904, 1908, 1980 and 1998. The research problem investigated in this thesis is therefore one of a historical reconstruction, namely to identify, describe and assess the configurations of factors which contributed to such tensions in relationship between the AME Church in America and Africa. The relationships between the American and the African districts of the AME Church have been characterised by various tensions around the sovereignty of the African districts. Such tensions surfaced, for example, in five protest movements, which eventually led to secessions from the AME Church in South Africa. The people of the African continent merged with the American based AME Church with the expectation that they would be assisted in their quest for self-determination.
The quest for self-determination in the AME Church in Africa has a long history. The Ethiopian Movement was established by Mangena Maake Mokone in 1892 as a protest movement against white supremacy and domination in the Wesleyan Methodist Church.
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Orality and transformation in some Zulu ceremonies : tradition in transition.Ngcongo, Thobile Thandiwe. January 1996 (has links)
This study contains a variety of oral traditional formulae found in various
places in KwaZulu-Natal which are used in the imbeleko ceremony and these
formulae are analyzed in their traditional form and in a number of new
formulations. The imbeleko ceremony is a celebration to introduce and
welcome a newborn child, but occasionally even an adult newcomer may
be introduced to both the living and the ancestral spirits. A full description of the imbeleko ceremony, the reasons for performing it,
the procedures followed, an analysis and comparison of mnemotechnics
used in the formulae and finally the application of orality-literacy theories to
the rites and the text are provided. Variations observed in my research in
the manner in which this rite is celebrated from family to family are pointed
out. Zulus regard it as a must to perform the imbeleko ceremony for every child
in the family. The reasons for this ceremony vary from (a) thanksgiving
ceremony, (b) the official introduction of the child to ancestors, (c) the rite
performed late to protect the child from misfortunes, (d) and to provide an
opportunity for naming the child. There is also the imbeleko ceremony that
may be performed in the life of the child when there are indicators that there
is a need for it to be done i.e. when there is illness that seems incurable,
and psychological crisis which occur even though the imbeleko had been
performed. There is also a type of imbeleko ceremony for the first child that
combines the child's maternal and paternal families. This dissertation concludes by comparing and contrasting the imbeleko and
the Christian baptism. It is possible changes have taken place in the
imbeleko ceremony as a result of external influences of the western
Christian life. (NB This dissertation is accompanied by a video) / Thesis (M.A.) - University of Natal, 1996.
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Protestant Christian Missions, Race and Empire: The World Missionary Conference of 1910, Edinburgh, ScotlandSanecki, Kim Caroline 25 July 2006 (has links)
This thesis explores prevailing and changing attitudes among Protestant Christians as manifested in the World Missionary Conference of 1910, held in Edinburgh, Scotland. It compares the conference to missionary literature to demonstrate how well it fit the context of the missionary endeavor during the Edwardian era. It examines the issues of race and empire in the thinking of conference participants. It pays particular attention to the position of West Africa and West Africans in conference deliberations. It suggests that the conference, which took place soon after the scramble for empire and just before World War I and the subsequent upsurge of nationalism and anti-colonialism, offers a valuable historical perspective on the uneven nature of globalizing Christianity.
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