Only after his appointment as RC Archbishop of Lusaka, Zambia, in 1969 did Emmanuel Milingo become aware of his healing powers. Members of his congregation suffering from sickness or misfortune... This description may be from another edition of this product.
The Church, the State and the Struggle for Modernity
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 23 years ago
This book is an account of Archbishop Milingo, a faith healer who was expelled from Zambia and who now works in Vatican City. The author, a Religious Studies Lecturer, lets the whole story unfold within the social and political context of a country ruled by President Kenneth Kaunda, comparing the two men, who had each reached positions of power through charisma. The author's basic premise is that Kaunda, although personally believing in Milingo's powers, felt he had to distance himself from the Archbishop in order to fulfil the role of a "modern" state leader. Ter Haar suggests that Kaunda equated political modernity with secularity. She suggests that Kaunda considered religion, healing and witchcraft to be antithetic to modern statecraft and national progress. Finally, Ter Haar asserts that, despite this attempt at western-style progress, divorcing the church from religion, African states are still fundamentally religious. She also clearly believes the Milingo's "miracles" really work.
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