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WASHINGTON: At an hour when most people here are sleeping or sinning, the worshipers of the Spiritual Warfare ministry gather in the cold sanctuary of a neighborhood church to battle evil.

The students, taxicab drivers, homemakers and entrepreneurs, all Christians, mostly from French-speaking Africa, attend a midnight service four nights a week to seek deliverance from lust, anger, fear and sadness.

They sing. They pray fervently. Finally, they kick and shadowbox with what they contend is the real force behind life's problems: the witches and devils whose curses they believe have ground down their families, towns, entire nations in Africa, and that have pursued them to a new country, making it hard to find work, be healthy and survive.

"Some situations you need to address at night, because in the ministry of spiritual warfare, demons, the spirits bewitching people, choose this time to work," said Nicole Sangamay, 40, who came from Congo in 1998 to study and is a co-pastor of the ministry. "And we pick this time to pray to nullify what they are doing."

Founded by a Congolese couple, Spiritual Warfare is one of many ministries and congregations in the growing African diaspora in the United States and abroad grappling with witchcraft. In most other churches, Sangamay said, you could not even raise the issue, let alone pray to combat its effects.

Those other churches may argue that such a focus on witchcraft is a relic of Africans' old beliefs, a dangerously pagan preoccupation. But scholars say this is Christianity made profoundly African. Spiritual Warfare considers itself Pentecostal, and like many other Pentecostals, worshipers see the battle between God and Satan, or what they also call the Bible against witchcraft, shaping the world.

"Religion for them is not like in the West," said Jacob Olupona, a professor of African religious traditions at the Harvard Divinity School. "It's not simply seen as meaning and reference to a transcendental order. Religion is seen as something that works. It has a utilitarian view, and people are looking for solutions in different angles and different ways."

The Spiritual Warfare congregants here said that because their ancestors were not Christians, they were cursed, Africa is cursed, and the sins of their fathers are now visited upon all the children.

One blustery Monday night, men and women trickled into the ministry's rented space at Deeper Life Bible Church on Sargent Road Northeast.

Rene Tameghi put his Bible and notebook down before kneeling, placing elbows in his chair and praying. Sita Waba would have to be at work at 8:30 a.m., but these two hours, she said, holding a cup of coffee, gave her strength. A few parents carried sleeping toddlers.

"Say, 'Jesus, I am here for you tonight,' " Jose Shinga told the congregation from a small, raised stage covered in red carpeting and bordered by pots of silk flowers.

The men and women, still in coats, vests and caps, sang a song of "Hallelujahs" in French, stomping, clapping and shuffling along with the joyful beat. The voices seemed stronger than those of the 25 people gathered, a quarter of the regular Sunday attendance. The neighbors once called the police to complain, a congregant said, and the police told them to keep it down.

The day before, the parishioners began a fast. "Why do we fast toward the end of the year?" Shinga said to the worshipers. "That is when Satan wants sacrifices, blood, and so we ask God to protect us and our families."

When Shinga asked the worshipers to pray for forgiveness, the loud pleas of each man and woman, faces turned to the floor or heavenward, rose together like the rumble of a train.

People repeat accounts that they have heard of cancer and infertility cured through Spiritual Warfare. But few such events have occurred so far in Washington, Sangamay said, because the congregation is only two years old. Still, she said, people turn to her and her husband for "soul therapy," which involves prayer and fasting. The ministry does not turn people away from secular resources like counseling or medicine.

"Every day in the village, or even here, people are putting curses on you," said Yemba Shinga, Jose Shinga's husband and the other preacher Monday. "They declare that you won't get a job, or will be separated from your family or get an incurable disease.

"But you know how to pray to God. Tell them, 'C'est fini! I will not repeat the story of my ancestors, of my past, of the devil.' "

The congregants shouted, "C'est fini!"

They listened, they moved the red chairs to the back of the hall, and then they called on the Holy Spirit to fight the enemy. Following Yemba Shinga, they said: "I rise now against every form of the devil! You want me under a curse, but I renounce you in the name of Jesus."

With each prayer, young men and middle-age women punched, kicked or stood and quaked. They pounded their fists. They reviled the devil in all his forms.

They sliced their arms through the air to cut the chains of evil binding them. They pretended to tie up Satan. Yemba Shinga ran out of breath as he urged on the worshipers. The prayers ended. They did all that they could.

"We declare this place to be blessed," Jose Shinga said, as the worshipers quieted down. "Thank you, Lord, Jesus Christ. Go in the peace of the Lord."

People had already zipped up against the chill. They walked out into the Washington night, ready.

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Anonymous chucky jesus said...
Ignorance and superstition know no bounds....


Anonymous DeadlyJohnny said...
Thank God for these African immigrants. Let the atheist number shrink. Millions of Catholic hispanics coming from southern border. Christians from Africa and Asia are also flowing into good old USA. They will be a majority, and the atheists will be a shrinking minority among these immigrants who procreate well.


Blogger Korinne said...
The sad things is, Johnny, that when these immigrants get a decent education and access to medical care, they might just realize that they have subscribed to a superstition, just like their ancestors.


Blogger Bloviator said...
What a fucking freak-fest! Christian apologists like to argue that people at the time of Jesus were sophisticated enough to tell truth from a fairy tale, but this story puts the lie to that. Take away education from a creative expressive vehicle like the human mind, and this is what you get.


Blogger jimearl said...
I got bad news for deadlyjohnny. The fastest growing movement in America is the nonreligious. If we were a religion, we'd be number one! The days of believing without question is over. Welcome to the new world, one of reality.


Anonymous troll said...
"Christians from Africa and Asia are also flowing into good old USA. They will be a majority, and the atheists will be a shrinking minority among these immigrants who procreate well."

Let's hope so


Blogger Spirula said...
Thank God for these African immigrants.

I'm sure you'll be very thankful when one of them labels your child a witch and then throws acid in the childs face.

http://exchristian.net/2/2007/12/christians-declare-war-on-african-child.html

Asshole.


Anonymous Anonymous said...
deadlyjohnny, don't you understand that should these very naive Christians indeed become a majority in America, it would mean the end of the United States and the beginning of a new dark age?

I am European, and my stake may not seem that big (however, the woman I love lives in the USA, so...). Still, it seems very shortsighted of me to cheer this very dangerous way of "thinking" on.

-Leonard


Anonymous RT Firefly said...
Sure sounds like Alabama to me!


Anonymous slingshot said...
Deadly Johnny, the fact of the matter is that 52 million citizens of the USA DON'T believe in christianity or catholicism. The USA is called a "christian nation" by many christians, yet, in fact, that is not so. The USA is aproximately 40% christian, 40% catholic, and the remaining 20% is a mix of pretty much everything else, from atheism to agnosticism,
Buddhism to Islam, Hinduism to Judaism, etc. etc. etc.. There are aproximately 10,000 religions in the world, and in the USA we find believers in most every one of those religions.

Christianity, in fact, is divided over the correct interpretation of the bible, being itself divided into numerous denominations. I've heard there are anywhere from 1,500 to 3,000 denominations of christianity. The exact number seems unclear. Christians and catholics disagree on many things, and a catholic might say that catholics are the "true christians," since christianity spun off from the catholic church to begin with. Despite their disagreement they all become christians when it comes time to do the census. In the world, there are aproximately 1 billion christians and 1 billion catholics, out of over 6 billion people. Those are the facts. We all have the same rights in the USA.

Your post reveals that you would love to see a more "christian nation" in the USA, yet you must accept the fact that there will always be people in the USA who see the absurditiy in christianity and are willing to speak and let their voices be heard.

How can you believe in such nonsense anyway, deadly Johnny? Have you ever taken an honest look at the bible? How do you explain it? Can you explain it from cover to cover? Nobody can, Johhny.

If I told you that we are born into a "fallen state," being the descendants of "original sinners," and that there is a Creator unseen to our eyes who loves us and that we die and go to hell, which God created, to burn forever because we commit deeds called "sins (such as getting a hard on when looking at a beautiful woman, even though God made us that way)" and that there is no hope of "salvation" from this horrible hell, would you believe it? According to the christian church, that is EXACTLY the way it was from the time of Adam and Eve to the time of Christ. Anybody born during that time remains in hell forever, burning, in flames "seven times hotter than anything on earth," and they are there even as we speak. Do you think they deserve it, Johnny?

I could go on and on pointing out the absurdities of the christian faith, but why bother? To anybody who is willing to be honest about it, christian doctrine is obviously a load of nonsense. When I say nonsense, I mean no disrespect. Nonsense simply means that christianity does not make sense. We here are sensible. Too sensible for christianity.

Would you close the door behind you on your way out, please?


Blogger boomSLANG said...
"Christians from Africa and Asia are also flowing into good old USA. They will be a majority, and the atheists will be a shrinking minority among these immigrants who procreate well."

Troll says...Let's hope so

Troll(I admire your honesty in choosing a moniker, BTW),

I've got news for you---even if the good ol' USA became a Christian theocracy, there would still be division on every single one of the so-called "moral" issues of the day..i.e...capital punishment; gay rights; abortion; war, and on, and on. Christians just can't seem to agree on what the Creator of the Universe really wants them to do, or not do.

In any event, your little wet dream is nothing but wishful thinking.....but then again, you are used to that, aren't you?


Anonymous Madame M said...
If Deadly Johnny thinks that the beliefs found in uneducated parts of third world countries are so great, why doesn't he just go live there for awhile. I'm sure he will change his tune really fast.

Notice how religion is only peaceful when it is tempered by education and rational thought. The less education in a religious group, the more superstitious and violent they become. The real "missionaries" these superstition mired areas need are those bringing education, not only the basics but solid science.


Anonymous Anonymous said...
"Christians from Africa and Asia are also flowing into good old USA. They will be a majority, and the atheists will be a shrinking minority among these immigrants who procreate well."

Yeah, and the Muslims are flowing into the good old USA. They may very well become a majority one day, and do away with all of us including the christians.


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