by Robert R. Schwarz
( Mr. Schwarz is a retired newspaper editor who has made several trips to Africa. This is his second contribution to "Reclaiming Our Heritage ." )
( last of three parts)
News of the exorcism did spread fast. Two Sundays later , the Rev. Khumalo's church was crowded for the first time. The all-Zulu congregation, however, demanded a combative show-down, a winner-take-all contest before it would exalt Jesus over its revered witchdoctors. Many Zulus in the region had parents and grandparents who had been antagonized by former Christian missionaries who had coerced them into joining a church by implying this was the only way to get their children into the highly-desired missionary schools.
The Rev. Khumalo scanned the pews and saw nothing but confusion on the faces of all his God-seeking people; they were finding it difficult to renounce their primitive beliefs.
At our dinner party back in Arlington Heights, Illinois, I paused my report to reminisce with my friends about the "popularity" of exorcism in the l960s and 70s. I told them how Dr. Lochhaus had cited to me several requests from Lutheran pastors in the United States asking for advice in ministering to people suspected of being demon-possessed. "He turned them down but advised them how to set up the exorcism," I said, and then quoted Dr. Lochhaus: "It's not the man who does it, but the Word of God." I added that according to Dr. Lochhaus, people in America who dabble in witchcraft can be influenced to the point of being dominated by it. Sometimes it's difficult to tell where the deadly dabbling in Satanism or drug-taking leave off and demon possession begins, Dr. Lochhaus had told me. The Rev. Professor Richard Muller, who has taught systematic theology and world religions at the Rev. Khumalo's alma mater, Concordia Seminary, Fort Wayne, has labeled demons and evil angels as a "malignant spiritual force in the world," I told me friends.
On a particular Sunday, the Zulu pastor from his pulpit observed the agitated body language of several people in the pews; their movements became more animated each time they heard the word "Jesus" spoken. (Mandla later explained to me: "People who believe in animism find the church to be a good 'cover' for them. But when people around them begin to pray in the name of Jesus, that's when the evil spirits begin to resist and reveal themselves.")
The body agitation incident foreshadowed the real showdown; it came during a revival meeting in the nearby village of Nelspruit while the Rev. Khumalo was preaching about the Good Shepherd (Psalm 23) . Fresh in his mind was the recent death of a non-Christian Zulu who ostensibly died because he believed in the power of a death curse, or ukuthakathaka. The centuries-old imprecation had been laid on him by a revenge-seeking villager who had told him: "In the spring , when trees blossom, you will fade."
Recalling one of my several trips to Africa as a leadership workshop facilitator for Lions Clubs International, I told my friends it was common for some tribal men to cast these spells on other men whom they suspected of having adulterous affairs with their wives.
Suddenly, a highly respected Zulu witchdoctor marched up to the pastor's pulpit, turned to the congregation and announced: "I have heard the word of God [from Psalm 23] and I want that Shepherd, too. But I have a problem. I am a sangoma. I want you, Mandla Khumalo, to come to my house."
Silence, then excited whispers . People began asking each other how their evangelism leader would face this challenge. The pastor paused to think. Was this sangoma baiting him into a trap whereby Khumalo's Christ would, in the Zulu's biased eyes, be proven weaker than their witchdoctor's magic? If that happened, it would likely take decades for his ministry to recover from the defeat.
The flock in the tent, along with the still-standing sangoma, waited for their preacher to reply. The Rev. Khumalo accepted the witchdoctor's challenge. The two men that same day would go to the sangoma's home.
Inside the sangoma's home, the Rev. Khumalo was repulsed by what he saw: small, dank rooms filled with witchdoctor craft, animal skins and baboon heads and oddly shaped pagan instruments which even Khumalo, a Zulu himself, could not identify.
"It must all be destroyed," the Rev. Khumalo insisted.
The pastor's eyes widened with astonishment as he watched the sangoma obediently carry an armful of the objects to the backyard. Khumalo did the same. When everything had been piled outside, the two men dug a hole, threw everything into it, and set it ablaze while several members of Khumalo's church watched.
Seeing the smoke from afar, families from various Zulu villages sped to the bewildering scene: Their esteemed and often feared witchdoctor was burning the very same objects that had once done so much magic for himself and them." They stood silently as the fire consumed their magic and, in some cases, their gods," the Rev. Khumalo told me.
The Zulus who had followed their pastor from the crusade tent began to sing the hymn, "In the Name of Jesus I Have a Victory." The villagers listened in wonderment until the fire was embers. Then they quietly retreated to their homes.
In the Rev. Khumalo's church the next Sunday there were many new faces—and the faces increased in number week after week. .
Today, with his son now a college graduate and his daughter soon to be, with an honorary doctorate degree from the Interdenominational Theological Center in Johannesburg hanging on his office wall, with 20,000 members that make up the 25 congregations of his St. Peter Evangelical Church of South Africa, and with a radio station and a program to educate teens about AIDS, the Rev. Khumalo simply explains: "When people hear the Gospel truth for the first time, their hearts become on fire."
I ended my report at the dinner table with three scenes from my friend Mandla's life: One is him crawling up to a tribal chief who had demanded this demeaning act in exchange for permission to evangelize to chief's tribe ; another is Mandla as a youth, climbing up to a hill top with a friend and shouting out the Gospel message to the countryside below him—whether anyone heard him or not; and, my favorite, is the security guard standing outside my friend's church, you know, that fellow to whom everyone once bowed as their powerful sangoma.
_________Contact Robert Schwarz @rrschwarz7@comcast.net
No comments:
Post a Comment
So what do you think? I would love to see a few words from you.