Becoming an African Noah: John Chilembwe's Prophetic Missionary Consciousness in the Black Atlantic World (1872-1915) Öffentlichkeit

Aycock, Jennifer L. (Spring 2023)

Permanent URL: https://etd.library.emory.edu/concern/etds/br86b5190?locale=de
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Abstract

This project argues that Reverend John Chilembwe drew on numerous sources to frame new visions for an African Church and a future African society delivered from the violent tyranny of White colonial rule and the long-enduring legacy of slave trades. Through preaching, teaching, and practice, he propounded a form of Christianity that reclaimed African dignity and humanity and asserted a central role for African Christians in divine history. As an early 20th century African Christian missionary among his own people, Chilembwe’s vision of an African Church was shaped by various Christian ideas and discourses emanating from European, African, and African American sources. In turn, Chilembwe’s mission became an intercultural African mission experiment as members of his churches contended with the past legacies of slavery and slave trades and the devastating upheavals of colonization through religious gathering and practice.

My study expands our understanding of how an intercultural form of Christianity, namely Black Christian Nationalism, furnished narratives, motifs, and practices that inspired Chilembwe’s missionary consciousness at the height of the colonial takeover of African lands, resources, and peoples. As an intercultural form of Christianity, Black Christian Nationalism reflected Christian ideology and practice as refracted through African American experiences in North America. Black Christian Nationalism inspired a number of African expressions of Christianity at the turn of twentieth century. To that end, this study highlights the ways in which Chilembwe understood himself as a missionary among his own African kin and illustrates practices he implemented to creatively recontextualize Black Christian Nationalism as a religious response to social change. Specifically, this project establishes that recasting Chilembwe as a missionary brings to the fore how intercultural African Christianity could meet contextual challenges related to colonialism.

Table of Contents

Preface…….................................................................................................................................... 1

 

Introduction................................................................................................................................... 3

A Biographical Overview of John Chilembwe

John Chilembwe in Memory and Historiography

The Transnational Study of African Christianity and Black Christian Nationalism

Project Outline

A Note on Terminology

Chapter 1: Debating the ‘Black Atlantic’ and Its Significance for the Study of African Christianity…………………………………………………………………………………...…56

The World the Black Atlantic Created

The Black Atlantic as Conceptual Framework

The World that Black Atlantic Christians Made

The Emergence of Intercultural African Christianity in the Black Atlantic World

John Chilembwe’s Mission

Chapter 2: Chilembwe as African Noah: African Christian Missionary Consciousness in the Early Twentieth Century……………………………………………………….……….…91

Recalling John Chilembwe as Noah

Biblical Narratives and African Christian History

Ethiopianism’s African Noah: African Agents in Divine History

Biblical Narratives and African Missionary Consciousness

Evils in the Land: Slavery and Land Theft

The Problem and Potential of Missionary Christianity

Becoming African Noah in Light of Slavery and Land Theft

 

Chapter 3: Fashioning the Motherland: The Redemption of African Women in the Chilembwe’s Thought and Practice…………………………………………...….……….…146

The Gender Factor in Black Atlantic Christianity

The Suffering Motherland in National Baptist Thought and Practice

The Suffering Motherland in Chilembwe’s African Mission Practice

The Sacrament of Sartorial Practice

Chapter 4: Gathering a People, Building the Ark................................................................. 176

African Missionary Consciousness, Black Reason, and Ecclesial Visions

Ecclesial Visions and African Christian Mission

Black Christian Nationalism and Ecclesial Visions in the Shire Highlands

Ecclesial Visions and Chilembwe the African Noah

Chapter 5: Critiquing Imperial Reciprocity: Chilembwe’s Pastoral Letter....................... 205

African Missions in a Time of War

Colonial States of Violence and their Tribal Wars

From Colonial Subjugation to The War of Thangata in Nyasaland Protectorate

Prophetic Rumblings and Chilembwe’s “War of Thangata” Letter

Conclusion: Recasting Chilembwe as a Missionary Between Worlds……………………..230

Afterword: The Disciple Whom Jesus Loved………………………………………………..234

 

Bibliography…………………………………………….……………………………………..240

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