"Biting the hand that feeds them? The case of Ghanaian Pentecostal discourse on 'breaking from the past'"
"Biting the hand that feeds them? The case of Ghanaian Pentecostal discourse on 'breaking from the past'"
Ghanaian Pentecostal pastor-prophets encourage their members to break away from the ancestral past which is projected as a vessel of demonic operations responsible for mishaps in society. Yet traditional priestly actors have challenged the notion that indigenous religious imaginations and ritual spaces are a crucial platform where power and recognition are contested by some pastor-prophets. As such, these traditional priests have particularly warned pastor-prophets to desist from oppugning traditional religion or face exposure of their underground dealings with the traditionalists. In this paper, I reflect on confrontations between traditional priestly actors and neo-Pentecostal pastor-prophets in Ghana, arguing that such confrontations are a function of a power struggle as to who the 'Big Men' are in contemporary Ghanaian society. To understanding these confrontations, I contend further that there is the need to interrogate the differing points of continuity and disjuncture between these two traditions.
CITATION: Tweneboah, Seth. "Biting the hand that feeds them? The case of Ghanaian Pentecostal discourse on 'breaking from the past'" . Oxon : Taylor & Francis Group , 2021. Journal of Contemporary African Studies, Volume 39, No. 1 2021 pp. 104-118 - Available at: https://library.au.int/biting-hand-feeds-them-case-ghanaian-pentecostal-discourse-breaking-past