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Under the Siege of Prophetic Trance
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong
Ghanaians appear to be under the clench of prophetic
spell. It is as if Ghanaians are hooked on some
prophetic drug and find it difficult to rehabilitate
them. This has put Ghanaians on some sort of permanent
prophetic high. It has become a real development threat,
making the prophetic genie hard to be put back in the
bottle.
The prophets virtually control the thinking of Ghanaians
– from the Prof. John Atta Mills’ presidency to the
petty roadside seller. This has raised the concerns of
the Asantehene (King of the Asantes), Otumfuo Osei Tutu
11, and veteran journalist and politician, Elizabeth
Ohene (of the British Broadcasting Corporation), who
would normally not comment on prophetic issues.
Prophets and their religions are private matter,
Ghanaian laws say. Today, the private and the public are
indistinct. But in the face of hopeless poverty,
ignorance, and some aspects of the Ghanaian culture
that’s deeply mired in false notions, prophets are
having a field day, not only milking Ghanaians heavily
but also bewildering them and endangering the growth of
their rationality.
Recently, people at a spiritual retreat at Asante-Mampong
most of the congregation said their diverse illnesses
have been healed. Charity Amenya, 35, a teacher, said
she had received divine healing and that the fibroid she
had lived with for the past 7 years has vanished, making
her registration for surgical operation unnecessary.
People testified they have seen visions. Others said
they have received inner peace for their souls. But a
Dr. Samuel Adjei, Afigya-Sekyere District Director of
Health Services, a member of the church, advised that
while miracles might have taken place, they should to go
for medical check-up to ascertain whether they have
actually been healed. A conundrum!!! In country of such
disturbing superstitious judgments how do you balance
the supernatural with the scientific? How do you balance
the truth from the falsehood?
In a Ghana where poverty is substantial, the deep
believe in prophets and the growing hope for miracles to
cure diseases and other existential distresses are high,
bordering on the fanatical. The believe in prophets and
miracles are legendary. Overnight, most parts of Ghana
sound like giant church with loud preaching, screams,
deafening music and people speaking-in-tongues. This
affects the sleep of most Ghanaians and the degree of
their productivity the next day. Irrationally, the
prophets do not think in such terms and Ghana is the
looser.
In Ghana, some people attend churches 24 hours a day
throughout the week with the anticipation of getting
visions and miracles to tackle their existential
challenges. Aside from the spiritual churches and the
old, tied orthodox churches, juju and marabou mediums
and witchdoctors abound, attracting miracle and vision
seekers. The whole spiritual fields appear bemused by
the prophets.
Miracle is invariably proportional to the nature of
superstitious believes in a society, the more
traditional the society is, such as Ghana, the more the
believe in miracles and visions. The more modernized the
society is, such as Canada, the less the believe in
prophets, miracles, witchcraft, evil spirits and demons
as the cause of existential problems.
Lance Morrow, formerly a journalism professor at Boston
University and the New York-based Time magazine,
explains that, “the realm of the miraculous sometimes
lies just across the border from the fanatical or the
tacky … the territory of the miraculous” are “approached
carefully, by stages, passing from the gaudiest,
shabbiest outer display toward what may, occasionally,
turn out to be a deeper truth. … A miracle is a wonder,
a beam of supernatural power injected into history. Up
There descends Down Here for an instant. The world
connects to a mystery - a happening that cannot be
explained in terms of ordinary life.” Morrow asks
whether miracle is “an external event occurring in the
real, objective world? Or is it a sort of hallucination,
an event of the imagination?
Either in Kumasi Central Market or Makola Market, most
miracles induced by the prophets can just be a
street-side entertainment scene, drawing the unemployed,
busybodies or the curious who are too weak to think and
explain their daily tribulations in clear rational
terms. The booms in spiritual churches have seen the
commercialization of prophets and miracles, making them
unsacred and undermining their divine nature. Stories of
prophets raping women, swindling their congregation,
aiding criminals, among others, are daily tabloid diet.
Yet, either from educated Ghanaians or illiterate ones,
the prophetic grip over Ghanaians is overwhelming. For
the past two-and-half-years of his presidency, President
Atta Mills, with a PHD in Law and former lecturer at the
University of Ghana, has projected the overpowering
grasp of the prophets on Ghanaians elites. This
threatens the wobbly development process that should be
directed by very rational elites against the backdrop of
Ghana’s history and culture parts of which are mired in
cavernous supernatural believes. The Nigerian prophet T.
S. Joshua has immense influence over President Mills.
President Mills is talked about in Ghanaian chatting
circles as surrounding himself with prophets of all
shades. Mills is reported to have organized a “Ghana in
prophecy” conference recently. All kinds of perverted
prophecies were revealed. One of the prophets, a
Emmanuel Kwaku Atta Kakra, prophesied atrociously that
God has destined “President Mills to rule, not only
Ghana for a second term, but the entire world till
eternity.”
Some Ghanaian parliamentarians and politicians aren’t
different from President Mills’ prophetic thinking. They
re dazed in the prophetic smoke. Parliament as the
center for high rational debates was caught spinning
mid-air recently when the chair of the Minority leader
was planted with scary juju ritualistic accoutrements.
The idea was to use the spiritual trappings, prepared by
some of the prophets, to influence the Minority National
Patriotic Party (NPP), in a hung-parliament, to do the
bidding of the Majority governing National Democratic
Congress without any questions being asked.
In 2009, press reports revealed how a Member of
Parliament nearly went mad for violating the spiritual
instructions of juju prophet. In May this year, Hon.
Dominic Nitiwul, LLM, MBA, BED (Science) and the NPP
Member of Parliament for the Bimbilla Constituency,
scandalously alleged that President Mills was helped
spiritually to win the presidency by a "magic ring" he
wore during the 2008 elections.
From the traditional to the modern, mixtures of prophets
and miracles have been a daily spiritual diet of most
Ghanaians. The Ghanaian culture has high in-built
supernatural believes that are subjugated by the
prophets. In a stage-by-stage preparation towards the
commanding of a Golden Stool from the sky to unite the
disparaging Asantes, the legendary traditional prophet,
Okomfo Anokye observed the deep disunity among the
Asantes. He assembled slaves, families, clans and
tribes, cut their fingernails, smoulder them, mixed the
ashes with some herbs and uttered some incantations. A
miracle: a Golden Stool came down from the sky and it
was used as a unifier among what is now called the
Asantes. The result is the Asante ethnic group, one of
the largest in the world.
Despite authentic miracles such as Okomfo Anokye’s,
experts in divinity and theology caution against
miracles or too much believe in prophets, more so in a
Ghanaian society where poverty is weakening rationality
and some aspects of the culture entrapped in high
senselessness. The prophets and juju-marabou mediums
that helped the various coup makers topple
democratically elected governments in Ghana/Africa will
tell you they are miracle makers. To the prophets, there
is nothing like law and order. They are part of the
disorders in Africa.
To curtail such unprogressive prophets on Ghana’s
advancement, Otumfuo Osei Tutu 11, among other
high-profile opinion-makers concerned about the menacing
prophets, has recommended to Church leaders to develop
self-governing devices to contain the activities of the
dominant prophets.
For Otumfuo Osei Tutu 11, this is to “protect the
sanctity and image of priesthood.” Still, for Otumfuo
Osei Tutu 11, the prophetic siege on Ghanaians are
“deeply worrying,” exploiting the “ignorance and the
fear of insecurity” of Ghanaians in order to “dupe
them,” and using “false doctrines and spurious
prophecies to achieve self-serving agenda.” Otumfuo Osei
Tutu 11 warns that “fraudsters parading as priests must
be exposed and shamed to restore credibility and public
confidence in the Church.”
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong, academic/writer,
Canada
July 14, 2011
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