Original Research

Patriarchy Reinvented? ‘Spiritual Parenting’ within African Pentecostalism in Zimbabwe

Zorodzai Dube
Verbum et Ecclesia | Vol 39, No 1 | a1777 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.4102/ve.v39i1.1777 | © 2018 Zorodizai Dube | This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 29 June 2017 | Published: 27 February 2018

About the author(s)

Zorodzai Dube, Department of New Testament, University of Pretoria, South Africa

Abstract

How do we explain the emergency of ‘spiritual parenting’ concept within African Pentecostal churches especially in urban Zimbabwe? From ethnographic studies done in Harare, Zimbabwe, these seem to usurp the traditional role of motherhood and fatherhood of counselling, instructing, protecting, guidance and all the functions of parenthood. This study explains the emergence of spiritual parenting as a development plausibly explainable through social variables such as i) the disintegration of traditional patriarchal values due to growing urbanisation and ii) socio-economic insecurities that seem to produce alternative kinship ties. Taking a constructive postmodern approach, the concept of spiritual parenting is plausibly explained as providing alternative ‘fatherhood’ spaces, thus implicitly re-invent traditional patriarchal models under the guise of Christian spiritualities.

Intradisciplinary and/or interdisciplinary implications: Using social scientific approaches, the study explains the emergence of particular spiritualties in modern African Christianity, viewing such spiritualties as influenced by particular explanatory social variables. It argues that new spiritualties and practices within African Pentecostalism may be plausibly explained vis-à-vis from particular cultural realities.


Keywords

African Pentecostalism; Spiritual Fathers; Patriarchy and Kinship

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Crossref Citations

1. Whatever happened to God’s holiness? The holiness of God and the theological authenticity of the South African neo-Pentecostal prophetic activities
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doi: 10.4102/ve.v42i1.2323