African perceptions of the missionaries and their message : Wesleyans at Mount Coke and Butterworth, 1825-35

Bibliography: leaves 175-183. === Missionary endeavours in the Eastern Cape were characterized by African resistance to the Christian Gospel during the first half of the nineteenth century. Current explanations for this rejection point to the opposition of the chiefs, the association that the listen...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Fast, Hildegarde Helene
Other Authors: Le Cordeur, B A
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14237
id ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-14237
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-142372020-10-06T05:11:21Z African perceptions of the missionaries and their message : Wesleyans at Mount Coke and Butterworth, 1825-35 Fast, Hildegarde Helene Le Cordeur, B A Missions - South Africa - Cape of Good Hope Bibliography: leaves 175-183. Missionary endeavours in the Eastern Cape were characterized by African resistance to the Christian Gospel during the first half of the nineteenth century. Current explanations for this rejection point to the opposition of the chiefs, the association that the listeners made between the missionaries and their white oppressors, and the threat to communal solidarity. This thesis aims to see if these explanations fully reveal the reasons for Xhosa resistance to Christianity by examining African perceptions of the missionaries and their message at the Wesleyan mission stations of Mount Coke and Butterworth for the period 1825-35. The research is based upon the Wesleyan Missionary Society correspondence and missionary journals and is corroborated and supplemented by travellers' records and later studies in African religion and social anthropology. The economic, social, and religious background of the Wesleyans is described to show how the Christian message was limited to their culture and system of thought. Concepts of divinity, morality, and the afterlife are compared to demonstrate the vast differences between Wesleyan and African worldviews and the inability of the missionaries to overcome these obstacles and to show the relevance of Christianity to African material and spiritual needs. Various types of perceptions are surveyed to show that, though the missionaries were respected for their spiritual role, their character and lifestyle presented an unappealing model of the Christian life. The threat that the missionary message posed to the structure and functioning of African communities is examined as well as African perceptions of these implications. A theory of conversion is advanced which reveals a consistent pattern of association with the missionaries for reasons of self-interest, exposure to the Gospel over a lengthy period of time, and finally conversion. The missionary-African contact of this period is thus characterized as the encounter between two systems of thought which did not engage. 2015-10-14T12:33:02Z 2015-10-14T12:33:02Z 1991 Master Thesis Masters MA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14237 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Humanities Department of Historical Studies
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Missions - South Africa - Cape of Good Hope
spellingShingle Missions - South Africa - Cape of Good Hope
Fast, Hildegarde Helene
African perceptions of the missionaries and their message : Wesleyans at Mount Coke and Butterworth, 1825-35
description Bibliography: leaves 175-183. === Missionary endeavours in the Eastern Cape were characterized by African resistance to the Christian Gospel during the first half of the nineteenth century. Current explanations for this rejection point to the opposition of the chiefs, the association that the listeners made between the missionaries and their white oppressors, and the threat to communal solidarity. This thesis aims to see if these explanations fully reveal the reasons for Xhosa resistance to Christianity by examining African perceptions of the missionaries and their message at the Wesleyan mission stations of Mount Coke and Butterworth for the period 1825-35. The research is based upon the Wesleyan Missionary Society correspondence and missionary journals and is corroborated and supplemented by travellers' records and later studies in African religion and social anthropology. The economic, social, and religious background of the Wesleyans is described to show how the Christian message was limited to their culture and system of thought. Concepts of divinity, morality, and the afterlife are compared to demonstrate the vast differences between Wesleyan and African worldviews and the inability of the missionaries to overcome these obstacles and to show the relevance of Christianity to African material and spiritual needs. Various types of perceptions are surveyed to show that, though the missionaries were respected for their spiritual role, their character and lifestyle presented an unappealing model of the Christian life. The threat that the missionary message posed to the structure and functioning of African communities is examined as well as African perceptions of these implications. A theory of conversion is advanced which reveals a consistent pattern of association with the missionaries for reasons of self-interest, exposure to the Gospel over a lengthy period of time, and finally conversion. The missionary-African contact of this period is thus characterized as the encounter between two systems of thought which did not engage.
author2 Le Cordeur, B A
author_facet Le Cordeur, B A
Fast, Hildegarde Helene
author Fast, Hildegarde Helene
author_sort Fast, Hildegarde Helene
title African perceptions of the missionaries and their message : Wesleyans at Mount Coke and Butterworth, 1825-35
title_short African perceptions of the missionaries and their message : Wesleyans at Mount Coke and Butterworth, 1825-35
title_full African perceptions of the missionaries and their message : Wesleyans at Mount Coke and Butterworth, 1825-35
title_fullStr African perceptions of the missionaries and their message : Wesleyans at Mount Coke and Butterworth, 1825-35
title_full_unstemmed African perceptions of the missionaries and their message : Wesleyans at Mount Coke and Butterworth, 1825-35
title_sort african perceptions of the missionaries and their message : wesleyans at mount coke and butterworth, 1825-35
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14237
work_keys_str_mv AT fasthildegardehelene africanperceptionsofthemissionariesandtheirmessagewesleyansatmountcokeandbutterworth182535
_version_ 1719348974329004032