African church leaders resist gay rights, call it a colonial  import
Fredrick Nzwili ("The Washington Post," March 6, 2014) 
Nairobi, Kenya — A call for greater acceptance of gays and lesbians has put 
 African and Western churches on a collision course, as some African 
clerics  liken mounting criticism from the U.S. and Europe to a new wave of 
colonization  by the West. 
Consider some of the statements at a news conference last week led by 
Bishop  Arthur Gitonga of the Redeemed Church in Kenya: 
“Homosexuality is equivalent to colonialism and slavery,” said one  par
ticipant. 
“We feel it’s like a weapon of mass destruction,” said another. 
“It is not biblical and cannot bring blessing to Christians,” said a  
third. 
Gitonga, a powerful East African Pentecostal church official, is among a  
group of Kenyan leaders who have launched “Zuia Sodom Kabisa,” Kiswahili for 
 “Stop Sodom Completely.” The campaign seeks 1 million signatures to 
petition  legislation to criminalize homosexual acts in Kenya. 
Scholars warn that such radical comparisons blur real issues. 
“There is little connection between homosexuality and the historical  
occurrences: slavery and colonialism,” said George Gona, a historian at the  
University of Nairobi. The differences are cultural, he added. 
Still, the harsh language attests to a sense of betrayal some Africans feel 
 toward the West. 
Across Africa, thriving churches are a testament to the work of 
missionaries  from Western nations. Clergy say they are ever grateful to 
Western 
churches for  sending missionaries to Africa and making converts to 
Christianity. 
Now many clergy feel Western churches are on a reverse trajectory, as they  
accept homosexuality, which is seen as unscriptural and contrary to African 
 culture. 
Support for government legislation criminalizing homosexual acts and 
levying  harsh penalties is widespread among Christians. 
Recently, Ugandan and Nigerian churches backed harsh anti-gay laws that  
impose jail sentences for gay sex. Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni signed a  
bill last month that would sentence gays to life for some acts, while 
Nigerian  President Goodluck Jonathan signed a similar law in January. 
Museveni criticized Western nations as imperialists imposing their culture 
on  Africa. 
Anglican Archbishop Stanley Ntagali of Uganda was a strong supporter of the 
 final bill there. He was among the religious leaders who recommended 
changes in  2010 to make it less harsh by removing the death penalty, reducing 
the  sentencing guidelines and deleting a clause on reporting homosexual  
behavior. 
On Wednesday (March 5), Ntagali denied reports that the province was  
considering breaking away from the Anglican Communion. According to the 
primate,  
the fabric of the Anglican Communion was torn in 2003 when the Episcopal 
Church  in the United States consecrated Gene Robinson as bishop in New 
Hampshire. 
“Not only was this against the Bible, but it went against the agreed 
position  of the Anglican Communion,” Ntagali said. 
Still, he acknowledged the differences on the subject have been a source of 
 tension. 
“This can be awkward for us because they are our Mother Church,” added the 
 archbishop, referring to the Anglican Communion. 
Other Ugandan church leaders have also backed the new legislation, saying 
it  will help stop recruitment to the gay lifestyle and will combat funding 
and  promotion of homosexuality. 
“We draw our authority from our sacred books that teach homosexuality is 
part  of human weakness that must be addressed at personal level through 
repentance,”  said Metropolitan Jonah Lwanga, the archbishop of Uganda’s 
Orthodox Church. 
Meanwhile, the Inter-Religious Council of Uganda, a grouping of Anglican,  
Roman Catholic and Orthodox churches, said the denominations would show 
respect,  practice nondiscrimination and offer compassion to homosexuals. 
Kenyan religious scholar Abdallah Kheir said people are not interested in  
pushing back on gay rights in retaliation for Western colonialism and  
slavery. 
“Homosexuality is not new in Africa, but what the faiths are opposing is 
the  open promotion and marketing of the practice in communities,” said Kheir. 
“Gays  and lesbians have been in existence here, but it has never been a 
problem until  recently when they came out into the open.”

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