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Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by ettekamba1: 3:50am On Oct 24, 2021
Kenya's churchgoers have been used to smartly dressed politicians rolling up in flash cars to attend services on Sundays - often with cameras in tow.

They tend to arrive flush with cash donations - carried by their handlers in shoulder bags - which can be used for the construction of mega churches and the purchase of loud music systems.

In exchange for this largesse, midway through the service, the politician takes to the pulpit, where the congregation becomes a captive audience for their message, which often has little to do with the bible.

These "sermons" often make it to TV bulletins to satisfy an insatiable appetite for news about those manoeuvring ahead of the next election, still nine months away.

Kenyan worshippers pray at the Gatina Church in Kawangware,as they wait for an opposition leader to attend the Sunday's service.

Image caption,Established churches want the pulpit to be reserved for religious sermons

Some tour around in search of new congregations, leading to some clashes inside churches with politicians accusing each other of invading one another's turf.

Priests have also been known to be invited to politicians' homes to discuss "development affairs" - as part of negotiations to ease these turf wars.

There are allegations - denied of course - that some of the donations are the proceeds of ill-gotten gains.

Now leaders of the established churches have had enough. They have banned politicians from the pulpit, accusing them of making "divisive and unedifying" remarks that "desecrate the church".

In order to reduce media attention, the churches will also no longer disclose the amounts donated by politicians towards church projects.

"Partly priests are to blame for the capture of the church by politicians. There was need to return the practice into its purity," Catholic Archbishop Anthony Muheria explained to the BBC.

The head of the Anglican Church in Kenya, Archbishop Jackson Ole Sapit, concurred that it was a "mistake" to give leeway to politicians in churches in the first place.

"I own it 100%. But we can't remain in the same mistake for long. A moment of repentance - a turnaround - is needed," he said when the ban was announced last month.

'Politicians are selfish people'
The move has been welcomed by some - especially these churchgoers I spoke to in the capital, Nairobi.

"To be honest it was a distraction. I have been waiting for church leaders to deal with it," said Eunice Waweru.

Janet Nzilani agreed: "I'm glad the decision was made because politicians are selfish people. They are not there to inspire people or to call for unity. They don't value people at all. Pastors should just recognise their presence [in church] and nothing else."

Florence Atieno said that politicians should be treated with respect, acknowledged by a pastor if they were in the congregation and be allowed to greet congregants after a service.

"My only problem is when they start campaigning and abusing each other in church," she said.

But these women all attend evangelical churches whose clerics may not necessarily agree with the pulpit ban.

It is being led by the Anglican, Catholic and Presbyterian churches and is facing resistance from those ministries where allegiance to self-proclaimed prophets and faith healers is huge.

Big business
Kenyans are predominantly Christian - 85.5% of the country's 50 million people, according to the 2019 census - with most now going to evangelical churches. The Catholic Church is the next most popular denomination.

The faith economy is big business - and a fundraiser with the right politician can greatly improve the fortunes of a church.

Many churches have been left cash-strapped as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic, so it is no surprise that some evangelical clerics have opposed a blanket pulpit ban.

"I don't think it will take root because we have churches that are opportunistic, they are looking for politicians who will give them money, sometimes they even invite them themselves," media commentator Barrack Muluka told the BBC.

Author and scholar Peter Kimani explains that the clergy of the established churches no longer have the control they did in the 1990s.

"It is no longer a unifying force… The evangelicals are briefcase operations and have no organising principles," he told the BBC.

Religious studies scholar Josephine Gitome notes that many worshippers may not be that bothered by the politicians' behaviour.

Most Kenyans may be churchgoers, but are not that religious day-to-day: "There is concern about whether their behaviour between Monday and Saturday concurs with their behaviour on Sunday."

Moral 'failures'
The pulpit ban seems to signal that mainstream churches want to regain some moral authority.

Previously church leaders had clout when speaking out on public affairs and over human rights issues - they pushed for a return to multiparty democracy in the 1990s.

But public confidence has dwindled over controversial positions taken over the last two decades.

Opposition lawmaker Otiende Amollo believes the churches missed the mark on three major occasions:

By failing to speak out strongly enough at the height of the post-election violence between 2007 and 2008
By opposing the new constitution, introduced after a referendum in 2010 to ease ethnic tensions
And by failing to mediate between political factions after the Supreme Court nullified the August 2017 presidential election results.
"These events significantly reduced the standing of the church and it will take quite some time for it to regain that standing," Mr Amollo, who was among the lawyers who convinced judges to cancel the first 2017 poll results, told the BBC.

Pandemic restrictions were partially lifted for church congregations in June - though campaign rallies remained banned, meaning churches became inundated with politicians.

President Uhuru Kenyatta, a practising Catholic, has recently further eased restrictions allowing churches up to two-thirds of their capacity, though rallies are still prohibited.

So the pulpit ban does not sit well with campaigning politicians, like Deputy President William Ruto, who is eyeing the presidency.

"We come as Christians to support church projects," he was quoted as saying at an evangelical service in central Kenya where he reportedly donated two million Kenyan shillings ($18,000; £13,000).

Mr Amollo thinks the churches should go further and ban politicians from fundraising events too.

But church leaders are at pains to say Bible-wielding politicians themselves are not banned.

"Politicians are still welcome to pray but without any preferential treatment to address congregants," Ferdinand Lugonzo, head of the secretariat of the Kenya Conference of Catholic Bishops, told the BBC.

"The church building is consecrated for purposes of worship only."
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-58666703

2 Likes

Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by Hezzyluv: 3:54am On Oct 24, 2021
It will only take churches who are heavenly minded to band corrupt politicians with their duffle bag of money from mounting pulpit.

21 Likes

Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by Icejayz(m): 5:17am On Oct 24, 2021
In Nigeria, it's the other way round, churches are now business centers

23 Likes 1 Share

Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by Blackfire(m): 6:52am On Oct 24, 2021
Nigerian pastors now



grin

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by NobleSeed(m): 7:10am On Oct 24, 2021
I wonder what they are doing there in the first place..

4 Likes

Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by Prosperous111(m): 7:10am On Oct 24, 2021
Okay o
Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by SEGLIZ: 7:11am On Oct 24, 2021
if only our god of churches in Nigeria can emulate this.
Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by Akwamkpuruamu: 7:11am On Oct 24, 2021
The house of God is a house of prayer and worship and not for politicking. I have never seen a politician go to campaign in a shrine

10 Likes 1 Share

Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by iamyemiakins(m): 7:11am On Oct 24, 2021
Wetin politicians dey find for pulpit in the first place, o wrong nau!

Attend church if you like and just follow up with the activities, not mount the pulpit.

1 Like

Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by Bobotic(m): 7:11am On Oct 24, 2021
But Nigerians pastors & politicians grin embarassed

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by Winters23: 7:12am On Oct 24, 2021
grin

The turf wars got me laughing

I mean, like the turf wars by drug lords

Dailymice:
If Christ had a church in his times, whenever politicians came around, he might have said, "You brood of vipers, who hath warned you of the wrath to come"

Jesus wouldn't say that because He'll obviously know they didn't come for salvation....


He'll probably whip them with koboko while chasing them away

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Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by Dailymice: 7:12am On Oct 24, 2021
If Christ had a church in his times, whenever politicians came around, he might have said, "You brood of vipers, who hath warned you of the wrath to come"

4 Likes

Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by potent5(m): 7:12am On Oct 24, 2021
But in Nigeria, politicians are pastors. The Bakares, Osinbajos and Adeboyes of this country know themselves.

1 Like

Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by Iliveforever(m): 7:13am On Oct 24, 2021
In Nigeria, it’s the other way round.. politicians are the ones banning and arresting pastors with dss who are against their interest.
Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by SocialJustice: 7:14am On Oct 24, 2021
Church self na Bible based hustle. Go to the father directly, Paul telling early Christians not to forsake gathering of brethrens has become the foundation for the multi billion dollar Bible based fraud industry.
Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by arantess: 7:14am On Oct 24, 2021
From next year, our politicians will start attending church with camera crew in tow
Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by QuickStandard: 7:15am On Oct 24, 2021
cool
Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by Picker28: 7:15am On Oct 24, 2021
grin grin grin grin
E go shock some pastor's for naija here
Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by Skyfornia(m): 7:15am On Oct 24, 2021
In Africa, politicians are nemesis. Maybe they need recolonization.
Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by Nobody: 7:16am On Oct 24, 2021
Wait oo
Politicians no dey fear God oo
So they don't only lie to the poor masses on their offices and campaign grounds,, they've now taken their lies as far as climbing "Church pulpits."
lipsrsealed
Hmm
What more can I say?? undecided

Thank God the churches there have put an estoppel to that (although the ban came as a result of clash of political interest)
Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by treatise: 7:18am On Oct 24, 2021
Just imagine if all church members were above average economically, they'd not give politicians the chance of using churches as campaign grounds. One of the most potent ways of controlling citizenry is impoverishing them.

2 Likes

Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by Marvieduke(f): 7:24am On Oct 24, 2021
The right thing to do.
Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by Danmisra(m): 7:25am On Oct 24, 2021
Icejayz:
In Nigeria, it's the other way round, churches are now business centers
Hmmmm, my guy it not only in Nigeria, but the whole of west Africa. The business is booming, just do a research on that, you will see it.
Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by Pavore9: 7:32am On Oct 24, 2021
NobleSeed:
I wonder what they are doing there in the first place..

Kenyan politicians are addicted to attending burials and being in Churches on Sundays because they get access to free crowd they can campaign to and abuse fellow politicians. cheesy
Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by Ayo081(m): 7:34am On Oct 24, 2021
'Go and reap where you didn't sow' will be the message elsewhere.
Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by Ademola47(m): 7:37am On Oct 24, 2021
Good
Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by jmaxjohn(m): 7:39am On Oct 24, 2021
Hezzyluv:
It will only take churches who are heavenly minded to band corrupt politicians with their duffle bag of money from mounting pulpit.

Never seen a politician mount the pulpit in a jw Hall b4 tho.
Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by calculator123(m): 7:42am On Oct 24, 2021
Way to go
Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by Passionate888: 7:52am On Oct 24, 2021
Nice
Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by seunayantokun(m): 7:53am On Oct 24, 2021
A pity the story is similar to what happens in some churches here.
Re: Why Kenyan Churches Are Banning Politicians From Pulpits by Iliya1520: 7:57am On Oct 24, 2021
In 9ja na some of the politician be the pastors of de church.

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