In Ghana there are two broad categories of Christianity. The first are the orthodox denominations (mainstream Catholicism, Anglicanism, etc.) and the second are the Charismatics (or evangelicals).
The charismatics are the new churches which preach a version of Christianity that sees every word in the bible as literally true. They are also fundamentalists in that they do not see truth as mind expanding but as a set of beliefs that everyone must subscribe to. They believe that they, uniquely, have sole possession of the truth.
The charismatics, through their simplistic understanding of the world and over-emphasis on the supernatural as an explanation for life’s challenges, are gaining ground in Ghanaian society. They are creating division between those that are “in” – the saved, and those that are “out” – the unsaved; those that are godly and those that are worldly. It divides society based on its subscription to a set of religious dogma. Although fundamentalist Christians may claim we are all equal in the eyes of God, in practise we are unequal in the eyes of these Christians.
Humanism overrides dogma in that it sees each individual as worthy of respect and dignity and is therefore a unifying force. It does
not divide the community based on beliefs but sees each person as valuable and worthy of respect. Unlike fundamentalism it encourages free inquiry, the asking of questions, and the quest for truth wherever it leads, no matter how uncomfortable that truth may be. Rather than stifling development, humanists encourage it. Humanists also understand that we are capable of doing good or bad deeds but we are still human beings and deserve to be treated as such.
Although some of the orthodox believers can be fundamentalists, the real threat to unity and development comes from the fundamentalist denominations. Humanists, mainstream Christians, and people of other beliefs should unite to combat the threat that fundamentalism brings and defend Ghana’s secular state which offers equal freedom to all religions, offering no special privileges to any one of them. We must take fundamentalist religious belief, with its fear of expanding the mind, out of the classrooms, so that our young people can develop inquiring minds. We must understand that a critique of fundamentalism is not an attack on religion.
As Humanists we should project our positive vision of the world around us and encourage respect for all members of our society, even the members of fundamentalist denominations.
Written for the Humanist Association of Ghana




Interesting. How do you compare this to the situation in the United States? Would you equate these fundamentalists with any denomination or group of leaders?
I can’t pretend to understand the situation in the USA but certainly Ghana’s charismatic preachers are often influenced by the American prosperity gospel and it’s evangelicals. For me the main difference is that the USA is already a technological and scientific culture and is benefiting from that. Ghana is still struggling to move in that direction and fundamentalists exert some influence in preventing it (in my opinion). Hoping to write a post about that issue very soon.
Religion is of course very important becuase it also helps us to be a good person for others. it doesnt matter what kind of religion you have, as long as it promotes goodness. ;*`;`
Regards
Well you don’t have to be religious to be good! A religion can promote both goodness and bad depending on the person’s interpretation of it. If we say it doesn’t matter what the religion is, does the truth factor of that religion matter? Can a religion be false or made-up but justified if it promotes goodness?
Have you heard of atheistic fundamentalism?
Isn’t that similar to a fundamentalism of not believing in unicorns or fairies?