A Critical Evaluation of the Impact of Religious Belief (Christianity) within Post-Colonial African Burial Rites: A South African Perspective

The mystery of death, dying and funerals has been a universal phenomenon in the lives of almost all human beings, from humanity’s fall from grace to today. Death visits every culture, clan and family, and yet it continues to be a terrifying, unexpected stranger and the most feared enemy of human bei...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Baloyi Magezi Elijah
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2024-02-01
Series:Religions
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/15/2/248
_version_ 1797297052437184512
author Baloyi Magezi Elijah
author_facet Baloyi Magezi Elijah
author_sort Baloyi Magezi Elijah
collection DOAJ
description The mystery of death, dying and funerals has been a universal phenomenon in the lives of almost all human beings, from humanity’s fall from grace to today. Death visits every culture, clan and family, and yet it continues to be a terrifying, unexpected stranger and the most feared enemy of human beings. People from different cultures use different coping mechanisms to fight off the pain of death, but for some people in the Collins Chabane Municipality, a particular Christian religious belief has been shown to be the most reliable asset during the battle. It is questionable whether alternative traditions besides Christianity can compete with Christianity in bringing healing from the pain of death. Various methods of healing, like African grief therapy and psychological healing, are offered to bereaved family members after death and even after burial, but are they enough for Africans to return to their normal lives? This article discusses why (Christian) religious belief is essential during and after the burial of a loved one. This is carried out within the context of colonialism having eroded all African traditions, creating a space for Christianity alone to be a remedy in death and burying.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T22:15:39Z
format Article
id doaj.art-1fbaa3c306cf46e08b00eabefcfe5e25
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2077-1444
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T22:15:39Z
publishDate 2024-02-01
publisher MDPI AG
record_format Article
series Religions
spelling doaj.art-1fbaa3c306cf46e08b00eabefcfe5e252024-02-23T15:32:50ZengMDPI AGReligions2077-14442024-02-0115224810.3390/rel15020248A Critical Evaluation of the Impact of Religious Belief (Christianity) within Post-Colonial African Burial Rites: A South African PerspectiveBaloyi Magezi Elijah0Research Institute of Theology and Religion, University of South Africa, Pretoria 0002, South AfricaThe mystery of death, dying and funerals has been a universal phenomenon in the lives of almost all human beings, from humanity’s fall from grace to today. Death visits every culture, clan and family, and yet it continues to be a terrifying, unexpected stranger and the most feared enemy of human beings. People from different cultures use different coping mechanisms to fight off the pain of death, but for some people in the Collins Chabane Municipality, a particular Christian religious belief has been shown to be the most reliable asset during the battle. It is questionable whether alternative traditions besides Christianity can compete with Christianity in bringing healing from the pain of death. Various methods of healing, like African grief therapy and psychological healing, are offered to bereaved family members after death and even after burial, but are they enough for Africans to return to their normal lives? This article discusses why (Christian) religious belief is essential during and after the burial of a loved one. This is carried out within the context of colonialism having eroded all African traditions, creating a space for Christianity alone to be a remedy in death and burying.https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/15/2/248deathculturereligionAfrican grief therapyAfrican burial traditions
spellingShingle Baloyi Magezi Elijah
A Critical Evaluation of the Impact of Religious Belief (Christianity) within Post-Colonial African Burial Rites: A South African Perspective
Religions
death
culture
religion
African grief therapy
African burial traditions
title A Critical Evaluation of the Impact of Religious Belief (Christianity) within Post-Colonial African Burial Rites: A South African Perspective
title_full A Critical Evaluation of the Impact of Religious Belief (Christianity) within Post-Colonial African Burial Rites: A South African Perspective
title_fullStr A Critical Evaluation of the Impact of Religious Belief (Christianity) within Post-Colonial African Burial Rites: A South African Perspective
title_full_unstemmed A Critical Evaluation of the Impact of Religious Belief (Christianity) within Post-Colonial African Burial Rites: A South African Perspective
title_short A Critical Evaluation of the Impact of Religious Belief (Christianity) within Post-Colonial African Burial Rites: A South African Perspective
title_sort critical evaluation of the impact of religious belief christianity within post colonial african burial rites a south african perspective
topic death
culture
religion
African grief therapy
African burial traditions
url https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/15/2/248
work_keys_str_mv AT baloyimagezielijah acriticalevaluationoftheimpactofreligiousbeliefchristianitywithinpostcolonialafricanburialritesasouthafricanperspective
AT baloyimagezielijah criticalevaluationoftheimpactofreligiousbeliefchristianitywithinpostcolonialafricanburialritesasouthafricanperspective