Many Pentecostal Christians would dislike this analogy for obvious reasons, but their faith is the latest mutation of the movement that began in the first century AD in modern-day Palestine. It appears to be performing extremely well in the process of natural selection whereby a faith movement is pitted against other world religions and secular modern ideas in the contest for hearts and minds and souls. The statistics speak for themselves: by 2050, one in ten people are estimated to identify as Pentecostal Christians. Many of these will be located in the Global South such as Nigeria, Latin America, and the Philippines where the overwhelming majority of global population growth is occurring. Not to classify Pentecostal Christianity as an exclusively Third World Faith, in one of its primary exporter countries, South Korea, it is considered the religion of successful and ambitious young businesspeople. So what if this particular branch of Christianity does emerge by the process of natural selection to become the most subscribed-to faith on the planet? Bethel Church in Redding California (where, for the record, one in ten people already belong, providing an interesting forecast for a world in which a similar proportion of the population are Pentecostals) makes no secret: world domination. Elle Hardy’s work focuses not so much on the tenants of this growing faith movement but on the challenges and problems that are arising as a single branch of Christinity, for better or for worse, is taking over the world.
Pentecostal Christianity embodies many paradoxes and even contradictions. How can a faith so embedded in biblical traditionalism and even fundamentalism, appeal so greatly to young people in modern Western consumerist societies? Why do pastors who preach every other week from the gospel of Luke also own multiple private jets, proceeds from their flock’s tithes, and the controversial practice of ‘seeding’. And how can a faith that professes the love of one’s neighbour contribute so greatly to providing political cover for Israel to subjugate, humiliate, and colonise its neighbours? The appeal of Pentecostalism, however, appears to be boundless and infinitely accessible. Pastors in Nigeria and Brazil have embedded worship into the daily routines of commuters and the faithful in South Africa and the United States will spend their life savings on appointments with renowned spiritual healers instead of modern medicine. On the other hand, such rapid growth of any religion can bring problems with it. Consider Nigeria, a diverse collection of Christian and Muslim tribes with varying oil fortunes, collected into a single nation-state. High degrees of tension between its Muslim and Christian populations have been caused in part by the rapid growth of Pentecostalism. Pentecostal pastors often converts from Islam, equate Nigeria’s Muslim population as a whole, with Boko Haram, thoroughly reflecting a lack of understanding that descends into violence. American churches dubbing their missions in Nigeria and elsewhere ‘crusades’ is unlikely to help. Now think of the suppression of the rich cultures of Mayan Guatemalans and the Roma people of Europe associated with conversion, forced or not, to a Pentecostal interpretation of Christianity. In Guatemala, the Pentecostal-led Christian American-backed military regime carried out what is known as the Silent Holocaust of the native Mayan people during the long and bloody Guatemalan Civil War following the 1954 CIA coup in Guatemala. Even today, Guatemala’s growing Pentecostal population leaves many (often Catholic) Mayan Guatemalans feeling as if their (intensely spiritual) way of life is being destroyed. The nomadic lifestyle of the Romani people of Britain frequently adopt a settled lifestyle upon converting to Christianity, leaving behind the rich and unique customs of their ancestors. These are just some of the problems that Hardy draws the reader’s attention to, sex scandals, embezzlement and corruption charges, and power struggles within churches aside.
Hardy’s work within Pentecostal churches from South Korea to South Africa provides a fascinating perspective on one of the world’s fastest-growing religious movements. Directly criticising such a large faith from so many countries will inevitably mean that she will face opposition to her work. These critics would do well to remember that the job of a journalist is to connect readers to the reality, whether or not they may like that reality, and to expose wrongdoing, if necessary. Christianity is, at its core, a gospel: good news! It is vitally important that we should know if anything other than good is coming out of the churches that claim to teach Christianity so that they can be re-made into what they should be. That is part of the mission of Pentecostal churches: a revival like so many revivals before it. Hardy’s work in exposing the less well-known side of Pentecostal Christianity will go some way in helping the revival movement re-revive itself.