Secularisation and Spirituality among Lapsed-Christian Young Adults in Nairobi: An Exploratory Study of the Antecedents, Triggers, and Response
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Conceptualising Young Adulthood in Africa
1.2. Understanding Secularisation
Once the world was filled with the sacred–in thought, practice, and institutional form. After the Reformation and the Renaissance, the forces of modernization swept across the globe and secularization, a corollary historical process, loosened the dominance of the sacred. In due course, the sacred shall disappear altogether except, possibly, in the private realm.
1.3. Specific Research Questions
- Parental and Family Background: Do mixed marriages of parents belonging to different Christian traditions, or their fervour in religiosity play any role in secularisation? What about the influence of discordant, divorced, separated, or single parents?
- Lack of Faith Formation: Have they been part of any systematic Christian faith formation, yet tended towards secularisation? Does poor faith formation predict falling out?
- Exaggerated Religiosity: What is the level of secularisation process among young adults who were exposed to some forms of exaggerated religiosity that had an impact on guilt and shame, or fear and brainwashing?
- African Literature: Some 20th century African literature is generally critical of Christianity. They identify Christianity as a vehicle of colonialism and Westernisation. Does this have any possible influence on secularisation among young adults in Nairobi, who study these pieces of literature as part of their school curriculum?
- Personal Trauma: Are there any histories of personal trauma associated with falling out of religious faith in Christianity?
- Moral Values: What is the norm of morality among lapsed Christians? What motivates them to be good?
- Spirituality outside Christianity: Are there some who adopt a spiritual orientation, including practices such as meditation, outside formal Christianity, while believing in or not in a personal God?
2. Method
3. Results
3.1. Antecedents
Ok, my mum’s family is Catholic. My dad was Seventh Day Adventist. However, for us it’s not something we were introduced to. My mum chose to raise us Catholic as opposed to Seventh Day Adventist. I don’t remember him being religious. I don’t think he even ever went to Church, ever.
not what you see in the movies, I think they should have left each other. Because they fight too much. Not physically, but verbally… They stayed together. Still, they do… but there is no communication! So, if I was to look back at my upbringing, I wouldn’t say it was the healthiest in terms of emotions, but my physical needs were met. So, I was like, this Christianity I don’t know if it is really for me, it is because I would see their actions, but I am like, these people, their actions don’t really match their spiritual faith?
You know, for us religion is not something that we ever focused on. It was on Sundays, we all go to church. And for us it just became we go for mass and life moves on, right? It’s not something at all we were thinking about: what kind of a Catholic am I. Um, no. It was just a duty.
We were so strongly trained for… to know what was right and what was wrong. You wanted to be in the right place at the right time, you wanted to do the right thing. But, one of my challenging experiences from the Opus Dei, was the Catholic confession. Because they gave you a list, and you’d sit with and tick out what you may not have done correctly? Those little questions became a bit of an issue. As a child I used to quarrel with my sister, or take stuff out of the kitchen without mum’s permission. When it came to the list, it used to bother my mind, you know. I feared much that exercise. When I was in Grade 7, I asked my mum if I could discontinue the formation programme of the Opus Dei. But the guilt stayed on!
“the pastor kept… kept on pushing my head for me to fall down, ha, holy spirit, holy spirit. (Chuckles..), the way they, they always force things. Actually, what pastor was doing actually gave me so many thoughts about religion. So, I started thinking too much … about this thing called religion. Yeah. Finally, I came to realize that eh… everything I can do through my effort.
3.2. Triggers
I would go back to 2007. That’s just after the post-election violence2. So, for me what happened that year, we were burgled around the same time. So, they broke all our windows, stole some of our things; just harassed us. It was traumatic and scary. Then after that I started uh… asking myself why… why would a God… why would a God who claims he loves us allow this to happen.
So… the thing that I think ticked me off was the Kiambaa church massacre.3 Like… that happened and the Church (leadership) was quiet for about two or three days. And even going back to Kenya’s history, the church had always been an integral part of democratic reform. So why is it that this time they are nowhere to be seen?... So that’s around the time I started losing my faith.
when in 2015, Garissa University attack happened. And I feel like that was what… (sigh)… that really, really broke my heart. I remember it was around Easter. So, I just asked myself… did 148 people really have to die? And shortly before that Westgate4 had happened. And I was like; these are children. Honestly, if this God exists, how cruel must he be? How much of a sadist must he be? And I was like; yes fine people say oh.. there is… and I even took a philosophy class that was like: good and evil can exist in the world. Ai, but it didn’t quite do much for me, to be quite honest. I was just like: 148 people! Oh, let your name be praised! Non-sense!
Some of the leaders in our church, started to talk badly to him saying: ‘what have you done? … you need to get married first before you get a child. You know what the Bible says no sex before marriage.’ So in fact that’s what made my brother stop going to church…. it didn’t sit well with me either.
And afterwards when the pastor came, that’s an Adventist pastor now, He really condemned me. He said that you are not allowed to talk to the dead. That now became more personal. I was like… this pastor can’t allow me to mourn my mother? I am not allowed in the way that I like to mourn. Yeah. It was like.. the church makes rules how I should mourn. That was very bad; I really felt very bad. That’s when I decided to do away with being religious.
“How can I say it? Let me just… We are homophobic. And again, we say God created everything in his own image and likeness. And why do we do that now [hating people] who are in the image of God, just because of the different sexual orientation? Is it right? And yet we go… everybody is God’s creation. It doesn’t add up at all.
Another thing that contributed to it was… I don’t know if it is the church’s stand or the Bible’s stand. But their views on home sexuality and LGBTQ community. I was like: Ok, because one man chooses to love another man or people of the same sex choose to love another person. And then, I believe God …. I am being an empathetic and I say, homosexuals go to hell? Like it felt quite… (sighs), this is not right.
3.3. Response
So, when I come here now, because I know what my Christian teaching entails and requires. I don’t want to leave, I don’t want to walk on (laughs)… on egg shells. I want to be genuine, alright. So let me take one approach wholly, now, since I have lived [Christian path] completely and I know there was a gap inside me. So I adopted the African way.
And most of the time I could think on the topics of very wide or curious topics like what’s the meaning of life? What’s our origin? What happens after we die? And those questions I could not find the answers in the Christian belief. … the answers were very insufficient from the Christian based life. That’s why I chose to think in a free-thinking way. That perhaps what the [Christian] belief is saying may not be true. Perhaps there are other answers that are more profound to this life questions.”
I have been thinking about these things for a long time. So, since 2008… One of the things people get wrong about losing your faith or coming to a point where you no longer go to church is: they always imagine it was an easy choice. But for me I agonised about it for so many years. Remember, I grew up in the Church, for around 23 years… and now I’m confronting the idea that maybe everything I was told might not be true. So, deconditioning myself from all those 20 years wasn’t easy.
I don’t believe in life after death. I just ask someone where were you before you were born? Which state were you in? I believe when you die you return to that state.
spirituality to me means connecting with a higher being um, whichever way I see fit. So, if that means mediation to me, that’s how I connect, that is fine. I don’t have to go to physical building or church or belong to any organization to be able to connect to my, a higher being if I may call it that.
knowing “what’s good or bad, is more innate or is more inherent” to human beings. “We are born with it. I don’t have to subscribe to any institution or belief to know that killing is bad… I have come to the conclusion that the more peaceful people are the irreligious.”
So, if… for example, when I commit adultery I will hurt my wife. If my wife commits adultery, she will hurt me. So … I will not want to do something to hurt my wife. So that is why I say adultery no. But it’s not coming from the Bible, but is coming from our own standard. What we try not to hurt others or to hurt ourselves.
4. Discussion
Undeniably, those who wilfully shut out God from their hearts and try to dodge religious questions are not following the dictates of their consciences, and hence are not free of blame; yet believers themselves frequently bear some responsibility for this situation. For, taken as a whole, atheism is not a spontaneous development but stems from a variety of causes, including a critical reaction against religious beliefs, and in some places against the Christian religion in particular. Hence believers can have more than a little to do with the birth of atheism.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | All names are pseudonyms. Consistently of the pseudonym is maintained while referring to the same individual. Gender and age are included within brackets. |
2 | The elections in Kenya in December 2007 were marred by violent ethnic conflicts, in which an estimated 1500 people were killed and another 500,000 were displaced. |
3 | About 50 people were burnt alive inside a church in Western Kenya on 1 January 2008, during the ethnic violence that followed the controversial election of 2007. |
4 | Another terrorist attack on a shopping mall that took place months earlier, perpetrated by militants of the same group. |
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Selvam, S.G.; Githinji, N. Secularisation and Spirituality among Lapsed-Christian Young Adults in Nairobi: An Exploratory Study of the Antecedents, Triggers, and Response. Religions 2022, 13, 968. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13100968
Selvam SG, Githinji N. Secularisation and Spirituality among Lapsed-Christian Young Adults in Nairobi: An Exploratory Study of the Antecedents, Triggers, and Response. Religions. 2022; 13(10):968. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13100968
Chicago/Turabian StyleSelvam, Sahaya G., and Ngure Githinji. 2022. "Secularisation and Spirituality among Lapsed-Christian Young Adults in Nairobi: An Exploratory Study of the Antecedents, Triggers, and Response" Religions 13, no. 10: 968. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13100968
APA StyleSelvam, S. G., & Githinji, N. (2022). Secularisation and Spirituality among Lapsed-Christian Young Adults in Nairobi: An Exploratory Study of the Antecedents, Triggers, and Response. Religions, 13(10), 968. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13100968