The Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church as Religious Other in Contemporary Ethiopia: Discursive Practices of Three Selected Religious Authorities
Abstract
:1. Introduction
The circulation of ideas, images, and narratives between different creeds does not mean that religions necessarily grow more appreciative or tolerant of one another. Instead, they appropriate aspects of other creeds and use them to fortify the boundaries between “us” and “them” or between believers and unbelievers.
2. Religious Othering
3. Religious Authority
4. Methodology
5. Presentation of the Textual Dimension
5.1. Instance 1: Mezgebekal Gebre-Hiwot—Justice Is in Our Hands!
If you kneel down and beg them to keep you alive when they come to kill you on Sunday, they will come and kill you the next day. So, justice is not something you beg or cry for. Enforcing justice is our duty. The scholars and the laymen should be taught this. It is over!
Our ancestors never deviated from three principles: The first is love of God. To love God who was before the world, who created the heavens and the earth. Our forefathers promised not to depart from this with all their hearts and minds. They don’t deny God; they don’t break the law; they keep his commandments. God says, if you love me, keep my commandments. The Ethiopians kept this promise. That is love of God. The second is love of neighbour. This means loving people, not pushing them. There is no one you can single out and push down because of their faith and their place of birth. You love people. If someone is victimised, you serve him/her with justice. If he is pushed or ousted, you give him back and compensate him. Loving people is the primary duty. The third characteristic of Ethiopians is righteousness. It means that you will enforce secular rules on someone who does not understand spiritual law.
This means that if your brother gets angry and hits you, you turn around and preach the gospel to him, because he is already a believer. He is your brother. If one of your hands cuts your other hand while you are chopping onions, you do not say that the other hand should be cut. If a Christian oppresses another Christian, he will bear it and not strike back at his brother. Turning the other cheek is for your brother.
We do not have such a saying for someone who slaughters, destroys religion and defiles the Church, my dear! Do you understand? You see, once again! This is a spiritual battle. Christ has told us about your brother. There is no joke in religion and country.
If you do not have a country, you do not have a Church. If you have no Church, you have no faith. If you have no faith, where will you live? You will not be saved. To have eternal life, you must live by faith; for faith to exist, the Church must exist; for the Church to exist, the country must exist. It is to prepare oneself to make the country run with justice. This is it!
5.2. Instance 2: Tolossa Gudina—Age of Visitation
It is not wrong to say that the time of mercy has come for the Ethiopian people and the Church. Listen, Ethiopian people! We have never seen with our eyes or heard with our ears when the leader of the country serves as priest, mediator and mentor. But today we are seeing all this. This is one of the signs that the time of reconciliation, healing and visitation has come for the people of Ethiopia. But we must believe, accept and support that the era of mercy and healing has come for Ethiopia. If we spend this time without properly understanding and accepting it, we must all know that we will pay the price.
Although the work is done day and night, there has been nothing that has not been tried to close the door of mercy and hinder the reform process through propaganda, media, war, espionage and bribery. The reform is still being tested in various ways. They do not seem to understand that what they are doing is destroying and weakening the country and are in a nightmare to take it back to the past.
The sickness and problem of Ethiopia is spiritual and mental. Most people in Ethiopia know the Lord Jesus by name and history, not by His life, truth, and spirit. If they did, no one’s blood would be shed in a so-called Christian country. The blood of hundreds of thousands of people would not be shed.
It will be solved when the spiritual condition of the Church in the country is fixed. But the Church itself is in great confusion and captivity. First of all, it should enter into a nation-saving repentance of its own. For the war, the insults, the misunderstandings, the criticisms, and the violences that the country is currently experiencing are shameful. This requires repentance.
There is no human medicine for this. It is only in the hands of the Lord Jesus Christ. Politics and diplomacy cannot solve this. The Amara, the Oromo, the Tigrayans, the East, the West cannot. It is repentance that can. We must forgive those who have harmed us. When we do that, we will be saved.
Let us hold the government that God has given us like a diamond. Let us work together. Let us bring change. We are the ones who have to bring the change. If we fail to do so, we should not forget that we ourselves are responsible for the failure and the misery that will come.
5.3. Instance 3: Ahmedin Jebel—Beware! Unite, Strategise and Move Forward!
If the institution has a system and an owner and can march sixty to seventy million Muslims behind it, Wolahi [which means, ‘I swear to God’], there are many miracles that we will do. I am not lying, Wolahi, we have the capacity to do a lot.
See what a genius the Prophet is! What did he do first? If this person comes with a mission, claiming to be a false Muslim, and if the Prophet just mixes him up, what will he do? He will spy. Is that not right? But what did he do? If your coming is true, then go and try to divide the unity (of the enemy); and if you come with a false conspiracy, then go with it. You see, he succeeded in both ways. In this way, the Prophet saved the Muslims. Even today, there are many ways to fight. The way to fight is not only through demonstrations.
There are many elements who want to turn us into mountaineers. And we are fighting for our country, not to be a steppingstone for others. We are ready to give not only our money but also our lives to fight for our religion, our country and our people in our own way.
6. The Discourse Practice: Social Media Reinforcing Religious Authority?
7. The Social Practice: Religious Othering?
7.1. Historical Ethiopia
7.2. “New Ethiopia”
7.3. Future Ethiopia
8. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Kumlachew, S.S. The Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church as Religious Other in Contemporary Ethiopia: Discursive Practices of Three Selected Religious Authorities. Religions 2024, 15, 744. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15060744
Kumlachew SS. The Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church as Religious Other in Contemporary Ethiopia: Discursive Practices of Three Selected Religious Authorities. Religions. 2024; 15(6):744. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15060744
Chicago/Turabian StyleKumlachew, Sileshie Semahagne. 2024. "The Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church as Religious Other in Contemporary Ethiopia: Discursive Practices of Three Selected Religious Authorities" Religions 15, no. 6: 744. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15060744
APA StyleKumlachew, S. S. (2024). The Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church as Religious Other in Contemporary Ethiopia: Discursive Practices of Three Selected Religious Authorities. Religions, 15(6), 744. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15060744