Melanesia Burning: Religious Revolution in the Western Pacific

Authors

  • Fraser Macdonald University of Waikato

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15286/jps.128.4.391-410

Keywords:

Solomon Islands, Melanesia, Christianity, Pentecostalism, revivalism, Papua New Guinea, religion, South Seas Evangelical Church

Abstract

In the history of Pacific Christianity, the explosion of revival activity within Melanesia during the 1970s remains an untold story. Within this regional spiritual upheaval, ecstatic Pentecostalist phenomena spread with unprecedented rapidity, intensity and geographical scope. As a result of these movements, Christianity assumed an importance in Melanesia in a way it never had before, as local congregations redefined their church life and spirituality over and against mission Christianity. This article documents a major branch of this regional revivalism. A detailed description of this series of interconnected movements transitions to an explanation of their success in terms of four factors: the mutual ramification of the revivals with political independence movements; the fact that despite being built on theologies of world breaking, the revivals dovetailed with traditional Melanesian religious experiences; the existence of interdenominational organisations that expedited the movement of people, practices and ideas across local, regional and national frontiers; and, finally, the personal dimensions of Melanesian revivalism, whereby the genesis, uptake and diffusion of revival movements often depended crucially upon the persuasive capabilities of influential Christian leaders in each society.

Author Biography

Fraser Macdonald, University of Waikato

Fraser Macdonald is an anthropologist of religion and a Lecturer in Anthropology at the University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand. His research focuses on the intersection of evangelical and Pentecostal Christianity and Melanesian cultural contexts. He has recently been awarded a Marsden Fast Start grant to conduct research into Melanesian revivalism in the 1970s.

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Published

2019-12-14