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Professor speaks on televangelists' effects in Jamaica

By Ben Gittleson

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Published: Thursday, December 3, 2009

Updated: Thursday, December 3, 2009

Marla Frederick

Alexandra Lacayo / Tufts Daily

Harvard University Associate Professor Marla Frederick spoke yesterday on the influence of U.S. televangelists on impoverished Jamaicans.

Harvard University Associate Professor Marla Frederick yesterday evening discussed with a Goddard Chapel audience her research on the influence of American televangelists on Jamaicans. She expounded on why those preachers’ messages of prosperity have become so attractive to inner-city Jamaicans racked by poverty.

The Christian gospel of prosperity, she said, has combined with impoverished Jamaicans’ desire for a new route to modernity and material improvement to offer them hope.

The sermons of American television ministries like those of Joel Osteen and T.D. Jakes, she said, have thus become an important part of spreading faith in Jamaica.

“The instability and malleability of the concept of prosperity is [key] to its longevity,” she said.

An associate professor of African, African-American  and religion studies, Frederick was participating in the Office of the University Chaplain’s Forum on Religion and the Media.

Prosperity gospel states that God rewarded faith with physical and material wealth. Frederick said it has become particularly popular in televangelism.

These television broadcasts are intended for middle-class Americans; the audience she found in Jamaica, she said, appeared completely different than the classic target group.

“The prosperity gospel consistently informs at least some of the religious ideation of the country’s Christian population,” Frederick said. It became clear to her that media played a role in spreading this theology.

Some scholars have determined that the failure of certain routes to wealth have led many to seek new strategies, according to Frederick. The words of American televangelists have helped fill that gap, she said.

“Prosperity theology provided a promise of a certain return on their faith,” Frederick said of Jamaicans looking for change amid strife. “One’s life did not have to waste away” in nihilism, she added.

Jamaicans pray with American televangelists who “offer them means to material gain,” Frederick said, adding that those Jamaican viewers adapt those messages to their unique contexts.

Frederick began her talk by setting the scene of a violent, poor, urban area. She has conducted research in inner-city Kingston, Jamaica, among what she called “an underworld of drugs and violence,” poverty and a high rate of both political and non-political homicides.

“It’s a different kind of lifestyle than we are used to seeing when we think about Jamaica,” she said. “Not even local churches wanted to set up in this area.”

But the prosperity gospel offered a way into these communities.

She told the audience, which numbered at one point around 20, that during her research, she visited a man named William who engaged in “spiritual warfare with the enemy” by setting up a tent church in a particularly poor and dangerous place where bodies often littered the streets.

“A large portion of William’s church is made up of single women trying to provide for their children,” said Frederick, who explained that 90 percent of children in Jamaica are born out of wedlock.

An “oasis” amidst a “desert” of impoverishment, Frederick said, the church’s Pentecostal leanings and emphasis on the prosperity gospel have inspired many.

Yet many Jamaicans who follow this gospel remain poor, which begs the question of what the televangelists’ teachings offer them and why they continue believing, Frederick said. Jamaicans often take issue with how, as one person she talked to put it, televangelists make it seem like the gospel is for sale, constantly pleading for money.

She explained that the prosperity gospel has several elements that make it attractive to those in the slums of Jamaica. In particular, the gospel has an ability to adapt to the unique situation of these individuals and their conception of prosperity, as it often includes less tangible ideas like one’s relationship with God.

The reinterpretation of prosperity gospel in Jamaica gives scholars insights into the underlying notions of that theology, she said.

University Chaplain David O’Leary praised Frederick’s study of religion and the media.

“I’m thrilled that more anthropologists are looking into religion to analyze it,” he said, calling that a good sign.

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9 comments

ON
Fri Dec 4 2009 10:29
In response to 'Your Name', my point of indicating the Catholic Church as one of the wealthiest institution does not necessarily infer that the Catholic Church is sitting on pots of surplus cash. But, the way that wealth is determined in a capitalistic society is based on the worth of your capital, and that includes property - schools, churches, community centers, etc. Simply because an institution takes its wealths and spreads it such that certain parts of it are indeed stretched for cash, it does not mean that it is not wealthy. If I win $1,000,000 in the lottery and use all of it to buy a house in Boston, though I do not have any more cash than I did before winning, I AM STILL MORE PROSPEROUS. To suggest otherwise, is not to understand how wealth works in a capitalist society.
I will not deny that some televangelists are looking to make a quick personal buck, but the fact of the matter is that there are other televangelists that ask for money in order to do the good works that churches often do. It is for the same reason why catholic and protestant churches collect offerings on Sundays, and why individuals tithe. The purpose is not to enrich the institution, but to provide resources for that Institutions good works.
Your name
Fri Dec 4 2009 09:30
Quick question for Robert Griffin. What exactly do you mean by religious homophobia? If Christians want to teach that homosexuality is wrong, why should anyone brand them as purveyors of homophobia.

Jamaica is a country in need of moral and social renewal. I would rather Jamaicans tuned into some televangelist preaching on the TV instead of watching vapid American music videos or situational comedies. Go televagelists! Go!

Prosperous
Fri Dec 4 2009 08:10
...Are you all for real?? If you knew your Bible you would know "Faith without works is dead".. There is nothing wrong with prosperity preaching or with prosperity preachers - actually everything is right with it!!! Did it ever occur to those of you who criticise it that maybe some of those who listen to prosperity preaching do not fully apply all the principles? Well I am a living testimony of Prosperity preaching!!!!! I'm a certified Commercial pilot in the USA&Caribbean with business in 4 Caribbean Islands and about to open up in South Florida by February2010. All this happened in a 7 year time span My testimony of what Jesus Christ did for me and the encouragement of prosperity preachers is remarkable. So those who say prosperity preaching does not work because some people are still impoverished does that mean school teaching does not work simply because some students fail their classes?????
Robert Griffin
Fri Dec 4 2009 08:07
This is very interesting. I would be curious to know if Professor Frederick's work revealed any religious homophobia encouraged from Americans preaching in Jamaica since that is a major issue there as well. The two American ministers mentioned also enourage more than just the notion of prosperity preaching.
Nina Lee
Thu Dec 3 2009 21:35
What poor people need is Knowledge and Tools--actual ways to prosperity--not a bunch of words about prosperity. The single mothers and the men who impregnated the women probably lacked Knowledge of the negative consequences (i.e. suffering) of rape and un-prepared-for pregnancy, as well as Knowledge of how to prevent rape and un-prepared-for pregnancy. In addition to lack of Knowledge, they probably lacked access to contraceptive tools. Many people who have been given Info and Tech take these things for granted and are unaware of how essential these things are for healthy lifestyles. Are you aware of how much it took for you to be able to input comments here? You know what would be more helpful than televangelists and churches? Schools, libraries, and other institutions that give people Info and Tech they can use to improve their conditions.
michael
Thu Dec 3 2009 17:44
The reason that televangelists are popular in poor areas in Jamaica is because the people have nothing else except their faith. There is a lack of safety, education, food, water, electricity etc.. The poverty and violence rampant in "Garrison" communities in Jamaica is almost unimaginable to most in the developed world. Therefore, the idea that "faith" will in some way lead to prosperity grabs hold in these communities. There is a saying in Jamaica that were there is "life there is hope." Unfortunatly this prosperity gospel sells hope but does nothing to dispell the ills of poverty in everyday life. In fact, it makes life worse. A a poor mother sends her last dollar to a church or televangelist who could care less about their terrible lot in life and in return does nothing to help them. The church/televangelists freely take but don't give anything back. Where is the assistance from the "Christians" to help these devote followers in such peril? What would Jesus say?
Your name
Thu Dec 3 2009 17:21
I take issue with the comment by ON who says that the Catholic church is one of the wealthiest institutions in the world. This is a commonly held view by people who do not know anything about the workings of the Catholic church. The fact that many of NYC's and DC's Catholic inner-city schools are closing shop are indicative of the stretched resources of the Catholic church. Just because there are many European cathedrals of ostentatious beauty and adornment that does not mean that the Catholic church has vast amounts of wealth. The Catholic church should not be expected to sell off its possessions to solve issues that we human beings create. Lastly, many of the Church's possessions are donated or created by the artists that are employed by the Church such as Michelangelo in the 16th century.

In regards to Jamaica, I think it is great that Prof. Frederick is doing some research on the religiosity of contemporary Jamaicans. It is quite sad to hear that 90% of all Jamaican children are born out of wedlock. I wonder what repercussions that will have on Jamaican society in the future. Good work, Prof. Frederick!

David MacKenzie
Thu Dec 3 2009 16:26
I think much more needs to be said about how "prosperity" is every bit as much a function of systemic issues, as it is personal ones. THE DEGREE to which a society refuses to murder, refuses to steal, refuses to commit adultery, refuses a bribe, refuses to cooperate with systemic injustice, IS THE DEGREE to which they will prosper as a society-- and as individuals. One more tither in Jamaica is certainly welcome, but Jamaicans and everybody else need to see prosperity as more than just an individual giving (and even gaining) more money.
ON
Thu Dec 3 2009 12:10
This is quite a fascinating topic, which definitely begs study. But, I did want to point out that while some televangelists do preach a prosperity gospel, it does not always focus solely on material and physical gain. Somewhat in relation to this, the message of some televangelists also implicitly teaches the need to reevaluated just what it means to be prosperous, and to problematize rampant materialism. It is also important to note that not all televangelists are "constantly pleading for money". In the same way that if one were to visit a church, and a time of offering and tithes would take place, so too will this happen when church is "watched" on a television screen. People are quick to criticize the wealth of televangelists, but yet are not so quick to point out that the Catholic Church is one of the wealthiest institutions in the world.






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