Posted on 01/10/2006 6:00:20 AM PST by tellw
MONTREUIL, France - The faithful are swaying, the walls are sweating and the choirs belting out praise to the Lord. Its Sunday morning and hundreds of black evangelicals are meeting in exuberant prayer.
Cries of "Amen!" rise from rows of neatly dressed adults and clapping children. Gospel singers lead the crowd spelling out the name "J-E-S-U-S!" Its the kind of service that could be found in black churches anywhere in the United States.
But the sermon ends with "Dieu vous benisse!" ("God bless you" in French). The final hymn is in Lingala, a language spoken in Congo. On their way home, these families are likely to hear passersby speaking Arabic, Turkish or Wolof.
The buoyant spirit of African evangelicals is moving through the gritty suburbs of Frances main cities, especially in the ring of rundown towns around eastern Paris including Montreuil.
Hardly known 20 years ago, these fast-growing immigrant churches are slowly carving out a place in Frances religious landscape. They face hurdles from local officials and complaints from neighbors, but some small hopeful signs have appeared.
"There is prejudice against us," said Yvan Castanou, pastor of the Impact Christian Center in Ivry, a suburb south of Paris. "Its against evangelical churches. Some officials see them as an invasion from the United States, associated with (U.S. President) George Bush and the conquering spirit," he said.
"The second fact is that when youre black...," he added, his voice trailing off before launching into a litany of complaints about life as an African immigrant in France.
There are 1.1 million Protestants in this traditionally Catholic country of 60 million. Once mostly Lutheran and Reformed, they are now more than one-third evangelical, thanks in part to recent African, Haitian and Asian immigrants.
About 250 "ethnic churches" operate in greater Paris alone, serving 36,000 black evangelicals. Many are from the Democratic Republic of Congo , formerly Zaire, but also from Cameroon, Ivory Coast and other African countries.
"We have 15 nationalities in our church, including from the Caribbean, French-speaking Africans, English speakers from Uganda and Nigeria, even some Arab converts," said Felicien Mas Miangu, pastor of Le Rocher Evangelical Assembly in Montreuil.
France, whose policy of separating church and state can turn anti-religious when applied by staunchly secularist officials on the local level, has gone through two years of discovering who these evangelical Christians in its midst really are.
Often not religious themselves, local officials know little about Protestant denominations and sometimes suspect anything much different from Catholicism to be a dangerous sect.
The unfamiliar ethnic churches burst into the headlines in early 2004 when two magazines branded evangelicals as "Bushs allies" and "a sect that wants to conquer the world."
Rev. Jean-Arnold de Clermont, head of the French Protestant Federation (FPF), said the evangelicals were "victims of collateral damage" from Frances confrontation with its large Muslim minority and French hostility to the Bush administration.
While this prejudice also hit white French evangelicals, many of whom came from other Protestant denominations or Catholicism, it was especially hard on black immigrants whose poverty and lack of political clout made them easy prey.
Ethnic churches complain that local officials often bar pastors from building premises for services in their towns. Congregations renting unused warehouses for years suddenly hit snags at town hall when they try to buy the buildings.
"The evangelicals, especially the immigrants, face major difficulties," Clermont said. "There are all sorts of municipal regulations and the mayors apply them with extreme rigor."
"WE HAVE TO SING AND DANCE"
Castanou said local officials were more helpful to the larger Muslim minority, which with 6 million faithful has much more political influence than small immigrant Protestant groups.
"When the Muslims sneeze, everybody panics," he complained. "But we are Christians. We black people are expressive in the way we praise God, but we dont want fights or confrontations. It seems that this attitude doesnt help."
Pastors like Castanou who cant find new premises have to hold services in rented halls, to the growing annoyance of neighbors who object to the loud music every Sunday morning.
"We have written to our neighbors asking for forgiveness," he said. "We are trying. But we cannot not sing. That is not our culture. We have to sing and we have to dance."
The best-known harassment case occurred last February when the communist mayor of Montreuil barged into Sunday morning services at six black churches demanding to conduct safety inspections on the spot. He evacuated four of them.
"I was getting ready to get up and preach when he came," said Mas Miangu, whose church is located in a unused warehouse in an industrial zone in Montreuil.
"Just by chance, an FPF official, a Frenchman who is the national prison chaplain, was there and told him we were not a sect but a member of the FPF," he said. "The mayor left."
"He would not have done this in a mosque or a synagogue," added Mas Miangu, who came to France from Congo 30 years ago. "We consider this both anti-religious and racial segregation."
LOBBYING IN HIGH PLACES
Both the FPF, which has taken in several black churches as members, and the separate French Evangelical Federation sued the mayor, Jean-Pierre Brard, for violating religious freedom.
They also lobbied successfully at the highest levels.
At the FPFs 100th anniversary in October, President Jacques Chirac noted the growth of evangelical churches and said: "All schools of French Protestantism ... have the same rights and duties. Religious freedom is not divisible. I will see to that."
Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin admitted some churches had problems securing premises and pledged government support.
Brard met a Protestant delegation in early December and assured them he would treat all faiths in his town equally, which means building and buying permits should materialize.
"He may have been a bit clumsy but hes not a racist," delegation member Pierre-Patrick Kaltenbach later said in a conciliatory comment about Brard.
"We have to get rid of this idea that the Africans are foreigners who are illiterate and talk funny," said Kaltenbach.
I suspect they'll never change in that regard.
Me too.
"..and sometimes suspect anything much different from Catholicism to be a dangerous sect. "
Unless, of course, its Islam.
I've always maintained that the first goal of the French Revolution was to destroy the clergy. Secondary goal was to bring down the monarchy. This is how socialism was born, and how socialism continues to operate. Socialism is in a war against God.
The French Revolution was virulently anti-Christian. Not much has changed in that regard over 200+ years. The racism is just icing on the cake (typical of the left, I might add).
Interesting that the French Revolution didn't stop persecution and fear of Evangelicals. Seems to be a constant in France.
When it came to the clergy, though, they were "disestablished" and stayed that way.
I was thinking of the way the revolutionaries - in a frenzy of intellectual enlightenment, of course - destroyed many church buildings and their contents. I agree they fundamentally were anti-clerical, however.
I can't believe the French authorities worry more about relatively small number of African Christians than the millions of African Muslims in Frence.
Where and when did that happen in the past 250 years? France, by and large, has been secular since Napoleon.
France has remarkably few Evangelicals, and the smart ones continue to emigrate, either to the US, or to the former colonies. Louis XIV left a lasting legacy, and must not be forgotten. Remember, the Revolution was against the relatively liberal Louis XVI, not Louis XIV. The French loved the Sun King and his crimes ~ still do!
bump
To be fair, the church in France during the time of the revolution was corrupt. Had the church been less of an active participant, I wonder if the animus the French have towards religion would be so pronounced.
Good point.
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