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- Published: 07 Mar 2010
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- Author: standardgroupkenya
Name | Legio Maria |
---|---|
Formation | 1963 |
Type | New Religious Movement, African Initiated Church |
Headquarters | Got Kwer, Kenya. |
Membership | est. 400,000 - 1.2 million |
Leader title | Baba Messiah |
Leader name | Blasio Simeo Malkio Ondetto |
Legio Maria (Latin, “Legion of Mary”) — also known as Legio Maria of African Church Mission, and Maria Legio — is an African Initiated Church (AIC) or new religious movement initially among the Luo people of western Kenya which incorporates traditional Luo religious customs into a Catholic Christian framework. The movement originated in the early 1960s as a breakaway of the Roman Catholic Church, declared its own pope, and asserted that it has replaced the "Church of Rome" as the true Catholic Church for Africa.
: Oxford University Press, 139]]
The Legio Maria Church was not the only church schism among the Luo people in the early years of Kenyan independence. Catholic missionaries had been working among the Luo for 61 years before the 1963 split. By 1966 there were 31 “distinct Luo separatist churches registered with the Kenyan Government.” Across Kenya, “by 1966 there were 160 distinct bodies with a total of 600,000 adherents, most of whom were formerly members of the Protestant or Catholic Churches,” with the Legion of Mary Church being the largest of the schisms from the Catholic Church. Today, estimates of the number of Legio Maria adherents range from 400,000 to 1.2 million to even over three million. In this regard, the Legio Maria Church is one of the most resilient and successful of the African Initiated Churches. While the Legio Maria Church began exclusively as a movement among the Luo people, it is now found all over Kenya and even has significant numbers of communities among the Turkana in northwest Kenya. In 1979, the word “mission” was added to the church’s official name, becoming the “Legio Maria of African Church Mission.”
Angry at Rome, Mary decided to ‘walk away from those people’. She determined apparitions no longer sufficed. She would tread on African soil as a person with her Son. Colorless in Heaven, both would become black Africans and bring her message directly to a more receptive audience. Legios declared ‘The Third Secret of Fatima’ was about African independence and the coming of Legio.In 2000, the Catholic Church released the official third secret of Fatima alongside a commentary on the meaning of the secret written by then Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger. Many groups, including the Legio Maria Church believe the church is continuing to cover-up the true secret revealed by Mary at Fatima.
• Pope Timothy Joseph Blasio Ahitler (1991–1998).
• Pope Maria Pius Lawrence Jairo Chiaji Adera (1998–2004)
• Pope Raphael Titus Otieno (2004–present)
Simeo Ondeto is known as the Messias, or Black Messiah, whose role is to liberate Africans from the oppression of colonialism and to “heal and protect from the evils of witchcraft.” Simeo Ondeto is not seen merely God’s messenger, but as “the actual embodiment of God in history.” Church leaders distinguish Messias Simeo Ondeto as separate from Jesus. He was not sent to replace Jesus, for Jesus has already accomplished his mission to the Jews and Gentiles. Instead, Messias Simeo Ondeto is God incarnated in another context, specifically for the Africans. Often, 1 John 4:1 is used as biblical support for the confession that God has again come into the flesh through Messias Simeo Ondeto, for “every spirit which confesses that Jesus Christ has come in the flesh is of God and every Spirit that does not confess Jesus is not of God…Therefore we say that Jesus has come in the flesh.” Just as Jesus was the Messiah for the Jews and the Gentiles, “so also God has decided to give the Africans their mediator.”
In their affirmation that Messias Simeo Ondeto is the Black Messiah, the Legio Maria do not exclude the possibility and reality that the Messiah has been incarnated in multiple times and contexts. In interviews during her three years researching the Legio Maria Church, Nancy Schwartz relates,
most Legios insisted to me that theirs was not the only way to choose light and Heaven. The Baba Messias Ondeto had preached that ‘God is a polygynist’ who loves ‘all the houses in his home’. All religions, he had said, are akin to ‘branches of a tree that bears fruit’. Legios reiterated that black and white people could both get to Heaven, if they followed their faiths.Thus, salvation is available through other religions and revelations of God. While the Legio are clear that God has provided specific revelations and even incarnations for different peoples of the world, this does not translate into an exclusivist position in which only adherents of Legio Maria will be with God in heaven. According to Schwartz, “most Legios affirmed that Heaven was a place where the Father, Son, Holy Spirit, Mary, saints, angels and Old Testament prophets and patriarchs are without color, a place where there is nothing like Mzungu (European/white person) and African.” She concludes that the Legio Maria Church has “formulat[ed] their own version of an anti-racist black liberation theology,” which is very unique.
Dreams also provide direction for the individual in regard to spiritual discipline practices and outward garments. While many AICs require adherents to exclusively wear white robes when worshipping, the Legio Maria church encourages adherents to listen for messages from angels in their dreams in regard to the color of robe they should wear. Schwartz recounts the varied meanings of these dream inspired colors:
Dreams can lead Legios to acquire robes of yellow, a range of blues, purple, green, red, brown and other colors that are associated with various spiritual gifts and patron saints. Black is for ordained male priests (padri, pl. pate) and church mothers (madha, padri madhako, pl. mathe, pate mamon). Legio priests and church mothers wear black robes at requiem masses and at graveside services held in family compounds. At happier times, black prayer beads are worn or carried by church mothers and priests as a metonym of power and ordained status. A few non-ordained men and women said they had the black beads on their house altars because a dream had directed them to get the beads and pray with them at home. The dream-bestowed black beads were a source of quiet pride to these Legios.It is through dreams that the Legio Maria adherents can also receive direction for the more mundane decisions in life.
First, the Legio Maria church recognizes salvation through Jesus Christ, the Son of God. The discontinuity with orthodox theology is that the Son of God has been incarnated in multiple contexts, rejecting the orthodox doctrine of Christ taking a human body and soul for eternity. As we have seen in the above research, none of these incarnations are considered exclusive; they only serve to reveal Christ to people of different contexts. All who are saved through any of these incarnations of Christ will worship God together in heaven. Thus, for the Legio Church, salvation is found through Christ, as revealed in their particular Messias Simeo Ondeto.
Second, the Legio Maria church recognizes an active spiritual realm that needs to be dealt with in order to respond to evil and illness. It is God who gives gifts to people for spiritual healing, sometimes through the saints. The Legio specifically recognize the Catholic saints Catherine of Siena and Bernadette of Lourdes in regard to spiritual healing. The Saints Samson and Michael help to “guide Legios with gifts for exorcism and battling witchcraft. In seeking guidance from these holy ones they are in continuity with Catholic theology, but this theology is applied to traditional religious understandings of evil and illness.
As stated above, the Legio Maria church is also in continuity with the Catholic Church in its use of Catholic hymns and the Catholic mass. Many Legio Maria communities still celebrate the Latin form of the mass. In addition, original Legio songs are added that reinforce the particularity of the Legio Maria church.
Another sign of continuity with the Catholic Church is that the Legio Maria include a white Catholic priest, Father Philip Chefa, among their saints. Serving at the Asumbi Roman Catholic mission station in the 1930s,
Chefa was said to have practiced a highly charismatic form of Catholicism that addressed his parishioners’ concerns. He had engaged in healing, exorcism, and the burning of paraphernalia associated with ‘witchcraft’ and indigenous spirit-possession. Chefa had treated people who later became Legios well. He had established a chapter of the Roman Catholic Legion of Mary for Luo in 1938.Not only does the Legio Maria Church acknowledge the Catholic saints as their own, but they have included some European priests who worked in Africa among their cloud of saints.
Category:African traditional religions Category:New religious movements Category:Religion in Kenya Category:Religious organizations established in 1962
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