Religion and sonic practices: Similarities as a source of conflict between Pentecostals and adherents of indigenous religions
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.62868/pjtm.v4i1.133Keywords:
Religious Conflict, Pentecostalism, Indigenous Religions, Sound and Performance, Music and Sonic PracticesAbstract
Silence plays a critical role in many Christian traditions as an important platform for prayer. However, the lived experiences in Pentecostal-Charismatic173 Christianity are seldom quiet. Indeed, participating in a Pentecostal church service involves exuberant activities such as calls-and-responses, clapping, dancing, singing, and shouting. Sound and bodily movement are fundamental because central to their belief is the idea that the Holy Spirit fills adherents, making every action spirit-filled. These practices tend to be controversial and create tension with a section of the population in Ghanaian cities around the year, but they come to a full expression during the implementation of the annual ban on drumming and noisemaking preceding the celebration of the Ga festival of Homowo in Accra.