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The Role of the Church in the Renewal of the Mind: Lessons from Early Christianity for Africa’s Development

Wed, Oct 8 2025 9:53 AM
in Ghana General News, News
the role of the church in the renewal of the mind lessons from early christianity for africas development
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Dr. Yao Eli Sebastian Nafrah

Introduction: The Crisis of Faith and Development in Africa

Every civilisation rises or falls upon the quality of its thought. As Aristotle observed, “The energy of the mind is the essence of life.” If this is true, then the Church, as custodian of truth and moral formation, stands as one of the most potent institutions for shaping the destiny of nations. The Apostle Paul, writing to the Romans, set down a maxim that reverberates through history: “Be transformed by the renewal of your mind” (Romans 12:2). The renewal of the mind is not only a spiritual imperative but also a civilizational one.

Africa—and Ghana in particular—faces a tragic paradox. It is home to some of the most vibrant expressions of Christianity in the world, with church attendance and public religious professions at historic highs. Yet, corruption, poverty, and moral decay remain entrenched. The virtues that Christianity extols —justice, honesty, hard work, compassion, and integrity—remain rare commodities. How can it be that a continent overflowing with churches still languishes in underdevelopment?

To answer this, we must revisit history, philosophy, and scripture. The European mind was once as chaotic, corrupt, and decadent as ours. But through the catalytic influence of Christianity—its doctrines, its pulpit reforms, and its shaping of moral imagination—the continent was renewed, and modern civilisation was born. What Europe once experienced, Africa too can undergo, if the Church reclaims its prophetic and reformative role.

1. Early Christianity and the Transformation of the European Mind

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The expansion of Christianity in Europe was more than the spread of a creed; it was the reorientation of an entire worldview. Augustine of Hippo, himself African by birth, wrestled with the decay of the Roman Empire and concluded that earthly kingdoms would collapse unless anchored in transcendent truth. For Augustine, the City of God was a higher order that infused temporal life with divine justice.

Later thinkers such as John Chrysostom and Jerome exhorted believers to embrace humility, justice, and charity as counterforces to imperial greed. Their vision was not simply otherworldly but practical, shaping civic ethics and personal responsibility.

Centuries on, Martin Luther shattered the edifice of indulgences, not merely to reform theology but to awaken moral conscience. “A Christian man is the most free lord of all, and subject to none; a Christian man is the most dutiful servant of all, and subject to everyone,” he declared. Freedom in Christ, Luther argued, demanded responsibility, diligence, and integrity.

John Calvin deepened this ethos, emphasising discipline and vocational calling. It was this worldview that Max Weber famously called the Protestant Work Ethic, which drove Europe out of feudal stagnation into industrious modernity. John Wesley, centuries later, fused personal holiness with social reform, declaring that “the Gospel of Christ knows of no religion but social; no holiness but social holiness.”

In each case, the pulpit became not an altar of manipulation but a beacon of renewal—shaping mindsets, curbing corruption, and energising societies. Europe’s transformation was, at its core, a renewal of the mind.

2. Ghana and the African Paradox: Churches without Transformation

Ghana today mirrors a strange irony: churches overflow, the airwaves echo with sermons, and entire skylines are decorated with billboards of prophets and crusades. Yet corruption pervades, public trust erodes, and productivity stagnates.

The Epistle of James reminds us plainly: “Religion that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless is this: to look after orphans and widows… and to keep oneself from being polluted by the world” (James 1:27). Yet our churches too often embrace spectacle over service. Corrupt elites are celebrated in pews, miracle money and bank alerts are preached as substitutes for diligence, while the poor— the very heart of God’s mission—are neglected.

Soren Kierkegaard, the Danish philosopher, once warned: “The Bible is very easy to understand. But we Christians…pretend to be unable to understand it, because we know very well that the minute we understand, we are obliged to act accordingly.” Ghanaian Christianity suffers this Kierkegaardian paralysis. We know the truth but evade its demands.

3. The Renewal of the Mind: What You Hear Shapes What You Become

Paul’s charge in Romans 12:2 resounds as a blueprint: renewal begins with thought, and thought is shaped by the Word. Early Europe was transformed not by rhetorical hype but by pulpit truth-telling. Reformers denounced corruption, rebuked sin, and called people to industry and accountability.

Today, however, African pulpits often promote emotionalism and dependency. Nietzsche, though critical of Christianity, nevertheless saw the danger of shallow religion when he wrote, “He who has a why to live can bear almost any how.” A Christianity that offers no higher ‘why’ beyond prosperity tricks robs its people of endurance, vision, and purpose.

If the pulpit is reduced to entertainment or extortion, then the renewal of the mind becomes impossible. Without renewed minds, nations collapse into the tyranny of appetite and corruption.

4. Hard Work and Ingenuity: The Bedrock of Christian Civilisation

The Book of Proverbs insists: “All hard work brings a profit, but mere talk leads only to poverty” (Proverbs 14:23). The early reformers echoed this: work was not a curse but worship. Every vocation, from farming to governance, was a calling to be pursued with diligence and creativity.

It was this theology of work that generated Europe’s productivity, innovations, and institutions. Max Weber, in The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, observed that the disciplined life of believers became the foundation of capitalism and modern civilisation.

Africa cannot escape underdevelopment by prophetic bank alerts or miracle lotteries. Nations are built through labour, ingenuity, and discipline. As Thomas

Carlyle once remarked, “Genuine work alone is noble.” The African Church must recover this ethos, teaching that prosperity flows not from manipulation but from godly diligence applied in every sphere of life.

5. Towards a Reformative Church in Africa

If the African Church is to become an engine of renewal, it must reclaim its prophetic essence. Five imperatives are paramount:

  1. Return to the True Gospel – The Church must rediscover the message of Christ crucified: repentance, integrity, humility, and service.
  2. Champion the Poor – Widows, orphans, and the marginalised must again occupy the centre of Christian mission.
  3. Denounce Corruption – Pulpits must refuse to sanctify corrupt elites. Silence in the face of injustice is complicity.
  4. Promote Industry and Ingenuity – Teach and model that hard work, creativity, and discipline are sacred virtues.
  5. Reject Opulence – Leaders must embody modesty. Leadership is stewardship, not luxury.

The African Church must again become what Dietrich Bonhoeffer, martyred under Nazism, called “the Church for others.” Without this orientation, it risks becoming, in his words, “cheap grace”—grace without responsibility, Christ without discipleship.

Conclusion: The Church as an IMPETUS

History testifies: when the Church speaks truth and reforms thought, nations rise. Europe emerged from decadence to civilisation because its pulpits became altars of renewal. Africa, and Ghana in particular, stands at a similar crossroads.

Will our churches continue to be theatres of spectacle, or will they become sanctuaries of truth? Will the pulpit remain an echo chamber of prosperity promises, or will it reclaim its role as the conscience of the nation?

Jesus’ words remain urgent: “You are the light of the world. A city set on a hill cannot be hidden… let your light shine before others, that they may see your good works and glorify your Father in heaven ” (Matthew 5:14-16).

The renewal of Africa will not come by chance. It will come when the Church renews the mind—when it marries faith with integrity, piety with productivity, and worship with justice. Only then will Africa rise, not on the wings of illusion, but on the enduring pillars of truth, diligence, and divine wisdom.

“The beauty of Christianity is not revealed in garments worn to its sanctuaries, but in the radiance of minds that dare to think nobly, create boldly, and heal the wounds of society. When faith becomes a wellspring of innovation, justice, and hope, then it ceases to be mere ritual and rises as a living vision. Only then shall the next generation find it irresistibly attractive—not through spectacle, but through grace, truth, and a horizon that calls the heart beyond the eye.” — Yao Eli Sebastian Nafrah, PhD

Written by Dr. Yao Eli Sebastian Nafrah

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