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Priests and Poltergeist
JOHANNESBURG Reuters) - Southern Africa's Catholic bishops
have warned priests to stop moonlighting as witchdoctors, fortune
tellers and traditional healers, and to rely on Christ for miracles.
The Southern African Catholic Bishops' Conference, which represents bishops
in South Africa, Swaziland and Botswana, said on its Web sites some priests
were adopting the traditional African practice of calling on ancestors
for healing.
The bishops ordered priests to "desist from practices involving spirits",
and to steer clear from witchcraft, fortune-telling and selling spiritual
powers or magic medicines.
"The belief that ancestors are endowed with supernatural powers borders
on idolatry. It is God, and God alone, who is all-powerful while the ancestors
are created by him," said the pastoral letter to priests issued earlier
this month.
Many in Southern Africa turn to sangomas -- or traditional healers --
to cure illness, ward off evil spirits and even improve their sex lives.
Sangomas, who play a key role in rural communities but are also revered
by many in towns and cities, call on ancestral spirits to heal and give
advice.
Some Christian sects, like the South Africa-based Zion Christian Church,
fuse traditional African beliefs about the power of the ancestors with
orthodox Christianity.
The Southern African bishops said Catholic priests should instead heal
in the name of Jesus Christ, and should tend to the soul, not just the
body.
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