The Cross, the Continent, and a Prophetic Gaze

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This past Sunday, as we celebrated the Triumph of the Cross, many in our pews were singing of victory. But in the hills of Africa, many Christians are still hanging on crosses of a different kind—massacres in church halls, funerals turned into killing fields. In Komanda, DRC, a community held a vigil toward morning, only to be torn apart by militants. In Nigeria, displaced Christian villagers shelter near mission compounds—homes already lost, lives already scarred. Yet just as the crucified Christ rose, so we believe that these tears will be wiped away, that these deaths will not have the final word. The resurrection is coming—not first in political victories, but in a transformation of hearts, a gathering of a people who refuse to bow to fear. So, though the cross is heavy, our hope is real, and there is a history to testify to

The Pierced Christ and Africa’s Wounds

Each year on September 14, the Church celebrates the Feast of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross, commemorating the discovery of Christ’s Cross in 326 AD, the dedication of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, and the return of the Cross after its seizure by the Persians. The Celebration of the Exaltation of the Cross is more than a commemoration. It is a theological lens—an invitation to contemplate the suffering that saves.

In John 19:37, echoing the prophet Zechariah, we read: “They will look on him whom they have pierced.” This is more than a poetic drama. It is a moment of reckoning: an invitation to face the wounds we have inflicted—on Christ, on each other, on the earth.

In Christ’s pierced body, we are called to recognize the suffering of peoples long crucified by violence, exclusion, and injustice. Among them stands Africa, her body pierced not once but repeatedly—by conquest, by extraction, by indifference. To look upon Him whom we have pierced is to enter a gaze of truth, repentance, and responsibility. This is the gaze the Church must now turn toward Africa’s wounded yet rising body.

In the pierced body of Christ, Africa’s wounds are not denied—they are reclaimed as sites of dignity, justice, and rebirth.””
— Nnaemeka Ali

From Crisis to Kairos

Africa is home to the world’s youngest population—over 60% are under 25 (World Economic Forum). She is also a land of growing religious vibrancy, with sub-Saharan Africa seeing major growth in both Christian and Muslim populations (Pew Research). Beneath her soil lie nearly 30% of the planet’s known mineral reserves (UNEP). Her landscapes stretch from deserts to tropical forests, alive with extraordinary biodiversity (Frontiers in Ecology).

Taken together, these realities make Africa not a peripheral actor but the beating heart of humanity’s future.

“Africa is not a peripheral actor but the beating heart of humanity’s future.”

And yet, this week’s headlines remind us: a rise without justice is not resurrection—it is illusion.

Addis Ababa: Green Promises, Dry Wells

At the Second Africa Climate Summit in Addis Ababa, leaders spoke of green transitions and climate finance. Ambitious pledges were made. But beyond the summit halls, many still breathe toxic air and face hunger driven by drought.

As political actors speak in numbers, the Church must speak in names—the names of those whose lands are scorched, whose crops have failed, whose children go to bed hungry. The Church must be the voice crying in the wilderness: Prepare the way. Let Africa’s valleys be lifted and her paths made straight.

Malawi: Democracy on Fragile Ground

In Malawi, citizens prepare to vote on September 16, after five years of economic hardship compounded by climate disasters. Poverty, inflation, and institutional collapse dominate the landscape.

Yet in the ballots of the poor, hope flickers. The Church must stand with the people—not as patron, but as prophet—pointing them not just to the polls, but to the Cross: a symbol of sacrificial love, courage, and rebirth. In the wounds of Christ, Africa’s dignity is not denied—it is reclaimed.

Congo: When the Land Bleeds

In the eastern DRC, militias continue to pierce the land—burning, raping, killing. The Church buries the dead while leaders debate ceasefires.

Here, theology becomes embodied. The pierced Christ walks through Ituri and Kivu. And the Church must ask: Can those who bomb villages also claim to be defenders of their people? The Church must summon all sides—state actors, militias, foreign powers—to look upon the face of the crucified Christ in the face of the African child.

A Church That Walks With

A church that “looks upon him whom they pierced” sees, with a prophetic gaze, the crucifixion of the African continent as a kairos moment for the rise of the children of Mother Africa.  

As Pope Francis said: “Africa is not to be colonized again—not even with aid or applause. She must rise on her own feet, guided by her own people and the Spirit.”

Africa is ready to rise, but the question is, “Are you ready to walk with her?”

Author

  • Nigerian missionary oblate, doctoral student, theologian, research assistant, and part-time professor at Saint Paul University in Ottawa. With over eight years of missionary experience among the Innu First Nation in Quebec, he explores how Indigenous wisdom, postcolonial identity, and storytelling can renew theology and mission. His work seeks to listen deeply to the Echoes of the Spirit from the Forest and in “all our relations.”

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2 comments

DAYAMBA BINDRÉ ROGER September 16, 2025 - 9:22 am
Puissante analyse. Merci père Ali, cette analyse rend compte de ce qu'est l'Afrique pour l'humanité et pour l'avenir. Vos perspectives sont intéressantes et appellent à l'action ainsi qu'à avoir une disposition d'esprit forte
Solange ngah September 16, 2025 - 11:10 am
très intéressant comme réflexion mon père. Cette parole forte interpelle aussi l'Afrique elle-même. oui dans le corps transpercé du Christ, les blessures de l’Afrique ne sont pas niées, elles sont récupérées comme des lieux de dignité, de justice et de renaissance.
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