%0 Journal Article
%T Language Management in ˇ°Internationalˇ± Pentecostal Churches in Cameroon
%A Jean-Paul Kouega
%J Open Access Library Journal
%V 5
%N 5
%P 1-15
%@ 2333-9721
%D 2018
%I Open Access Library
%R 10.4236/oalib.1104646
%X
This paper considers Pentecostal churches whose
names include such globalising terms as ˇ°all nationsˇ±, ˇ°globalˇ±,
ˇ°internationalˇ±, ˇ°universalˇ± and ˇ°worldˇ±, with a view to uncovering the nature
of their language management, as it has not been made explicit in any document.
The data come from some 35 churches located in various residential areas of the
city of Yaounde. In each church, five members were contacted i.e. one pastor, one church official,
one choir leader and one male and one female congregants. The instruments used
were a questionnaire, informal discussions, interviews and participant
observation. A total of 40 highly motivated research assistants were involved
in the data collection process, which took place in January and February 2016.
The framework used for the analysis was the structural-functional model. The
analysis revealed that the services of these churches contained four to 13
parts and that the languages used to realise these parts were French and
English, with translation from one language to the other being systematic. When
tongue speaking was used, translation was not done. During Testimonies,
congregants not sufficiently competent in French or English occasionally
switched to Pidgin or a few Cameroonian languages. Most of these churches were
found not to be represented in other countries outside Cameroon and those that were said to use English singly or in combination
with other languages, not with French.
%K Cameroon
%K Pentecostal Churches
%K Language Management in Religion
%K Multilingualism
%K Language Choice
%K Tongue Speaking
%U http://www.oalib.com/paper/5293919