Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY
/
In Zimbabwe, Secular Education Is Overtaking Historic Mission Schools
In Zimbabwe, Secular Education Is Overtaking Historic Mission Schools
Jan 30, 2026 12:50 PM

  Neville Mlambo, 65, a retired missionary, shakes his head. His United Church of Christ in Zimbabwe (UCCZ) church had educated some of the finest Black ministers, CEOs, bishops, and judges in the last 100 years when Western colonialism and the church landed together in Zimbabwe.

  Colonial church-owned schools were prestigious. They groomed the cream of Black army commanders or city mayors, said Mlambo. Twenty years ago, we would overflow with 1,000 students squeezing for a place to study at our mission boarding schools. Today, we hardly attract 350 in some schools.

  Historic church-run mission schools in Zimbabweaffiliated with a range of traditions, including Anglican, Catholic, Presbyterian, Dutch Reformed, Baptist, or Salvation Armyare now on the decline.

  They are losing money, students, and the next generation of congregants as more Black families troop to private secular schools, he said.

  Zimbabwe has one of Africas highest literacy rates: 97.1 percent of the population in urban areas are able to read and write. Its educational system has included a mix of free state schools, plus thousands of Christian seminaries, primary schools, high schools, and colleges. The Catholics, Anglicans, and American Methodists have vast tracts of lands in Zimbabwe and dominate ownership of missionary-led schools.

  Christian mission schools took off in the 1920s as the colonial project deepened along with a need to train clerks, teachers, nurses, or judges that served the colonial conquest. That story is unwinding today, fast, says Edgar Shuwa, a theology lecturer at Rusitu Bible College, which is run by remnants of the American Baptist mission in east Zimbabwe.

  Theres an explosion of secular private schools owned by Black entrepreneurs across Zimbabwe today, says the government. Nearly 500 private-owned primary and high schools were operating in the capital, Harare, in 2022, with authorities battling to even distinguish between licensed and unlicensed ones, said Zimbabwes education minister in April.

  After Zimbabwe gained independence in 1980, almost all students attended low-fee public schools run by the government and private schools run by Christian denominations. But in the last 20 years, more parents have turned to secular private schools, citing a decline in teaching quality and facilities in older schools. According to UNESCO, 29 percent of all schools in Zimbabwe are now privately run.

  Church mission schools have run their course, according to 45-year-old Marlon Danga, who studied at the famous Catholic Kutama Mission, where Zimbabwes first Black prime minister, Robert Mugabe, was schooled by Jesuit fathers. Danga sees their strict doctrine-based curriculum as outdated as culture liberalizes.

  Like many Black parents today, I went against the script when it came to my offspring. I sent my kids to secular private schools that teach no adherence to any religion, he said.

  New money is empowering Black families to cut ties with schools run by colonial churches, says Stella Ngomwa, 49, a finance manager for a brewery. More Africansin Zimbabwe and across the continentare working to detangle their institutions and identity from Western colonialism.

  Its a seismic shift, and we have lost, pastor Mlambo said. Less money coming from mother churches in America or Scotland meansfor old churches like us Baptists, Methodists, or Anglicansthat we cant adequately maintain our schools infrastructure or dole out more scholarships to poorer Black students. And we are losing appeal.

  With the rise of African-initiated churches, the new African not only wants to own the church, he/she also wants to own schools, cities, land, identity, wrote Yasin Kakande, author of Why We Are Coming: Slavery, Colonialism, Imperialism, and Migration.

  Church-run mission schools dominated the colonial heyday, but the reality is that Black Zimbabweans lacked options, Ngomwa explains.

  Now, the countrys Christian landscape is changing. More believers church-hop between denominations, rather than maintaining a strong identity within one of the older colonial-era denominations.

  I dont want my daughters to be forced to recite Anglican hymns and attend Scripture Union meetings every evening at an Anglican or Dutch Reformed boarding school, said Ngomwa.

  Secular private schools also broaden the options for students to excel in programs like sports, which open doors for university placement abroad; Ngomwas daughters athletic involvement got her a place at a UK university.

  Meanwhile, the quality of facilities and education in church-run schools is declining fast as old colonial churches get poorer, said pastor Ado Manake, a cleric with the Apostolic Faith Mission (AFM), a Black-founded, post-colonial Pentecostal Christian denomination thats home to some of the biggest congregations in Zimbabwe.

  New Black-owned evangelical and Pentecostal churches are forcefully challenging colonial Catholic, Presbyterian, or Anglican churches in Zimbabwe, said Manake. We are opening new schools, making some nondenominational, and getting lots of students, because we understand the new Black clientele.

  Over the past 20 years, secular private schools have dismantled the monopoly of old-church-run mission schools. They charge pricey sums like $1,000 per semester in primary or high schools, compared to church schools that were a mixture of modest fee-paying students and those on scholarships .

  Rusitu High School, situated in Zimbabwes far east province of Manicaland and established by American Baptists, had been a prestigious and popular option throughout the 20th century. Today, it can barely enroll 400, down from around 1,000 high schoolers at its peak. We must accept times are changingwe used to attract students from all corners of Zimbabwe, said Amos Gwade, the schools treasurer.

  There are still Christian options available: Some of the newer evangelical and Pentecostal schools continue to incorporate faith and doctrine in the curricula.

  In those schools, we make sure students, be they high school or college, are taught and prescribed key concepts like salvation through grace, not works, and miracles as a key manifestation of faith, said Manake, of schools run by AFM and similar traditions. We dont want to go all-secular in our schools.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY
The Christian Revolution
Figures like the Jewish scholar Philo of Alexandria (25 B.C.–A.D. 50) fortably between the Hellenic and Jewish worlds. A member of a priestly family, Philo was also a Roman citizen and deeply involved in Roman politics. His brothers and nephews served as Roman officials. But Philo categorically understood himself to be a Jew and visited Jerusalem at least once. Logos and dabhar: parallel concepts Throughout his writings, Philo employs Greek concepts to elucidate aspects of Jewish belief. The word...
Marie Poussepin
I often notice that whenever we talk about faith and business, the discussion is mostly about businessmen and their faith. But what about women who seek to live a life of holiness in business? It’s not an exaggeration to say that they receive much less attention. I recently read an article published on the French-language version of the Catholic website Aleteia which provides a e corrective to this tendency. Entitled “Businesswoman et bienheureuse, c’est possible!” and authored by Agnès...
Editor's Note: Spring 2019
This issue of Religion & Liberty focuses on higher education in all its fulness. Two statistics throw the college tuition crisis into stark relief: Since 1978 – the year the federal government offered subsidized loans to all students – the cost of college tuition has risen by 1,375 percent. And another 1,400 students default on those loans every day. The cover story by Anne Rathbone Bradley unravels the crisis of student debt. “The essential problem of student loan debt...
Western Civilization: force for good or source of evil?
In 2016, students at Yale University called on the university to “decolonize” a reading list of canonical poets – people such as Shakespeare, Milton, Wordsworth, and so on – saying the course “actively harms students” and creates a “hostile” academic culture. The same year, students at Stanford University overwhelmingly voted down a proposal to restore a Western Civilization course requirement. This January, the University of Notre Dame announced that it will cover up a dozen “problematic” murals of Christopher...
No room for debate: academia’s one-sided conversation
Oberlin University is paying the price of political correctness. The plied with a court order to post a $36 million bond after an Ohio court ruled against the university in a defamation lawsuit brought by Gibson’s Bakery. The case arose from an incident in 2016 when the owner, who is a frequent target of student shoplifters, tackled an African-American male, who was subsequently arrested. munity accused the owner, who is white, of racial profiling, and the university sided with...
The moral hazard of ‘erasing’ student debt
In June 2019, Democratic presidential candidate and current Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders introduced a plan for eliminating $1.6 trillion dollars in student loans currently held by about 45 million Americans. This was more radical even than a similarly ambitious plan presented by his Democratic rival and Senate colleague Elizabeth Warren. With the election cycle for 2020 looming in the near future, this is one of several issues that will remain at the forefront of the discussion. This is especially...
Untangling the college loan crisis
The current student loan crisis is a perfect, yet dismal example of policy gone wrong. It is right and good to desire the best life for our children, and for some that includes a traditional four-year undergraduate degree. But in recent years this has been upheld as the essential golden ticket for a prosperous and successful life, deemed necessary to the American Dream. Policies built on myths and fallacies can destroy an economy and, in the process, harm the...
The Gospel of humanitarianism
In The Idol of Our Age: How the Religion of Humanity Subverts Christianity (Encounter Books, 2018), Daniel J. Mahoney confronts a central heresy of our age, the “remarkably truncated view of human beings” that permeates our culture. This shortsighted approach fails to “acknowledge the hierarchy of goods and values that characterize the moral order and the life of the soul.” Mahoney traces the genealogy of contemporary humanitarianism and its critics from Auguste Comte through Pope Benedict XVI. Happily, he...
Acton Briefs: Spring 2019
A collection of short essays by Acton writers, click a link to jump to that article: Importing drugs from Canada won’t reduce U.S. drug pricesby Joe Carter Walmart: Corruption’s causes and consequences by Sarah Schwartz No, millions of Americans are not living on less than $2 a day by Joe Carter Importing drugs from Canada won’t reduce U.S. drug prices Joe Carter, Acton Institute If you suffer from acid reflux, your doctor may prescribe Nexium. But at $9 a...
'The Godfather,' Acton, and the price of liberty
As far as I am concerned, the classic Godfather saga remains plete with only two installments. The alleged third one is remarkable only in how unremarkable it is, and when my boxed set arrived from Amazon, I immediately removed a third disk that went by the title Godfather IIIand threw it into the trash. It pletely unmemorable, except for one line. It is the lament of Michael Corleone: “Just when I thought I was out, they pull me back...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved