Abstract:
This thesis examines the affinity between Pentecostal Christianity and feminism in Ghana.
Feminism has been a topic of debate in Ghana for many years because it is viewed as disruptive
ideology. The role of women is often overlooked within Ghanaian Pentecostal Christian circles.
Women are often not allowed leadership positions in the absence of male leaders, and this is
often backed by literal androcentric biblical interpretations. Such interpretations put feminism
and Ghanaian Pentecostal Christianity as opposing ideologies. However, the biblical passages in
Numbers 27:1-11 regarding the daughters of Zelophehad and that of the women mentioned in
Acts 16: 1-7 when analysed through womanist hermeneutics offer an interpretation that
recognises equality in Ghana’s (Pentecostal) Christianity. The role these women played made
biblical history and the beginning of women’s recognition in Christianity. This thesis examines
the affinity between Ghanaian (Pentecostal) Christianity and feminism using womanist
hermeneutical interpretation.