This book presents a multidisciplinary study of how Nigerian Pentecostals conceive of and engage with a spirit-filled world. It seeks to discern the spirituality of the charismatic religious movement in Nigeria in relation to issues of politics, national sovereignty, economic development, culture, racial identity, gender, social ethics, and epistemology. Nimi Wariboko describes the faith's core beliefs and practices, revealing a spell of the invisible that defines not only the character of the movement but also believers' ways of seeing, being, and doing. Written by an insider to the tradition, Nigerian Pentecostalism will also engage outsiders with an interest in critical social theory, political theory, and philosophy. Nimi Wariboko is the Katherine B. Stuart Professor of Christian Ethics at Andover Newton Theological School, Newton, Massachusetts.Presents a multidisciplinary study of how Nigerian pentecostals conceive of and engage with a spirit-filled world, arguing that the character of the movement is defined through an underlying spell of the invisible. IntroductionSources of Nigerian PentecostalismThe Spell of the InvisibleExcremental Visions in Postcolonial PentecostalismDesire and Disgust: Ways of Being for GodThe Pentecostal Self: From Body to Body PoliticPolitics: Between Ontology and Spriritual WarfareMiracles, Sovereignity, and CommunityAltersovereignty and the Virtue of Pentecostal FriendshipSpirituality and the Weight of Blackness This Neighbor Cannot Be Loved! : Invisibility and Nudity of the Pentecostal Other Pentecostalism and Nigerian SocietyNotesBibliographyIndex