Article Open Access February 15, 2024

Influence of Televangelism on Ghanaian Women

1
Department of Social Sciences, Wiawso College of Education, Sefwi Wiawso, Ghana
Page(s): 1-11
Received
October 20, 2023
Revised
December 25, 2023
Accepted
February 12, 2024
Published
February 15, 2024
Creative Commons

This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright: Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Scientific Publications
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APA Style
Asmah-Sey, N. (2024). Influence of Televangelism on Ghanaian Women. Current Research in Public Health, 4(1), 1-11. https://doi.org/10.31586/ujssh.2024.880
ACS Style
Asmah-Sey, N. Influence of Televangelism on Ghanaian Women. Current Research in Public Health 2024 4(1), 1-11. https://doi.org/10.31586/ujssh.2024.880
Chicago/Turabian Style
Asmah-Sey, Nicholas. 2024. "Influence of Televangelism on Ghanaian Women". Current Research in Public Health 4, no. 1: 1-11. https://doi.org/10.31586/ujssh.2024.880
AMA Style
Asmah-Sey N. Influence of Televangelism on Ghanaian Women. Current Research in Public Health. 2024; 4(1):1-11. https://doi.org/10.31586/ujssh.2024.880
@Article{crph880,
AUTHOR = {Asmah-Sey, Nicholas},
TITLE = {Influence of Televangelism on Ghanaian Women},
JOURNAL = {Current Research in Public Health},
VOLUME = {4},
YEAR = {2024},
NUMBER = {1},
PAGES = {1-11},
URL = {https://www.scipublications.com/journal/index.php/UJSSH/article/view/880},
ISSN = {2831-5162},
DOI = {10.31586/ujssh.2024.880},
ABSTRACT = {The purpose of this study was to examine the influence of new religious movements’ televangelism on women in Dunkwa-on-Offin in the central region of Ghana. The study adopted the sequential explanatory mixed-methods approach. The study population was important because they make up a bigger share of individuals who attend mainline churches and are constantly exposed to televangelism in their daily lives. A multi-stage sampling technique (purposive and simple random sampling techniques) was used to select two hundred (200) women for the study. Krejcie and Morgan's table determined the two women population of 400 (for both churches). The main instruments for data collection were questionnaires and interview guides. Quantitative data was analysed with the use of the IBM SPSS statistics software version 23, to compute frequency distributions, percentages, tables and cross-tabulation. Descriptive statistics and inferential analysis were employed in the analysis of the data. Qualitative data was analyzed thematically by identifying relevant information, coding, classification and summaries. The study revealed that televangelism has influenced women to follow televangelists rather than the teachings of their churches. Also, the activity has influenced the youth and women to follow false teachings, prosperity and vain promises of travelling. The findings of the study revealed that televangelists’ messages are geared towards obtaining money and raising unrealistic hopes. It is recommended that the government should also establish and enforce policies and regulations that encourage genuine televangelism programming and deter televangelists who are driven by fraud and self-gain by registering all the churches and holding them accountable for their actions.},
}
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%T Influence of Televangelism on Ghanaian Women
%M doi:10.31586/ujssh.2024.880
%U https://www.scipublications.com/journal/index.php/UJSSH/article/view/880
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UR  - https://www.scipublications.com/journal/index.php/UJSSH/article/view/880
AB  - The purpose of this study was to examine the influence of new religious movements’ televangelism on women in Dunkwa-on-Offin in the central region of Ghana. The study adopted the sequential explanatory mixed-methods approach. The study population was important because they make up a bigger share of individuals who attend mainline churches and are constantly exposed to televangelism in their daily lives. A multi-stage sampling technique (purposive and simple random sampling techniques) was used to select two hundred (200) women for the study. Krejcie and Morgan's table determined the two women population of 400 (for both churches). The main instruments for data collection were questionnaires and interview guides. Quantitative data was analysed with the use of the IBM SPSS statistics software version 23, to compute frequency distributions, percentages, tables and cross-tabulation. Descriptive statistics and inferential analysis were employed in the analysis of the data. Qualitative data was analyzed thematically by identifying relevant information, coding, classification and summaries. The study revealed that televangelism has influenced women to follow televangelists rather than the teachings of their churches. Also, the activity has influenced the youth and women to follow false teachings, prosperity and vain promises of travelling. The findings of the study revealed that televangelists’ messages are geared towards obtaining money and raising unrealistic hopes. It is recommended that the government should also establish and enforce policies and regulations that encourage genuine televangelism programming and deter televangelists who are driven by fraud and self-gain by registering all the churches and holding them accountable for their actions.
DO  - Influence of Televangelism on Ghanaian Women
TI  - 10.31586/ujssh.2024.880
ER  -