Religion and spirituality occupy a central place in Africa’s development experience shaping values, institutions, and collective action across the continent. While development discourse in Africa is often dominated by economic and political indicators, this paper argues that religious and spiritual dimensions remain critical to understanding social transformation, governance, and community resilience. The methodology used was historical and case studies of the African religion, spirituality and development. Religious institutions; ranging from African Traditional Religions to Christianity and Islam have contributed significantly to education, healthcare delivery, peace building, and social welfare, particularly where state capacity is weak. Beyond institutional religion, African spirituality as a lived experience reinforces values such as solidarity, resilience, moral responsibility, and communal belonging, all of which are essential for sustainable development. At the same time, religion presents challenges, including extremism, gender exclusion, political manipulation, and resistance to scientific innovation, which can undermine inclusive development. Using historical analysis and selected African case studies, this paper examines both the constructive and problematic roles of religion and spirituality in Africa. It concludes that when critically engaged and responsibly harnessed, religion and spirituality can serve as powerful resources for holistic development rooted in ethical values, social cohesion, and human dignity.
Atanda et al. (Sun,) studied this question.