Tenzi Za Rohoni: 7 Lyrics

The beginning and the end of faith, Is Christ who is alive; I will not look at my works, For they are full of sin. My garment is righteousness, With which Jesus clothed me; In him I am blessed, Though I am not yet perfect.

A striking African existential concern is addressed: fear of death as the ultimate enemy. The hymn proclaims “mauti imekufa” (death has died) – a subversive statement that transforms the traditional African worldview of ancestor spirits and the living-dead. Christ’s resurrection is the basis for “uzima” (eternal life), not merely spiritual survival. tenzi za rohoni 7 lyrics

The phrase “Alinilipa deni langu” (He paid my debt) uses economic language common in evangelical theology. The debt of sin is satisfied not through penance but through the shedding of blood ( katika damu ). This reflects Anselm of Canterbury’s satisfaction theory, filtered through Protestant orthodoxy. The beginning and the end of faith, Is

Ee Bwana, uwe na sifa, Kwa rehema zako sikuzote; Umeyafuta makosa yangu, Kwa sababu ya Mwanao. Sasa natazama mbele, Hadi nifikie zioni, Pale nitakapokuona, Ee Mwokozi, uso kwa uso. 3. English Translation Stanza 1 I have a good faith, Holding fast to the blood; Christ who truly died, He is the one I praise. He paid my debt fully, By giving his own life; Thus now I have seen him, The one who has righteousness from heaven. The hymn proclaims “mauti imekufa” (death has died)

I no longer fear death, For death has died; His truth has spoken, That I have eternal life. Jesus who answered for me, Through his fierce sufferings, Has left me joy, So that I may praise his name.

Sina tena hofu mauti, Maana imekufa mauti; Ukweli wake umenena, Ya kwamba nina uzima. Yesu aliyenijibu, Kwa mateso yake makali, Ameniachia shangwe, Ili nisifu jina lake.