Thursday, 30 October 2025

“An Unequal World: What Alternatives?” - An address to the International Meeting for Peace organised by the Community of St Egidio, Rome

 International Meeting for Peace

Community of St Egidio, Rome

October 26th to 28th 2025

Forum-Africa: Land of the Young Generation

The Most Revd Archbishop Thabo Makgoba

“An Unequal World: What Alternatives?”


Firstly, I want to say how much I appreciate the invitation to  join you, and to thank and congratulate the Sant’Egidio Community for your ministry of birthing and nurturing peace in our world.

Kwame Nkrumah, an elder statesman of the first wave of liberation in Africa, wrote in the early 1960’s, “The resources are there, it is up to us to marshal them in the service of our people.”

His words encapsulate the dilemma which we face particularly acutely in South Africa, where the Gini Coefficient, the World Bank index which measures income inequality, shows that we have the world's biggest gap between the rich and the poor. And the way in which our society works is not addressing the crisis this causes, because typically the sons and daughters of the wealthy enjoy a good education and employment, while the sons and daughters of the poor are caught in a self-perpetuating spiral of inadequate education, too few jobs and debilitating poverty.

Sadly, we have allowed wealth to mirror our vanity rather than be a window of opportunity. As someone once said, Africa’s young people, our greatest natural resource, often stand at the gates of opportunity, invited to look in but never invited to participate. 

While the problem may be seen at its worst in South Africa, we are by no means unique. Across Africa, the dreams of our liberators, from Nkrumah to Nelson Mandela, have not been realised; in the words of Langston Hughes's poem, our dreams have been deferred, and our multiple social pathologies have ballooned. 

We ignore the youth cohort at our peril. We are the youngest continent, with more than 60% of our people under 25 years old. In sub-Saharan Africa about 70% of our people are under 30 years of age.  Estimates are that by 2035 more young Africans will enter the workforce each year than the rest of the world combined, with no guarantee there will actually be jobs for them.

The figures are frightening. The stark reality is that our large African population already constitutes a demographic burden, as it is called, with that demographic facing high unemployment, a mismatch of skills to jobs, a reliance on informal work and exclusion from economic decision-making.  

This is a lethal combination. There is an old African proverb that haunts me in all of this dysfunction, which says “The child who is not embraced by the village will burn it down in order to feel its warmth.” This is a prospect we cannot afford even to contemplate. The young need to be embraced now with opportunity, with dignity and trust, and we must create equality of opportunity.

To marshal the resources of our countries in the service of our people, we need to break what economists call the “resource curse”, the paradox in which nations blessed with minerals, oil, and other commodities exploit them successfully but fail to spend the ensuing riches on development, meaning they remain poor in education, jobs and justice. As a theologian, I call this a “a failure of stewardship.” When wealth becomes concentrated, it stops being a blessing and becomes a form of bondage, holding back the young instead of setting them free. In Luke's Gospel (Lk: 12:48), Jesus says that from those who have been given much, much will be required. Africa has been given much, yet the question hangs over us:  have we used the much to build up the next generation?

Our challenge is not only one for Africa; it is global. In 2016 I attended in Hong Kong an Ecumenical School on Governance, Economics and Management, where we looked at how we might distribute resources and income more equitably in a restructured global economy. My primary focus at the time was on the way in which the skewed allocation of resources affected the Global South. Now when we look at the Global North, it has become clear that we in the South are not the only victims of the current ordering of the global economy. We now realise that what Desmond Tutu used to call the “so-called ordinary people” – “so-called,” he said “because in my theology, nobody is ordinary, all are created in the image of God” – that average men and women in the world's most powerful and prosperous economies, are just as much as the victims of the greed of self-serving elites who wield economic and political power for their own benefit as the poor in the South.

The global financial crisis of 2008 gave us some warning of this, but it is especially since 2016 that the devastating consequences of inequality and the hoarding of power and resources for the benefit of a few have become apparent in economically developed nations as well. Populist oligarchies have risen to power in countries which we imagined were democracies – flawed democracies as they might have been, but democracies which aspired to reflect the views and the interests of all their people. Across the world, now including in Europe and the United States, we see the phenomenon of what we might call the “left-behinds” – those who stand on the margins, watching elites prospering while their standard of living is eroded. We see them turning toward political solutions reflecting economic chauvinism, xenophobic nationalism, woven in with resurgent racism and even the stirrings of a new kind of fascism. We see our faith perverted and transformed into a narrow Christian nationalism which seeks to demonize “the other”. Like a cancer, economic inequality is metastasising across the world.

As we look for alternatives, these developments create for us a new and critical challenge. We cannot only focus on fighting inequality within each developing country; we cannot only focus on how to fight inequality across the African continent; we cannot only focus on how to fight inequality between the developing and the industrialised worlds. 

The devastating consequences of inequality within industrialised countries are already being seen in the drastic cuts in foreign aid and assistance to the developing world. We now need to operate within a new, holistic paradigm, which recognises that inequality within all nations, rich and poor, threatens the future of humankind.

Our crisis is not merely political or economic; it is spiritual. When wealth becomes detached from justice, it ceases to be a blessing and becomes a temptation. When power forgets compassion, it turns prosperity into oppression. Pope Francis spoke regularly about the economy that kills, an economy where profits are more important than people and where the young are treated as disposable. 

The key questions we need to ask are not only for Africa, but for the world. How can our riches serve the common good? How can we ensure that the young inherit not debts and disillusionment but dignity and direction? We must transition from accumulation to allocation, from privilege to participation. This will not fall out of the sky, it has to be struggled for. We need to ensure that we use every pulpit and platform to instruct, to teach and to prioritise this quest for justice for the young. We need to educate for justice. We need to mobilise, call people out, demonstrate and initiate activism to grow awareness and signal our strength. We also have to act where there is leverage for change, in the places where decisions are made, where policy is considered and decided upon. This theory of change needs to be a part of our strategy to realise our dreams for the young, for a just economy and a world that deeply respects the other and repairs our planet.

Simply put, as people of faith – or at least as people of conscience who follow the Golden Rule – our calling is to reclaim the moral purpose of wealth, to put it back in service of the human purpose, and not the other way round. 

God bless you. God bless Africa. God bless this community, and God bless the world. 

* * * * *

Ad Laos - To the People of God – October 2025

 The Archbishop's letter to the laity of Cape Town in its newsletter, Good Hope:

 Dear People of God, 

It feels like yesterday that I last wrote to you! Since then, the Gaza ceasefire has come as a great relief – although we have already seen breaches. Please keep Gaza in your prayers as people return to their homes, many of which have been obliterated by bombing. It is easy to destroy, but much harder to rebuild, not only infrastructure but especially trust of one nation by another. 

For me, both the Lord who made heaven and earth and Jesus, the Son God unites us with, agonised over the starving and killing of children in this war. The war industry which profitted off the drones and bunker buster bombs tested my soul and left me struggling for words to pray. We continue to wait upon the Lord, reassured by Martin Luther King Junior's words that although the arc of the moral universe is long, it does bend towards justice.

In London for meetings this month, one of the things I did was to spend some time in a Lambeth Palace boardroom with an artist who wanted to measure my face, my nose and my head for a portrait! It was good to be forced to be still, and also to pray for our worldwide Anglican community as we engage once again in robust debate about who we are and want to be.

I also met the team from the Anglican Communion Office which is preparing two webinars on the Lambeth Call on Reconciliation in November. The call, issued by the last Lambeth Conference of bishops, will enable Anglicans from around the world to share insights from their work in peace and reconciliation ministry. Anyone can register and take part. I invite you all to join, which you can do here >>

In London I also joined an annual meeting of the Mining and Faith Reflections Initiative, the dialogue I have been part of for the past 12 years in which faith leaders mainly from the Vatican and Methodist and Anglican churches engage mining communities on how they can best serve the common good. 

Back to South Africa, and to Pietermaritzburg where I presided over the consecration of Bishop Amos Nkosi as the new Bishop Suffragan of Natal. I love these services, which are always inspiring and glorious, especially the music from all our Anglican traditions. Scroll down on our Provincial Facebook page for the congregation's rendition of the Nicene Creed! 

Finally, home in Cape Town for the glorious dedication of our new church in Crossroads. During the 1970s and 1980s, when women living in defiance of the pass laws were expelled from their homes, church activists lay down in front of bulldozers to stop their homes from being destroyed. When they were made homeless, churches across the Diocese gave them refuge. Later, when the state fomented conflict within communities, the then Bishop Desmond Tutu flew to Cape Town to mediate between the “comrades” and the “witdoeke”. For many years the congregation worshipped in effect in a shack, which was once burned down during violence. When they regrouped, they called their church Eluvukweni (Resurrection) believing they would rise again. Thank you to all of you who helped them, and I urge others to donate during Advent via the Diocesan Office.

Now our communities have new challenges: gang violence and crime, and to follow up on the extensive coverage Good Hope gave to that struggle last month, I urge you to redouble your prayers and practical efforts to combat that scourge. 

Elsewhere in this edition you will read about the latest Anglicans Ablaze – congratulations to Growing the Church for another successful celebration of our faith! Finally, our warm congratulations go to Bishop Sarah Mullally of London, who will be the new Archbishop of Canterbury, and in our own Diocese to the Ven Mcebisi Pinyana, who will be consecrated as Bishop of Grahamstown in Makhanda on November 22. 

God bless
††Thabo Cape Town

Friday, 10 October 2025

Sermon at Anglicans Ablaze Conference 2025

 ARCHBISHOP THABO MAKGOBA

PRIMATE and METROPOLITAN OF THE ACSA

Anglicans Ablaze Conference 2025

St Agnes Parish, Kloof, Diocese of Natal

9 October 2025

Readings: Malachi 3: 13 -4:2a; Psalm 1; Luke 11: 5 -13

”WALKING IN THE FOOTSTEPS OF JESUS“


Bishop Dalcy Dlamini, Liaison Bishop for Growing the Church,

The Revd Bruce Woolley, Director of GtC, 

Bishop Nkosinathi Ndwandwe – our host,

Visiting Bishops,

Participants in this International Conference, 

Invited guests and visitors,

Fellow clergy,

Young people and

Ladies and gentlemen:


May I speak in the name of God, who is Creator, Redeemer and Sustainer. Amen.

Dear brothers and sisters, thank you so much for inviting me to Anglicans Ablaze, and allow me to join the organisers in welcoming the visitors and guests who have come to be with us. Please feel at home. 

Thank you so much for your warm welcome on our arrival today. Thank you to Bishop Nkosinathi, the Diocesan Bishop, for hosting us in your diocese. Thank you, Revd Sizwe Ngcobo and your leadership team for opening the doors of this beautiful church. Many thanks, Revd Bruce Woolley, Director of Growing the Church, and your team for your efforts in preparing for this year’s Conference – our evangelical outreach in the Province. And a special welcome to distinguished guests, fellow clergy, young people, and to all of you, the whole wonderful family from all corners of this Diocese, Province and beyond. 

It is an honour and privilege to stand here today as the Patron of the Growing the Church and to preside at this Service for this Conference, the last Anglicans Ablaze I will attend before my retirement as your Archbishop. I am thrilled at the wide representation of participants and guests from different dioceses of our Province and beyond. This is indeed a sign that God is growing this church, using Growing the Church to enable us to reach out to all communities of our Province. Your record of witness, service, ministry and mission through God’s love and grace is inspiring, especially during these challenging times in our country and the world. You are indeed one of the leading institutions of our Province in living out faithfully ACSA’s Vision statement as part of your ministry and mission.

Bishop Dalcy and Revd Bruce, thank you for your leadership. Thank you mostly for your openness to learn and grow in the knowledge and love of God, as witnessed in your experiences amidst the challenges you face every day. We wish you well for your plans beyond this conference – and we also pray for God’s blessing and strength as you continue to spread the Gospel message. Let me also thank the whole GtC Provincial leadership team for all you have done for our Province. 

I would like to begin today by sharing my thoughts on how those who serve God are called and sent.

Yesterday, the speakers laid a solid biblical and theological foundation. They reminded us that as the baptised, beloved in Christ, we are taken, broken, moulded, and refined, and are called to participate in what God is already doing in the world. This understanding reflects the missiological dimension of our sent-ness, which emphasises what the priesthood of believers is called to be and do by virtue of our baptism. Revd Catherine highlighted the significance of the sacramental element for those who are sent, stating, “We go not only as broken individuals who are now healed but as the body of Christ, with a variety of skills and capabilities, warts and all.” We become the visible manifestation of the inwardly invisible grace, illustrating the essence of the sacraments.

In a Pauline context, we indeed become the body of Christ, broken for the good of the world. Conversely, Bishop Darcy focused on the Christological elements of our sent-ness. She emphasised that in everything we do and say, we are called to imitate Christ, take on the mind of Christ, and put on the full armour of Christ. Canon Bob from Zambia reinforced this idea by reminding us that as we adorn ourselves with the armour of Christ, we are also called to heal, reconcile, and remember those who may have lost their connection to the body of Christ or have not yet heard the Gospel preached. He underlined that our primary mandate as the harvesters for God is missiological, urging us to make disciples of Christ in all corners of the earth.

Finally, our programme director from the Diocese of Johannesburg consistently reminded the attendees after each keynote speaker to pray for one another. This sentiment echoes the importance of remaining connected to God, as Christ did with the Heavenly Father, ensuring that everything flows from our relationship with the Triune God. At the end of yesterday, we prayed together and engaged in a ministry of healing. We laid hands on one another, fostering spiritual connections through prayer. The Bishop of Matlosane, our Dean of the Province, beautifully closed that day of worship by presenting all of us before God.

Today, I intend to weave one additional element into this already colourful mosaic and tapestry, which I refer to as the pastoral and prophetic lens. I will apply this lens to specific situations and share the lessons I have learned in the public space regarding the National Dialogue. I hope to bring forth a report from the Synod of Bishops on the pastoral and prophetic ministry challenges. 

Today's reading from Malachi (3: 13ff) tells us how those who have served God, who have truly feared the Lord in a time of great cynicism, will be spared. The prophet compares their attitude with that of those who have been defiant; of those who have thought that it was evil-doers who prospered and thus questioned whether serving God loyally is of any value. Malachi invites us as the faithful to refuse to be moved by the arguments of cynics and instead seek to deepen our fellowship with each other and to reassure ourselves of God’s justice. In that way we can emulate those in Malachi's time who helped to restore the moral order which prevailed in the days before God's people were exiled to Babylon.

The Psalmist in today's reading has a similar message for us, likening those who trust in the Lord to trees that yield a distinctive harvest, drawing life from a river. If we delight in the law of the Lord, then we too can be fruitful and prosper, since God watches over the righteous and guarantees their destiny.

In the last few words of the Malachi reading, we are given an image of the consequences of acting upon the prophet's message, painting as it does a picture of the joyful, vigorous life that will be ours if we follow righteousness. But let us be clear: deepening our fellowship with one another, and being reassured that God's justice will prevail in the world, does not mean that we can treat this Conference as a comfortable cocoon into which we can retreat to escape from the world.

In the here and now of Southern Africa, Anglicans Ablaze gives us a chance to follow the example of those who listened to what Malachi was urging them to do. This Conference, in helping us to deepen our fellowship with one another, to share one another's burdens as well as joys, and to reassure ourselves of God's justice, enables us to take a step further and to use this opportunity of worship, fellowship and praise to work out what God's justice means in practical terms in our context today, and what we need to do to achieve it in practice. 

At the last meeting of the Synod of Bishops a few weeks ago, we heard of the multiple social crises being faced in just about every Diocese of our Province, whether caused by human failings or natural disasters. The bishops reported on children of migrant workers being left alone in Lesotho; kidnappings in the Diocese of Port Elizabeth; corruption over oil exploration in Namibia; illegal mining in Matlosane; youth crime in Mzimvubu; young people harming themselves, even committing suicide, in Eswatini, Pretoria and the Diocese of Grahamstown; xenophobia in the Diocese of Christ the King; the prevalence of taxi violence in False Bay and of drugs and absent fathers in the Highveld. St Helena suffers low wages, unaffordable land and housing, and emigration. Gender-based violence (GBV) was reported by many Dioceses. The Eastern Cape Dioceses of Mbashe and Mthatha, as well as the Diocese of Natal, reported on the effects of devastating floods. And that is not to speak of the crisis of corruption and incompetence found at just about every level of governance in South Africa, and of the societal crises brought about by inequality of opportunity, the yawning gap between rich and poor and the frightening lack of jobs, particularly for the young.

In that context, please allow me to address a few words to the South Africans among us on our National Dialogue. Given the cynicism that we hear about the dialogue, it was striking to hear at Synod of Bishops of how widespread the support for the dialogue is in our church. Most of our Dioceses are either rural or have significant numbers of rural parishes, and in my experience it is there, and in marginalised urban townships, that we are seeing support for the dialogue. People in better-off urban areas have the resources to overcome service delivery challenges themselves and can afford to be cynical. As I am saying everywhere I go, the levels of discontent in the country are so high that I don't believe politicians will be able to manipulate the dialogues at local level, and so I urge all of you to attend one of the 14,000 local gatherings that will be held around the country, and to help communities take control of the process themselves.

Please also allow me to bring to this very important gathering a troubling question concerning the ministry of our church which the Synod of Bishops has failed to resolve. Ten years ago, the Province asked us as the bishops to draw up guidelines for pastoral ministry to those among us who identify themselves as being LGBTQI. We have wrestled with the request for 10 years, but still have no guidance to offer our clergy for that ministry.

To go back to basics, if you go read the Catechism in our Prayer Book—the summary of our doctrine and our guide to faithful living—paragraph 106 of the Catechism says: “The two great sacraments given by Christ to his Church are Baptism and the Holy Eucharist.” We already administer those two sacraments to our LGBTQI sisters and brothers. Then if you read paragraph 120, it spells out “other sacramental rites”, which include Confirmation, Confession and Absolution, the Anointing of the Sick, Christian Marriage and Ordination. We allow for all of those for LGBTQI people, with the exception of Christian Marriage (as well as Ordination in most circumstances).

The bishops have not proposed making any changes to the Catechism. Paragraph 125 of the Catechism says explicitly, as does our Canon on Marriage, that Christian Marriage is the lifelong union of a woman and a man. I want to emphasise that what the bishops have been wrestling with does not involve any departure from our position on administration of any of the sacraments.

What the Province did ask the Synod of Bishops to do 10 years ago was to provide guidelines for how to minister pastorally to all. On that we have consistently failed, for meeting after meeting. The bishops all agree that all people are created in the image of God, and we explicitly said in 2016 that all baptised, believing and faithful persons, regardless of sexual orientation, are full members of the Body of Christ. But we have been unable to reach a common mind on how to give meaning to that declaration in the form of providing pastoral ministry to couples. 

I said at last month's meeting of the Synod of Bishops that I believe we need to take our failure to the wider church, and to ask for your help on the way forward. We need your input and your views, and in that I look especially to the young people in whose hands we are entrusting the future of our church.

Returning to today's readings, in Luke (11:5ff) we are presented with a parable whose purpose is to encourage us to pray. Although in this passage the householder who has bread is asleep and unwilling to get up, yet because of the persistence of the midnight visitor, the visitor's needs will be supplied. This is a parable of contrast; if even a human friend responds to someone in need, how much more will God respond generously? Just as earthly parents do not wilfully deny their children their needs, so God will give the gift of the Spirit to all who ask. With these assurances, we know that we can pray for our needs in confidence that our prayers will be answered by God as is best for us.

This is a matter of critical importance to our faith. For there can be no faith and no Christian works without the constant, daily ongoing conversation with God which prayer assures us of; a conversation in which we learn to listen more than to speak. Prayer does not involve escaping into a luxuriant comfortable little world of our own; truly effective prayer will drive us off our knees and out into the world to give meaning to God's justice and love for all God's creation. 

In conclusion, as you pray, worship, celebrate and work out together what it means to be God's agent of love in our world, and then go out into the world to live out our faith, I invite you to play your full role in addressing the important decisions we face in the many areas of our personal and corporate lives: how we participate in the lives of our nations; how we order our collective life; how we transform our liturgies so that we worship God in ways best suited to the times in which we live; how we respond to the need for sensitive and effective ministry to those in same-sex unions; and how we ensure that our congregations are safe spaces for all our people, especially women, young people and vulnerable children.

I encourage all of you all to continue striving for what is ethically good in our communities. Let us discern and fulfill our call to the best of our ability – by so doing we shall have responded positively to the Gospel message today. 

Finally, let me once again thank Bishop Dalcy, Revd Bruce and your team for the sterling work in growing disciples for Christ, and wish you all the best as you continue to reach out and live lives worthy of your calling, so igniting God’s flame in the world. 

Congratulations on this successful AA2025 conference, and may God bless you, your Dioceses, our Province, our nations and the world. May God bless each one of you richly.

God loves you and so do I. Amen.

 

* * * * *


Friday, 3 October 2025

Archbishop Thabo welcomes new Archbishop of Canterbury

Archbishop Thabo Makgoba has responded to the news of the choice of Bishop Sarah Mullally of London: 
 
"On behalf of the Anglican Church of Southern Africa and on my and my family's behalf, my warm congratulations to Archbishop-elect Sarah Mullally. The historic appointment of the first woman as Archbishop of Canterbury is a thrilling development. We heartily welcome the announcement and look forward to working with her as we all try to respond prophetically and pastorally to what God is up to in God’s world."
 

Sermon for Desmond Tutu Memorial Mass, St John's College, Diocese of Johannesburg

ARCHBISHOP THABO MAKGOBA
PRIMATE and METROPOLITAN OF THE ACSA
Desmond Tutu Memorial Mass, Diocese of Johannesburg
St John's College
2 October 2025


Readings: Micah 6: 1-8; Matthew 5: 3-12

 

May I speak in the name of God, who is Creator, Redeemer and Sustainer. Amen.
    Brothers and sisters, thank you so much for inviting me to this Memorial Service this morning as we remember Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu.  Thank you for your warm welcome on our arrival. Amongst his many ministries, the Arch exercised a ministry of gratitude. Let me then start by expressing our thanks to God and acknowledging Mr West and his wife, Joanne West. Stuart has been a friend and support of our family, especially when he was head of Herschel, and he has served our Anglican independent schools over a long period of time as an outstanding leader. Mr West, and Joanne, thanks to you both and to your wonderful team for hosting us. Many thanks to the parents, learners and educators for gracing this early morning service. Thank you, Fr Thapelo Masemola, School Chaplain and your team for preparing for this service in this beautiful chapel and for ensuring that a liturgy is crafted perfectly in memory of the Arch Emeritus. 
    As we remember him this morning, in our Anglican Church calendar we commemorate the 19th century British philanthropist, Anthony, Earl of Shaftesbury, whom we remember as a fervent evangelist and  campaigner against the appalling conditions in which people lived and worked in the early days of the Industrial Revolution. Following in the footsteps of William Wilberforce, the anti-slavery campaigner, Shaftesbury championed the under-privileged and oppressed, advocating legislation which aimed to improve life in the factories and the slums—a cause, like that against slavery, which in its day generated as much controversy as did Desmond Tutu, in and outside this school community, when he fought against the injustices of apartheid. In our case, of course, we have won political, although not economic, liberation, and we need to continue a New Struggle to achieve that. In the case of the UK, I am glad to say that the Church of England has acknowledged its sad past in collaborating with slavery in the West Indies by earmarking 100 million pounds for reparations, with the objective of boosting it to a one billion pound investment. 
    Turning to our readings, the Old Testament prophet Micah is perhaps known best for those words which concluded today's text: 

“He has told you, O mortal, what is good,
    and what does the Lord require of you
but to do justice and to love kindness
    and to walk humbly with your God?”

Both Anthony in the 19th century and Desmond Tutu in the 20th were indeed shining examples of Christian witness who, in the face of the cruel ill-treatment of God's people, indeed did justice, loved kindness and walked humbly with their God. In fact, the preacher at the Arch's funeral in 2022, the retired Bishop of Natal, Michael Nuttall, used this verse as the foundation of his sermon.
    I wonder how many of you know of the role this school played in Desmond Tutu's first major public act in calling for the apartheid government to do justice? It was nearly 50 years ago, in May of 1976, when as the Dean of St Mary's Cathedral he joined other clergy from the Diocese of johannesburg for a week-long silent retreat here. He had refused to live in his official residence, the Deanery, which was just around the corner from here in Houghton, choosing instead to stay in Soweto, and he was deeply worried about the situation there. Since the beginning of the year, teachers were being forced to teach maths and social studies in Afrikaans even though there weren't enough teachers fluent in Afrikaans. In response, 14-year-olds at the  Phefeni Junior Secondary School, close to the Tutu home in Orlando West, had begun a slowdown, then a strike, dumping their Afrikaans textbooks at the principal's door.
    So anxious was the Arch that, sitting in what has been described as his schoolboy's cell-like room at St John's, he spent the week here in silence, feeling called by God to write a 2,600-word letter to Prime Minister John Vorster. In the letter, which he said “more or less wrote itself”, he addressed the prime minister, and I quote, “as one Christian to another, for through our common baptism we have been made members of and are united in the Body of our dear Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ... who has broken down all that separates us... such as race, sex, culture status...” In the course of the letter, he warned that “I have a growing nightmarish fear that unless something drastic is done very soon then bloodshed and violence are going to happen in South Africa almost inevitably.” The prime minister ignored the letter, five weeks later the Soweto uprising began and in the months that followed, at least 650 young people were killed, most of them under 24. South Africa was never the same again, and the Arch's prediction, written here at St John's, propelled him into the front ranks of religious leaders who were opposing apartheid. 
    (As an aside, if you were to ask me where I was in all of this, I was 15 and my family had been forcibly removed from Alexandra Township, alongside Sandton, to Pimvlle in Soweto. So I was spending a lot of my time every day travelling from Pimville to town by train, then by bus to school in Alex, and back again after classes. I only joined the rebellion when it spread to Alex two days after June 16.)
    In Desmond Tutu's letter to John Vorster, he was following the example of the prophet who summoned Israel to repent, recalling God’s mercy at the Exodus, invoking a scene in which God lodges a formal complaint against the people Israel and summons them to listen to His accusation and to prepare their defence against the charges that follow. God remonstrates with His covenant people for their ingratitude and faithlessness, telling them they have treated the Lord as if He had been guilty of injustice towards them; yet they cannot cite any wrong He has done to them, except perhaps in giving them benefits they did not deserve and having delivered them from danger and from all their foes since the days of Moses and Aaron, whom He sent to lead them out of bondage in Egypt.
    Friends, a true and living faith will be evidenced by a will, firstly, to work for justice in accordance with the principles of Scripture revealed as God’s will; and secondly, to love kindness or steadfast love, whether it involves those closest to us, our neighbours or those of God's children who may not share our faith or our nationality. Thirdly, a true and living faith will be judged by whether we are prepared to walk humbly with our Lord, in utter dependence upon God, recognising that any goodness within ourselves is merely a reflection of the goodness of God, not the result of our personal ability or our own merit.
    Moving from the Old Testament to the New, what we heard in the reading from Matthew's Gospel (Mt 5:3-12) is Jesus spelling out in practical terms what it means to do justice, love kindness and walk humbly with our God. In what we call the Beatitudes, Jesus in his teaching ministry unites the exhortations found in the Old Testament into one integrated narrative of a life of Christian character; a life in which the poor, the meek, the hungry, the merciful, and the peacemakers—just to take a random selection—will, as Jesus goes on to say further down in this chapter, become the salt of the earth and the light of the world.
    I must keep this homily short, so let me end by saying two things, firstly—and importantly—by wishing each one of you all well, whether learners, parents or staff—indeed, the whole school community—as you prepare for end-of-year exams.
    Secondly, I leave you with a personal testimony. I have sometimes been asked, especially overseas: Why, in a country in which those such as John Vorster, and others like him, chose in the name of Christianity to inflict upon us colonialism and apartheid—why in such a country do I choose to be a Christian? My reply is that I do so because, to adapt what I said in Faith and Courage, a memoir I wrote some years ago,

“I am a Christian and I remain a Christian because I remember that our faith begins with a young Palestinian on a donkey in Jerusalem, riding to Calvary. Since Roman times we have perverted the Word and the mission of Jesus Christ, and its message about what God is up to in our country and our world. Over the centuries we’ve allowed ourselves to be pointed to imperial agendas. Christ’s message has been attached to national flags, to military might, to the AK-47, and dare I say to Make America Great Again.

        “But that is not the Gospel. Christianity is not imperialism. Christianity is not colonialism, nor is it apartheid. Christianity is how do I love my neighbour as myself and as others. The man who links us to God is he who enters Jerusalem a nonentity, riding a borrowed donkey. He is humble and he is marginalised, but his message of love and simplicity is powerful; powerful enough to challenge the perversion of common humanity that empire and power engender.”

    May God bless you, our country and the world.

    God loves you and so do I. Amen.

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Thursday, 2 October 2025

St Cyprian's Anglican Church, Sharpeville 70th Anniversary Celebrations

ARCHBISHOP THABO MAKGOBA
PRIMATE and METROPOLITAN OF THE ACSA
St Cyprian's Anglican Church, Sharpeville 70th Anniversary Celebrations
Diocese of Christ the King
28th September 2025

Readings: Jeremiah 32: 1-3a; 6-15; Psalm 91:1-6,14-16;1Timothy 6: 6-19; Luke 16:19-31

May I speak in the name of God, who is Creator, Redeemer and Sustainer. Amen.
    Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ, people of God in the Diocese of Christ the King, it is an honour and a privilege to have been asked to celebrate and share with you the Word of God in this wonderful service. Today, we celebrate a remarkable milestone as we recognise 70 years of worship and witness in this church, named after Cyprian – Bishop of Carthage and Martyr. On behalf of the whole Province, meaning the Anglican Church across the whole of Southern Africa, I bring you our warm congratulations! 
    Thank you to Bishop Mkhuseli and to you, Archdeacon David Mahlonoko, together with your leadership team, as well as the community of Sharpeville, for inviting me to join you in your celebrations. Thank you also to the Matshaneng family who hosted the dinner last night, provided transport for me and before dinner accompanied the Rector on a visit to my grandparents' home and on a tour of Sharpeville. Some of you will know that when I was young I spent many happy summer holidays here when I took a break from everyday life and school in Alexandra Township or Soweto. 
    Thank you too, all of you who have worked very hard behind the scenes to prepare for this celebratory service. I want to acknowledge Bishop Peter Lee and Gill, also my Rector when I was young at St Michael's  in Alexandra township, as well as Bishop William Mostert and Canon Eric Ephraim, both of whom were at St Paul's together with me, and their spouses. Finally a special welcome to distinguished guests, fellow clergy, and to all of you, the whole wonderful family from all corners of this Diocese. 
    Your record of witness, service and ministry through God’s love and grace in this Diocese is inspiring, especially during these challenging times in our country and the world. I want to acknowledge and congratulate you for using your premises to partner with SANCA as they offer support and counselling to people with addiction challenges. This is a progressive initiative and is indeed what more of us should be doing,  especially in an environment in which the teachers complain that some of their learners come to school completely disoriented due to substance abuse.
    We meet today to celebrate your anniversary, recognising the centrality to your witness of the life, ministry and witness of Cyprian, whose name you bear. Our little book, Saints and Seasons, tells us that Cyprian, a scholar and someone learned in the law, was elected Bishop of Carthage at a time when the church was troubled by much schism. During his time, he reflected on how the apostolic ministry of bishops, when they were bound together with bonds of love, could secure and preserve the unity of the church.  St Cyprian was martyred, together with members of his diocese, at the hands of the Emperors Valerius and Gallienus in A.D. 258 for refusing to offer sacrifices to them rather than to God. We give thanks to God for this giant leader of the church, and for the example of unsparing dedication to our Lord to which he gave witness.
    In the story of Lazarus and the rich man which we heard in the Gospel of Luke today (Lk 16:19-31), both   Egyptian and Jewish sources have furnished similar stories in describing how the fates of uncaring rich people and those who are poor are reversed in the world to come. The parable told in Luke implies that the rich man did scarcely anything to alleviate the beggar’s distress. When the latter died, he found a place of honour beside Abraham, the father of the Jewish nation and a friend of God, while the rich man found himself in Hades, in torment and agony. He appealed to Abraham as a father, begging for mercy, but Abraham refused to offer him help.
    Thus far the story follows traditional lines, but now there is a fresh element. Could the rich men’s brothers, presumably rich and careless themselves, be warned before they reached Hades? Abraham's reply was very clear: the teaching they had learned in the Old Testament should be enough. For those who shut their ears to the voice of God in the Scriptures, not even the miracle of somebody returning from the dead to warn them would have any effect. It is a moot point whether the parable is intended to give literal information about the next world, but whatever the case, while the language of the story is surely symbolical, it speaks clearly to a warning in the scriptures that a failure to practise love and mercy will lead to bad consequences.
    It is for this reason that Paul, in his charge to Timothy (1 Tim. 6:19 ff) exhorts him to be true to his Christian calling, to keep clear of such ensnaring things as the love of money, and to sustain the pursuit of Christian virtues. In those memorable words which resonate across the ages, and across societies wherever Christ is confessed, “the love of money is a root of all kinds of evil...”
    As the people of Sharpeville, of Gauteng and of South Africa, I come to reassure you that all of you here, members of St Cyprian's Parish and of the Diocese of Christ the King, are part of God’s plan for the world, just as Lazarus, Paul and Timothy were part of God’s plan for the world. So what can we draw from these lessons and use as building blocks to build ourselves, our families, our parish, our communities and the world? What do the lessons mean to us in the here and now?
    Well, I suggest we begin by looking at the readings and asking what it means in South Africa today to practise the Gospel imperative to show love and mercy, in particular to those who are poor and oppressed. And what does it mean to recognise, as the reading from Timothy says, that “in their eagerness to be rich, some have wandered away from their faith and pierced themselves with many pains”? 
    Can we really say that all of those who wield power in South Africa today, whether political power in government structures or economic power in the corporate world, are taking any heed of these scriptures? Or are they like the rich man and his brothers in the story of Lazarus, men who shut their ears to the voice of God?
    Nearly eighty years ago, Trevor Huddleston, the priest who led the way in urging our church's leaders at the time to take a more radical stand against apartheid, used our Gospel reading to try to shock the civic leadership of Johannesburg into action. Preaching at a celebration of the founding of the city of Johannesburg, he called attention to the terrible living conditions of black South Africans in its townships. Calling them “stinking backyards”, he said they were the result of, and I quote, “a criminal, a sinful, lack of vision in the years that are past, [in that] whilst Lazarus has been lying at the gate unheeded and full of sores, [the rich man] has fared sumptuously, has built himself skyscrapers and laid out for himself pleasure gardens every day...”
    Eighty years later, and 31 years after our liberation, we have made a lot of progress, yes, but not nearly as much as we could have, were it not for the corruption, self-dealing and nepotism that we see at every level of society. And even when people are not guilty of this kind of criminal or sinful behaviour, as I have said times without number, it remains true in our society that the sons and daughters of the wealthy flourish, while the sons and daughters of the poor are caught in a self-perpetuating spiral of inadequate education, too few jobs and debilitating poverty.
    Sometimes it’s difficult to see that we are part of God’s plan, especially when we are inward looking. Is the infrequent, close to non-existent, collection of waste in Sharpeville part of God’s plan? Is sewage running in your streets part of God’s plan? Is incorrect billing of accounts, which sees people suddenly owing large amounts of monies to the municipality, part of God’s plan? Is the total collapse of services, partly because of the deployment of cadres without the requisite technical skills, part of God's plan? Indeed, is  the corruption and bad government that we see at every level of government across Gauteng, and indeed across the length and the breadth of South Africa, part of God’s plan?  Of course not. 
    To fulfill God's plan for South Africa, we need to embark on what I call the New Struggle for a new South Africa, a struggle which replaces the old struggle against apartheid, a struggle in which we overcome the huge wealth gap between the rich and the poor, a struggle in which we restore water supplies, fix our roads, ensure the rubbish is collected, clean and maintain your graveyard, and create environments in which all of us can live decent lives in all our communities. One of the ways in which we can do this is to reject the pessimism that we see in the media around the National Dialogue, and take control of the dialogue ourselves. I have said it before, and I will say it again: If corrupt politicians think they can take control of the process and seize it as an opportunity to benefit themselves, they have another think coming. 
    I know some are sceptical about the dialogue. But the mistakes which beset it at the beginning can be fixed, and it was interesting to hear at last week's meeting of our church's Standing Committee that there is widespread support for the dialogue as the best chance ordinary people have to make their voices heard. The co-chair of the Eminent Persons' Group, Professor Tinyiko Maluleke, addressed the Standing Committee later during our proceedings, and it was clear from his address that controversy and contestation is to be expected, and in fact without it,  the dialogue won't be a proper dialogue. He emphasised that it is meant to be the people's dialogue, to be owned and guided by ordinary South Africans, expressing their different views. And he underlined a point I have been making, which is that I think the cynics tend to be those who are more comfortable with the status quo than those who are trapped in urban ghettos where services don't work, or in rural areas starved of resources and services.
    The dialogue will involve nearly 14,000 community dialogues at ward, district and sectoral levels, so I urge you in this community to go and make  your voices and your needs heard. The Sharpeville community does not deserve the kind of treatment you receive from government and the municipality. Nor should people have to wait in long queues to be treated in hospitals, especially Sebokeng Hospital. When that happens, it's no wonder some are tempted to blame migrants for our problems, but we must put the blame for inadequate services and bad living conditions where it belongs in what is a much wealthier country than those the migrants come from. We should not be attacking them. 
    Your founding fathers planted this parish and Diocese through tempestuous times of colonialism, oppression, pandemic and sometimes of wars in our country. As you move forward into the next 70 years and beyond, you will be challenged to revisit your vision and mission for this parish and the Diocese for the years to come. 
    With all our daily challenges in this journey, our assurance is that God has, again and again, met people and sent them out to proclaim his truth, with clarity and courage, through difficult and challenging times in the past. And God will do so again today and in the future at St Cyprian's and Diocese of Christ the King. 
    Finally, let me congratulate you once again and wish you well on your 70th anniversary. Celebrate it, and build upon it for the sake of our Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ.
    God loves you and so do I. Amen.