Thursday, 9 July 2026

Charge to the 68th Session of the Synod of the Diocese of Cape Town

 Charge to the 68th Session of the

Synod of the Diocese of Cape Town

The Most Revd Dr Thabo Makgoba

Archbishop of Cape Town

Cathedral Church of St George the Martyr

Cape Town

Thursday, 9th July 2026


“For such a time as this” (Esther 4:14)

“As you go, proclaim the good news” (Matthew 10:7)

May I speak in the name of God, who is Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Amen.

Welcome and Acknowledgements

Sisters and brothers in Christ, I greet you all in the name of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, and welcome you warmly to this Session of our Diocesan Synod. A warm greeting also to all our special guests, including our ecumenical and interfaith partners, the Bishops and Vicars-General of our neighbouring dioceses, my counterparts in REACH, retired Bishops, the heads of our schools, recipients of the Diocesan Award and members of the Order of Simon of Cyrene, the highest honour we can confer on an Anglican lay person. To all watching online, from our parishes and from further afield, a very warm welcome.

Please allow me to acknowledge and thank my wife, Lungi, for the patient support and sustenance she always provides me. Thank you, Manala; “mmangoana o tshwara thipa ka bohaleng” — “a mother holds the knife by its sharp edge”. I thank too our two children, Nyakallo and Paballo, for their love and support, and for helping to keep me grounded and human through the challenges and joys of their own lives. And I thank my intercessors, who hold me and this ministry before God — all of you are important to me. My profound thanks to everyone in the Diocesan family who arranges and enables our mission, ministry and administration: the Diocesan Standing Committee, the Diocesan Finance Board and Trusts Board, the Diocesan Chapter, the Diocesan staff, all the ministry teams, the heads, chaplains and staff of our schools, homes and institutions, our legal advisers, and all the lay people who aid us. My deep gratitude to the clergy, their spouses and their families, for creating and sustaining us as a Christian community which demonstrates the redeeming love of God at work.

I want to acknowledge all the ministries of our Diocese — the many and varied works through which the love of Christ is made visible across our parishes and communities — and to thank, in particular, our children’s homes and their staff. For their pastoral heart, their daily faithfulness, and the tender support and protection they offer to the children entrusted to their care, we are deeply thankful. In them we see the Gospel’s reversal of exclusion at work, and the restoration of dignity to the most vulnerable among us.

I want also to thank our Diocesan Health Care Fund, which looks after us as clergy and our families with such faithful care, often unseen and easily taken for granted. It is my prayer that one day God will move someone to endow it generously, so that this ministry of care may be placed on a secure footing for the generations of clergy families yet to come. Thanks to for the Robert Selby Taylor Will Trust, which provides educational assistance to the children of our clergy.

I owe particular thanks to the staff of the Diocesan Office, to the Archdeacon to the Ordinary, and to Bishop Josh, the Bishop of Table Bay, for his support and collegiality, and especially for holding the fort as Diocesan during my three months of sabbatical. My thanks, too, to the Synod Advisory Team. I arrived back only a few days ago, in time for Synod but not for all the preparatory work they put into it. That work has made this gathering possible, and I am the grateful beneficiary of it. Thank you, all of you, for your faithfulness and your care.

I also want to thank my staff at Bishopscourt, who help me to keep the Benedictine rhythm of prayer, work and reflection — even when, I confess, I capsize that rhythm into work, work and work. For your patience in calling me back to balance, and for all you do, thank you, Bishopscourt team.

My thanks, too, to the Dean and to the Cathedral for hosting our opening Synod service, and — in advance — to the Revd Moeketsi and the community of St Cyprian’s, where our Synod will continue over the coming days. It is wonderful to be gathered once again as a worshipping people.

Our Synod Theme

The theme of this Synod is drawn from the book of Esther, and from Mordecai’s searching question to the young queen at the hinge of her people’s history: “Who knows whether you have not come to the kingdom for such a time as this?” (Esther 4:14). In addressing the theme, I hope to incorporate in broad terms the themes that we have worked on together during my time as your Diocesan.

Mordecai’s question is one that refuses to accept every excuse Esther might have come up with to dodge the challenge it presented. She might have pleaded her vulnerability, or the danger of taking the throne uninvited, She might have refused to serve because she was living comfortably. She might have said the crisis facing her people was not of her making. Mordecai would allow none of it. Deliverance would come, he told her; the only question was whether she would be found among those who acted, or among those who kept silent and let the moment pass. 

“For such a time as this” is therefore not a sentimental phrase about feeling chosen. It is a summons to courage, to agency, and to costly action at the decisive hour. I want to hold that summons before us throughout this Charge, for I believe God is asking the same question of this Diocese, of this Province, and of this country: for what time have we been brought here, and what will we do with it?

We have just prayed our Synod Collect together, and I want us to carry its words with us through everything that follows, for it gathers our theme into a single petition. We asked God, whose “Word and steadfast love have sustained your people through all generations,” to “enable your Church with grace to discern your vision, that we may meet this moment with courage and act with intention to confront the challenges of this time, that we may witness to your transforming power as you make us partakers in your Kingdom.” 

Hear how closely that prayer walks with Esther and with Mordecai: to meet this moment, to act with intention, to confront the challenges of this time. We have not merely described our situation; we have asked God to make us equal to it. It is my prayer that this Synod will be, for all of us gathered here and for those joining online, an opportunity to pray and to be renewed for God’s service. The whole of this Charge is, in one sense, simply an unfolding of that collect.

Grace, and an honest confrontation with reality

The great North African Bishop, Augustine of Hippo, spoke very tellingly as, on the one hand, he wrestled with the burden of being a bishop, while on the other he was filled with the energy that came with serving the Christian community; an energy generated by the intellectual discoveries that came from exploring the wonder of faith with his small community in the desert sands of North Africa. In Sermon 340 he could finally sense the hand of God and rejoice in the delicacy of ministry, as he wrote: “For you I am a Bishop, with you I am a Christian.” 

Those words fill my heart as I deliver this Charge, as I look both back and forwards, recognising from where God has brought me and at the same time experiencing how, despite myself and my weaknesses, God has used me. The vocation of leadership is worth taking on only when those who accept the call not just occupy the thrones that come with office, but immerse themselves in the heart of the Church with all its rich diversity and its endless depth.

Augustine went on to say in that same sermon, “The former” — that is, episcopal office — “is a duty, the latter — that is, the Christian life — is “a grace.” If ever a word has been my lodestar through the profoundly changing scenes of life, it is surely the word “grace.” St Thérèse of Lisieux sums up what I feel in my heart after 24 years in episcopal ministry: “Everything is a grace because everything is God’s gift. Whatever be the character of life or its unexpected events, to the heart that loves, all is well.” Every day of this awesome calling, I have known that grace, leaned on that grace, and celebrated it. That I have sometimes failed despite that grace — that I have made mistakes, misunderstood, not listened, and at times not had the courage to take leaps of faith and so missed prophetic opportunities — goes without saying; and for that I beg your and God's pardon.

Even as I say these words, I hear the voice of Archbishop Emeritus Tutu, who reminds me in this moment that asking for forgiveness is a “risky undertaking, but in the end it is worthwhile, because in the end only an honest confrontation with reality can bring real healing.” That honest confrontation is itself an act of hope. We do not name our failures in order to be paralysed by them, but in order that grace may do its mending work. To draw on the depths of grace for the healing of our fractured world, our exploited continent and our broken country, is one of the core missions of our time; it weaves together the challenges of our age. 

The former Archbishop of Canterbury, William Temple, located all of this — exploring the wonder of faith, drawing on grace, the work of healing — in the Church’s work of worship. Listen to Temple’s words: “To worship is to quicken the conscience by the holiness of God, to feed the mind with the truth of God, to purge the imagination by the beauty of God, to open the heart to the love of God, to devote the will to the purpose of God.” Worship, then, is never an escape from the world’s pain; it is the furnace in which our engagement with that pain is forged.

In a timely way, today's Gospel text from Matthew, with its exhortation, “As you go, proclaim the good news”, draws us further into a grace-infused ministry of healing and offers us a way to think about the future of our Church, of our country and of our planet. I will always remember, when the leaders of the Anglican Communion met with Pope Francis, how he spoke of proclaiming the Kingdom of God as the hope for the nations. Holding out a vision of our evangelism as constituting a visible source of justice in the world, he told us: 

“Today’s wounded world needs the appearance of the Lord Jesus! It needs to know Christ! Some of you come from lands in which war, violence and injustice are the daily bread of the faithful; yet even in countries thought to be affluent and peaceful, great suffering and poverty exist. What should be the message we offer in response, if not Jesus, the Saviour? Our mission is to make him known. In the wake of what Peter said to the lame man at the Temple gate, what we have to offer these troubled and needy times is not silver and gold, but Christ and the amazing good news of his Kingdom.”

Doing justice, not only speaking it

Our mission, the proclamation of the Gospel, the Good News of Jesus Christ, is not merely to speak about justice, but to do justice. As we have seen our precious democracy falter in recent years, we have spoken up for justice, calling out the corrupt, the racists and those who put their own profits before the welfare and dignity of others. But we have lagged behind on doing justice.

The crisis we face over the treatment of the migrants from other African countries who live among us is an example of this. The urgent questions we face are: what does justice look like for South Africans in poor communities who can’t find decent jobs, and who fear that migrants willing to work for low wages are stealing their opportunities? What does justice look like for migrants who are fleeing conflict zones in which their very lives are at risk, or whose governments are so corrupt that they have virtually collapsed their countries' economies? What would it look like to restore the dignity of migrants as those who, just like us, are made in the image of God?

Recently a researcher on migration governance reform in the New South Institute urged religious and community groupings to drive programmes to include foreigners into the mainstream of South African society in a constructive way. (1) One of the reasons migrants are often received with such hostility is their capacity to survive and even flourish in conditions which local people struggle to overcome. That should be no surprise: across the world, migrants are often the most innovative and creative people their countries produce; how else would they have found ways to flee their countries, travel halfway across a continent, and survive in foreign, often hostile environments? 

For us, this raises a challenging question: Are there not ways, even at parish level, in which we can encourage our communities to harness both the skills of migrants and the urgent clamour of our people for jobs to create win-win scenarios for both?

Addressing the demands for justice in South Africa is not easy. The old struggle against apartheid was not easy, and the New Struggle to realise the dividends of democracy, which you have heard me advocating times without number, is not easy. But if we are to have any kind of a decent future at all, we dare not dodge this struggle. We have to face the difficult, contested and controversial business of taking sides. We have to engage in informed advocacy. We have to enhance the agency of those whose voices are muted so that communities can speak for themselves. We must actively engage in community organising, and in doing so recognise that change comes from the margins and not from those who hold power.

There is a quiet temptation in a church such as ours — respected, well-networked, with access to the powerful — to mistake proximity to power for the exercise of justice. The first step in obtaining justice is therefore to change our mindsets and acknowledge the true source of change. For too long we have relied on the powerful to make the changes, and those changes have ultimately served the powerful and not given agency to the poor. We have learnt that no victor voluntarily shares power or allows alternative narratives to shape policy. Steve Biko put it succinctly: we must stand resolutely with the oppressed and the exploited. That applies in South Africa today, whether it encompasses poor and marginalised South Africans who can't find jobs, or desperate migrants whose exploitation is reflected in their low wages. The experiences, the cries and the struggles of all those are ours.

Here Esther meets Biko. Esther was inside the palace, close to power, comfortable, and able to tell herself that the suffering beyond the walls was not her responsibility. Mordecai’s warning is sobering: “Do not think that in the king’s palace you will escape any more than all the other Jews.” Proximity to power is no refuge, and silence is no safety. The agency God asks of us is not the borrowed agency of those near the throne, but the courageous agency of those willing to risk their standing for the sake of the excluded. Esther’s greatness is not that she was favoured, but that she stopped trading on her favour and spent it — “If I perish, I perish.” That is the approach to our challenges which this time in out country’s history demands of us.

When I came to this ministry, I would not have believed that so many of the gains we made in South Africa would be rolled back, that the scourge of corruption would continue to rob the poor and insult their dignity. Yet it is so, and the faith community stands condemned for the many times our voices were mute and our condemnations half-hearted. As I said in an earlier Charge, reflecting on our deeply unequal society — the most unequal in the world — the income gap has widened to the point where a tiny fraction at the top commands a grossly disproportionate share of our wealth, while the great majority are left to divide what little remains. And we have to acknowledge that this poverty still clings stubbornly to racial lines. Naming those statistics was never enough; the question each Synod must put to itself is what we have actually done since we last met.

We also need to be honest and not confuse charity with justice. It was the same St Augustine who reminded the early Church that “charity is no substitute for justice withheld.” Charity in crisis moments has its place, but it cannot replace justice in the long term. A soup kitchen is a mercy; but if year upon year the same queue lengthens, we are called not only to feed it but to ask why it exists and to dismantle what produces it. The grace of being part of a believing community must show itself in solid, unflinching work to change the mechanisms of injustice, exploitation and marginalisation.

We must also be more intentional in our engagement with community organisations and community struggles. Implicit in my suggestion for action at parish level around the migrant crisis is the wider need to play our part in enhancing agency for those most excluded, helping them find a place at the table of decision-making and assisting in the transfer of knowledge and skills. This is the difference between doing things for people and doing things with them — only the latter restores dignity.

Returning to the formative insights of Steve Biko and his generation, they insisted that the core components of a true liberation struggle must include psychological emancipation, self-reliance and the restoration of the dignity of black people. Those imperatives need to be examined afresh in our context as we move forward in making South Africa — in Chief Albert Luthuli’s poignant words — “a home for all.”

Anger at our country’s current condition is a necessary emotion. But it cannot stop there if we are to achieve necessary change. We need to hear again the words ascribed to St Augustine: “Hope has two daughters: anger and courage. Anger at the way things are, and the courage to ensure that they do not stay the way they are.” It is exactly that courage — the courage that comes from faith, the courage that ideology alone cannot give — that is our gift to South Africa at this time of profound challenge. That is why we are so clear in our ecclesiology: ministry is not possession; it is, rather, participation in God’s generosity.

Healing as the reversal of exclusion

The very core of today’s text from Matthew underlines our task in all situations: to proclaim that the Kingdom is at hand. It is not simply about a future that awaits us; more profoundly, it is testimony to the active reign of God breaking into history. We as church are called to be witnesses to God’s transforming grace in history. The actions that follow in Jesus’ narrative — to heal the sick, raise the dead, cleanse lepers, cast out demons — are, every one of them, symbols of the restoration of life and dignity.

In Matthew, healing is never merely physical; it represents the reversal of exclusion and brokenness. To heal the sick and cleanse lepers is to restore people to community, to just relationships and structures, and to a renewed sensitivity to the burdens people carry and the wounds that afflict communities. This is why our safeguarding work — making our parishes, schools and institutions genuinely safe and inclusive for all, and especially for children and the vulnerable — is not an administrative burden bolted onto mission; it is mission. A Church that cannot protect the most vulnerable in its own midst has not yet understood what it means to cleanse the leper and restore the outcast to the community.

The verses we deal with from Matthew today make the point clearly: “Let your peace come upon that house.” We the church, and especially the clergy, are pre-eminently called to be the bearers of peace in our deeply fractured world: from the communities across our country so deeply wounded by violence, to homes scarred by gender-based violence, to the bleeding of Gaza, from Sudan and South Sudan, from the Sahel to the DR Congo, to the Straits of Hormuz, to Ukraine and Haiti — and countless other places where war kills, where weapons rob the poor of their meals and their education, and where greed, manipulation and the scramble for the earth’s resources rob people and nations of peace.

But we don’t have to feel that we are alone or isolated when we consciously decide to be voices of peace in our communities. In his recent Encyclical on artificial intelligence, Pope Leo XIV made a powerful point. “[B]uilding a world in which everyone can flourish,” he said, “requires shared responsibility and courage. No one can single-handedly bear the weight of the challenges the world is facing, just as no one is so weak that they cannot play their part, for ‘power is made perfect in weakness’ (2 Cor 12:9). All are given their own section of the wall: scientists and researchers, entrepreneurs and workers, educators and legislators, civil society, popular movements and faith communities.” (2)

Conclusion: Measure ministry by faithfulness

I end as I began, with the words of Jesus: “As you go, proclaim the good news. Freely you have received, freely give.” In the end it is sobering for all of us — whether at the brink of retirement or having just crossed the threshold of new beginnings in ministry and public office in the Church — to realise that ministry is not about how many buildings we erected, how many committees we chaired, or how many titles we accumulated. It is about whether we remained faithful to the One who called us. Only that.

To those who are actively in the field, let me say: there will be seasons when your efforts seem fruitful and seasons when they seem barren. There will be people who welcome your ministry and people who reject it. There will be days when you are encouraged and days when you are weary. Do not measure your ministry solely by visible indicators; measure it by faithfulness. Jesus did not ask the disciples to be successful in every town; he simply asked them to preach, to heal, to trust and to proclaim. The results always belong to God.

As you lead the Diocese into the future, I leave you with hope, confident that you will continue the grinding work of pursuing the New Struggle as part of your mission to discern what God is up to in the world in our time, and that you will do this by wrestling with the challenges you face through a process of courageous conversations and indaba. You may feel, to use the Pauline phrase, that you are seeing in a mirror dimly, but be reassured that if you approach the task with a sense of awe and wonder you will indeed discern the face of God in the incarnate Jesus, through Jesus the Holy Spirit.

And so I return us to Mordecai’s question, which is finally God’s question to each of us: “Who knows whether you have not come to the kingdom for such a time as this?” We did not choose the hour into which we were born, nor the wounds of the country we have been given to serve. But we have been placed here, now, in this time and no other — and that placing is itself a calling. May we meet this moment with courage and act with intention, that we may witness to God’s transforming power as he makes us partakers in his Kingdom. And may we not be found among those who kept silent and let the moment pass.

In my pre-ordination retreat, all those many years ago, the retreat master sent us out with words something like these: “Love your people deeply; pray more than you worry; listen more than you speak; stay close to the poor, the wounded and the forgotten; and never lose the wonder of your calling.” I bless you with those words, in all the variety of the Church’s callings. Guard your hearts; protect your first love for Christ. When the road is long and the night is dark, remember that the One who called still walks beside you.

And finally, remember: God loves you, and so do I!

Amen

* * * * *

(1) https://theconversation.com/profiles/alan-hirsch-170889; https://nsi.org.za/media/the-conversation-anti-foreigner-violence-migration-governance-south-africa/

(2) Paragraphs 13 and 59, Encyclical Letter, Magnifica Humanitas, of His Holiness Pope Leo XIV on Safeguarding the Human Person in the Time of Artificial Intelligence: https://www.vatican.va/content/leo-xiv/en/encyclicals/documents/20260515-magnifica-humanitas.html [Accessed May 26, 2026]


Saturday, 6 June 2026

Troubled Times: Can We Be Surprised by Hope Again?

Troubled Times: Can We Be Surprised by Hope Again?

The Most Revd. Dr Thabo Makgoba

Book Launch — Voices of Hope

English Reformed Church, Begijnhof 48, Amsterdam

3rd June 2026


Thank you for your generous welcome to this church, to the university community, and to this city. What a privilege it is to be with you in this beautiful, history-laden space — and to those joining us online from different parts of the world, you are not a distant audience. You are part of this gathering. This evening belongs to all of us.

I am grateful to Professor Jan Jorrit of the School of Theology and Religion, his team and colleagues responsible for today and for my and my family’s sabbaticalp; to the Dean of the Faculty of Humanities, Professor Gregor, the faculty that is hosting us; and to the Rector, Professor Jeroen Geurts, and University Council for their welcome and for the gift of a three-month sabbatical at this university.  To the Rector of this parish, Revd. Marius and to Prof Dion Foster, dankie ook, Broers! 

And I am grateful to the editors and contributors of this book — thirty voices, from different continents, disciplines, generations and religious traditions — for trusting that hope is still worth speaking about.

I want to say one more thing before I begin. I have spent these last six weeks in Amsterdam, meeting what I call different publics — communities, institutions, individuals who rarely appear in the same sentence, but who together make up the living texture of this city and its questions, thanks Jan Jorrit (JJ). This sabbatical has been a gift of time and encounter, and much of what I want to say tonight has been sharpened by what I have seen and heard here. Amsterdam has been teaching me. I am still learning.

Can we be surprised by hope again?

I want to sit with that question before I try to answer it. Because the word surprised matters. We are not asking tonight whether hope is theoretically possible. We are asking whether it can still arrive uninvited — whether, after everything the world has shown us, we still have the capacity to be ambushed by it. In Sepedi, “go Makala”- startled, frightened, astonished, seized or overtaken and IsiXhosa- “ukumangalizwa”- struck with awe or wonder, or ambushed”.

I want to earn that answer honestly. The people watching this evening from different parts of the world — some of them in places where hope is not a lecture topic but a daily survival decision — deserve more than comfortable reassurance from a church building in Amsterdam. So let me begin not with hope, but with the world as it actually is or as I see it.

We face what I have called a kairos moment for humanity. Kairos in Greek does not mean ordinary time. It means the appointed time — the moment of crisis and opportunity that cannot be postponed. And the crisis I am describing is this: economic inequality is metastasising across the world like a cancer. Over a hundred million people are currently displaced from their homes — the largest forced migration since the Second World War. The Uppsala Conflict Data Program in Sweden recorded 61 active conflicts involving at least one state in 2024, the highest number since statistics were first collected in 1946.1 The climate crisis is bearing down most heavily on the communities that contributed least to causing it. And the political response across much of the world has not been to face this honestly but to find someone to blame.

Across both the economically developed and under-developed world we are watching the rise of what I call the left-behinds: people standing on the margins, watching elites prosper while their own standard of living is eroded. These victims of the current system of global financial governance are responding to their situation by turning towards populist politics, embracing economic chauvinism, xenophobic nationalism, resurgent racism and the stirrings of a new kind of fascism. And in an age-old pattern, the elites — through their dominance of media and public debate — are exploiting the disillusionment of the left-behinds by cultivating division; by diverting people's anger away from those responsible for the inequality by blaming the vulnerable, the poor and the weak – those even less fortunate than themselves – for their plight. Like a cancer, inequality eats away at our social compacts, threatening to devour everything that makes us human.

I say this not as an observer from a distance. I have consoled weeping mothers and sisters in Ukraine and prayed at mass graves while sirens wailed overhead. I have sat with despairing peace mediators freshly returned from South Sudan and attended a memorial service for fellow South Africans killed in the Democratic Republic of Congo during a peacekeeping mission. I have walked the corridors of the United Nations and the rooms of Davos and found, in both places, the same exhaustion: people who know the scale of what is broken and have run out of the language to say so. I have walked with communities that have no sanitation, no voice, no expectation that the powerful will look their way. And I have stood on the floor of the London Stock Exchange and in the corridors of financial power — and found there a kind of moral vacuum, a disconnection between the decisions being made and the lives being shaped by them.

Earlier this week I was in the south-east of Amsterdam, in Bijlmer, where I learned that although Amsterdam is one of the wealthiest cities in one of the wealthiest nations in history, you can still see the same logic at work in its streets and in its policies: that some lives count more than others.

As I have said, we face a kairos moment. It is real. It is now. And into it, tonight, we launch a book called Voices of Hope.

Before we go further, we need to be precise about what kind of hope we are speaking of. Because there is a hope that is merely the absence of despair — thin, nervous, easily shattered — and there is a hope that is something altogether more durable. I want to speak about the second kind.

Last year in Rome, at a symposium on hope jointly hosted by the Vrije Universiteit, the University of the Free State and the ACSA, I drew on the work of the theologian Jürgen Moltmann, whose Theology of Hope, written in 1964, remains one of the most searching theological texts of the twentieth century. The South African scholar Professor Jacobus Vorster argues that Moltmann's framework offers not sentimental hope, but what he calls tangible hope — grounded not in single liberation events but in the ongoing movement of the Spirit of the living God in history.

Moltmann's thesis, as Vorster reads it, is that hope does not lie primarily in historic moments. Not in 1994 in South Africa. Not in any single triumph. The people of Israel had many liberations — the Exodus, the return from Babylon — and hope rooted in those events soon faded. Consistent hope, on this account, is found in the movement of God's reign flowing from the resurrection of Christ — manifesting in signs where good is victorious over evil, peace over enmity, love over hatred. These signs are God continuously grinding out of the hard rocks of evil the visible and touchable signs of goodness.

I find that image extraordinary and I want to dwell on it. The hard rocks of evil. The grinding. The slow, costly, material production of something good out of something terrible. This is not hope as a feeling that arrives when conditions improve. It is hope as a practice — a refusal to be daunted, an intensification of effort precisely in the face of the challenge, a willingness to act as instruments of the moving God even when the large picture is dark.

We are warned, on this reading, against placing all our hope in single episodes or single persons. And this brings me to the South African story — which is often told as a reason for hope in the world — and to what it does and does not prove.

For most of the second half of the twentieth century, it looked as though South Africa was headed for a racial war. We avoided it — through a largely peaceful struggle, through international sanctions, through the exemplary leadership of Nelson Mandela and the last white president, FW de Klerk. Mandela was what I would call a symbol of holiness: a leader set apart, able to hold himself and others accountable to a greater Being, and to draw people together based on a vision for the common good. Our Truth and Reconciliation Commission, chaired by my predecessor but one, Archbishop Tutu, was praised across the world as something genuinely new in the life of nations — amnesty in exchange for truth, healing in the place of retribution.

I prayed with Mandela. I wrote a book on it — Faith and Courage: Praying with Nelson Mandela. I also prayed with FW de Klerk. I spoke at his funeral and was present at his cremation. Whatever history's contested account of his legacy, his final recorded words were these: “I, without qualification, apologise for the pain and the hurt and the indignity and the damage that apartheid has done to black, brown and Indians in South Africa.” He said it was as if he had a conversion — that he realised in his heart of hearts that apartheid was wrong. Even in the most unlikely of people, the grinding of goodness out of hard rock continues.

But I want to be honest about what the South African story does not prove. The Commission is, as Jesus said of himself in Nazareth, a prophet without honour in its own country. Our government has never acted on some of the key recommendations of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. Victims of gross violations of human rights violations have been sold short. And it was never mandated to deliver economic justice — that is a task in the hands of the government and the private sector, which have both failed to implement redistributive measures, making us the most unequal society in the world. So, while our forebears fought a struggle against colonialism and apartheid, bringing us out of a wilderness and into a non-racial democracy, we have not built the land which that democracy promised us. 

This is why I have been calling for over a decade for what I name the New Struggle — a struggle to eradicate corruption, to regain our moral compass, to bring about economic justice and realise the promises of our Constitution. 

This New Struggle cannot be for a new multiracial middle class to simply inherit the privileges of the old elite. The struggle must be for a new society: more equal, more honest, one in which the wealth that comes from growth is shared equitably among all, and in which equality of opportunity is real rather than rhetorical. And those of us with financial means must be prepared to make sacrifices to redistribute what God has given us for the benefit of the poorest of the poor.

In response to this crisis, which as I have said affects the Global North as well as the South, I am urging the adoption of a theology and ecclesiology of generosity — focusing on the Incarnation as the hermeneutical key to both theology and economy. If God chose the margins of society in which to demonstrate God's presence in our world — if the Divine entered the world as a refugee child in poverty, in a borrowed room — then the church that follows that God must orient itself toward the margins too. Not as a matter of charity, but as one of justice. Not out of occasional generosity but as a demonstration of structural commitment.

And I want to add what I have been saying recently in Geneva and New York: we must address not only material poverty but spiritual poverty. It is the spiritually poor in the developed world — and many among wealthy elites in the Global South — who generate the blindness that ignores the desperate suffering of the people of Gaza, of Sudan, of Ukraine and the sixty-one other places of conflict in the world today. The ecological crisis belongs to this same frame: the communities of the Sahel, of coastal Bangladesh, of the Pacific islands did not cause two centuries of carbon accumulation. They are bearing its first and heaviest costs. This too is a justice question. This too belongs to the New Struggle.

Let me now name three practices — not programmes, not policies, but spiritual and civic disciplines — that I believe are equal to this kairos.

The first is Indaba. This is a isiZulu and isiXhosa concept — a gathered community discerning together, every voice carrying weight, the purpose being not majority decision but shared wisdom. It entered global Anglican life at the 2008 Lambeth Conference as a way through profound disagreement. Its theological root is ancient — it mirrors the silence of the Jerusalem Council in Acts 15, sitting with what had been heard before it reached its conclusion. In a world designed to hear only the powerful, Indaba insists that the woman excluded from the peace table in South Sudan knows something about peace that the men around it do not. That the un-documented person in Amsterdam knows something about belonging that the policy document does not. Practising Indaba is, in itself, an act of hope.

The second is Courageous Conversations. I have called the church throughout my ministry to conversations it would rather not have — about the gap between what we preach and what we practise, about the young people we are failing, about the inequality we have normalised. These conversations are not performances of moral superiority. They are acts of love toward a community you refuse to give up on. Amos named the exploitation of the merchants of Samaria with a precision that made comfortable religion impossible. Tutu called out apartheid as an evil policy, evil in and of its very nature, but he simultaneously insisted that its perpetrators were redeemable. That combination of unflinching honesty and unmistakable love is the hardest thing in public life. It is also the most transformative.

The third practice I want to highlight is a Theology of Generosity — the ecclesiology I have been developing from the Incarnation outward. If the God we follow entered the world at the margins, then our institutions, our budgets, our policies and our prayers must orient themselves there too. This means challenging the structural causes of inequality, not merely ameliorating their symptoms. It means being prepared — as Pope Francis insists — to reject the absolute autonomy of markets when those markets produce suffering, and to attack the structural causes of inequality. It means the church acting not as a commentator on injustice but as a participant in its dismantling.

Tonight we present thirty voices. Thirty people from different continents, disciplines, generations and religious traditions, asked to speak about hope in troubled times.

The polyphony of this book is itself part of its argument. A single authoritative voice on hope would be a kind of contradiction — because hope that belongs only to the powerful, only to the credentialed, only to those who have not been broken by what the world has done to them, is not hope in any sense that the suffering can use. These thirty voices are, in Vorster's language, signs of the moving God — each one grinding something good out of hard rock, each one a small step taken in hope.

Already the range of these voices tells us something: hope migrates, cross-pollinates, appears where it is not expected — in a government ministry and dialogue global citizenship on peace with justice at VU, in a mosque in Bijlmer and a churchyard in Ukraine, in a stadium in Soweto or soccer stadium watching match in joy and anxiety and a round table of young city-makers who refuse to accept the world as it is.

So, let me return to our question: can we be surprised by hope again?

I want to answer that question now — not with optimism, but with the testimony of what I have seen. I have been in rooms far darker than this one where hope arrived anyway. Not announced. Not argued into existence. Just present — the way Moltmann describes it: the living, moving God grinding goodness out of hard rock. A woman in Ukraine who had lost everything and was somehow not destroyed. A peace mediator who came back the next day. An apartheid president who spoke words of apology into a camera, knowing they would be his final words to the world.  A woman from South Sudan at VU talking about daring to hope and the courage to knock and open doors shut by male comrades. Young people in Bijlmer this week who looked at a broken city and refused to accept that it could not be made whole.

These are not proofs. They are signs. And signs, as Moltmann reminds us, are exactly what hope is made of — not certainty, but the visible and touchable evidence that the moving God has not finished with this world.

As I have said in South Africa, as well as in Faith and Courage- Praying with Mandela, and as I want to say here tonight in Amsterdam: hope is not a nebulous, pie-in-the-sky concept. It is the driving force that motivates our determination to name our problems, to identify solutions and to mobilise people to overcome them. Hope must be what drives us to fulfil the promise of societies based on democratic values, social justice and fundamental human rights.

Small steps taken in hope can become islands of hope. And as those islands come together, we can create landscapes of hope.

That is what this book is. Thirty islands. One landscape, beginning.

Faith sees further. Justice reaches further still.

Welcome to Voices of Hope. May they surprise you.

Thank you.

*  *  *  *  *

 

Monday, 13 April 2026

Archbishop Thabo welcomes Pope Leo's opposition to Middle East war

As Archbishop Thabo Makgoba began a three-month sabbatical in the Netherlands, he issued the following statement of support for the church's witness against the current conflict in the Middle East:

"I want to align myself with the Catholic Church as Pope Leo XIV, supported by American cardinals, courageously challenges the kingdoms of this world with a vision for the Kingdom of our God.

Our South African experience under apartheid, and the armed struggle which was fought against it, challenged the churches of our country to work carefully through the theological thinking which helps Christians decide when it is permissable for the church of Jesus Christ, the Prince of Peace, to support war.

Judged by these standards, the attack which the United States and Israel launched against Iran can in no way be regarded as a just war. And the glorification of war in the name of our faith that is being advanced by the Pentagon directly contradicts the Gospel. We support to growing calls from Christians across the world for an end to this aggression.

Sunday, 5 April 2026

SABC News report on the Archbishop's Easter Vigil sermon

 

"We are seeing clear signs of hope in South Africa today" - Archbishop's Easter sermon

 The Most Revd Dr Thabo Makgoba

Archbishop of Cape Town

Easter Vigil 

St George’s Cathedral, Cape Town

April 4th 2026

Ezekiel 36: 22–28, Romans 6: 3–11, Matthew 28: 1–10

Alleluia, Our Lord has Risen! He is risen indeed! Alleluia!

Sisters and Brothers in Christ, thank you for being here on this most holy night, when we recall and celebrate the Resurrection of Jesus. Thank you Mr Dean – we really appreciate your leadership here – and the Sub-Dean, the Cathedral staff, all those responsible for the music, as well as to you, members of the congregation who ensure through your sacrificial giving that we have such a beautiful place in which to worship God. A special welcome to those who are visiting – we are privileged to have you join us.

Before I go any further, I ask for your prayers for the Anglican Archbishop in Jerusalem, Archbishop Hosam Naoum, and his people, and for all faithful Christians who defy danger and restrictions to worship in Jerusalem tonight. I was deeply distressed to read last week that Israeli police stopped the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem from celebrating Mass at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. Although that restriction has now been lifted, let us remember that the current conflict has prevented Muslims, Jews and Christians from observing Ramadan, Passover and Easter in their usual ways. Many in the faith community are interpreting the Israeli restrictions – and especially those on access to Al Aqsa Mosque on Eid – as punishment for the Muslim and Christian communities whose homes are in Jerusalem and the West Bank.

On a more hopeful note, I was excited last week to celebrate the installation of Archbishop Sarah Mullally of Canterbury in her Cathedral. On your behalf, I have welcomed her warmly, and expressed the hope that even as she ministers to all, her ministry will reflect a deep concern for the environment as well as those on the margins of society. In the days which followed her installation, the Primates of the Anglican Communion held a meeting where we discussed issues such as global conflict, the integrity of the environment and the effects of migration, looking at the underlying causes of these challenges. Leading the closing session of the meeting, my challenge to my fellow leaders of Anglican churches across the world was “What gives you joy?” since we cannot afford to get bogged down in despair at the state of our world.

Turning to our readings, the prophet Ezekiel was speaking into a moment of national despair for the society in which he lived. The people had lost their land, their temple and their political independence. They lived in exile and humiliation. Their institutions had collapsed and their confidence was shattered. Into their gloomy situation, God makes a remarkable promise when he declares, “I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit within you”. This anticipates the ministry of Jesus who, in his conversation with Nicodemus in John’s Gospel, makes it clear that no one can enter the Kingdom of God without being born through water and the Spirit (John 3:5). 

In a similar way, in a single chapter of Matthew, from which we drew our Gospel reading tonight, we see a narrative shifting from one of despair in the previous chapter to one of hope. Matthew helps us to see that this hope, this new Resurrection life, this overturning of the old order and the ushering in of a new season, is often the work of taking small steps, of new life emerging from unexpected places and the most unlikely of people. 

If our hearts are not attuned to these sometimes quiet notes of grace, we will sadly miss the moments of Resurrection. No matter how hard the times and how bleak the outlook, God never abandons us to the worst of times. With this, no doubt, in his spirit, Matthew begins to find a new vocabulary; silence turns into words of proclamation and the fear that dominated the beginning of his story is transformed into deeds of courage. Here we find transformation, new hope, Resurrection.

And Matthew underlines that change is not immediate. It is accomplished on a journey, and it takes hard, disciplined, dedicated work to achieve. There is no Easter without the courage of those who made the journey to the tomb while it was dark, to go to a place where dangers lurked. As so often in the gospels, it was women who took the lead at the first Easter. In a world where theological articulation was a male domain, where women were not heard, it was women – the women who had stood at the foot of the Cross when the men ran away – who stepped out of their comfort zones and defied social and cultural norms to go to the tomb. It was women who found the courage to go in search of new life, so becoming the first of Jesus’s disciples to proclaim the first Easter.

Today it is when things are dark that we are called upon to summon up the courage and to take to the road to make change happen by being a part of that change long before the new era dawns. There are people in our country and our world who, once victory dawns, take credit for it without ever putting in any work when the night was dark, the road was long, and working for change was costly. But Matthew’s Gospel praises those who work in the dark in dangerous times, who are prepared to abandon their comfort zones and go to the tombs, and there to challenge the culture of death. History and new life emerges from hearts which, like those of the women at the tomb, are filled with courage, overcome life’s restrictions and proclaim confidently that “The Lord has risen.”

Easter should be a time of celebration, of renewal and of hope. But that is a hard sell, given the current state of the world. The Middle East is consumed by war, and those celebrating Easter in Jerusalem and other cities and towns across the region do so under the threat of drones and missiles. Not only that, the conflict threatens to spread, and its effects – especially the restrictions on oil and gas exports – are being experienced across the globe. Escalating petrol and especially diesel prices raise the spectre of rationing, speed restrictions and higher food prices. The war in Ukraine continues, with South Africans unwittingly and tragically dragged into it under false pretences. In Sudan we are seeing a repeat of the genocide of 20 years ago, apparently perpetrated by largely the same actors.

We are navigating a world filled with destruction and fear, not only abroad but at home. In many of our communities, an almost unstoppable culture of violence seems to have taken hold, fuelled by the vulnerability that comes from increasing poverty, unemployment and the plethora of social pathologies that democratic governance has failed to address after three decades. Waking up in the morning, it is almost a surprise not to read about a new corruption scandal involving those who pervert politics for self-serving ends. Whistle-blowers, witnesses and professionals such as lawyers are assassinated in brazen attempts to escape the consequences of taking bribes from tenderpreneurs. In Cape Town, teenagers are killed, victims of gang violence, with frightening regularity and domestic violence continues to stalk households. 

Perhaps worst of all, the confusing spectacle of claim and counter-claim we are seeing before Justice Madlanga and his fellow commissioners leaves the average South African unable to judge which police general is honest and who is controlled by a crime syndicate. Although we must wait for the Commission to sort the truth from the lies, it is already clear that the public cannot rely on the police service’s leadership, considered as a whole, to end the violence and criminality which has percolated to the top of society. At the same time we need to celebrate those officers in police stations across the country who do serve the public with dedication and empathy.

An evil which is not getting enough attention is how online gambling, easily accessible to anyone with a smartphone, is ruining people’s lives. In a recent discussion paper on online and interactive gambling, the National Treasury reported that annual betting revenue in South Africa has sky-rocketed by 390 percent in the past five years – from around R10.6 billion to R52 billion, with online betting estimated to generate more than R44 billion a year.

At a recent meeting, Anglican bishops from across Southern Africa gave accounts ranging from pensioners in South Africa gambling away their SASSA grants to students squandering financial aid for their studies. We heard of graduates who can’t find work borrowing money to gamble with in the hope of making a living, and of young people committing suicide in despair as a result of losing everything. As Dr Imraan Buccus has said, gambling has become “a form of economic self-medication, a desperate search for luck in a society that offers no opportunity.” 

The crisis that harmful gambling represents for society must be addressed urgently across government and civil society. We need to treat gambling the way we dealt with smoking and alcohol, and consider banning – or at least imposing strict restrictions on – gambling advertising. 

But the story of Easter tells us that we need not despair. On Good Friday, we heard a story of events 2,000 years ago that were not so different from what we see today. The first Easter took place when Palestine was oppressed by the brutal machinery of the Roman Empire. It was preceded by the harsh reality of pain, destruction, the demise of dignity, a political trial that perverted justice, the nailing of a man to a cross and the lives of his followers torn apart by cruelty. 

Just as the story of resurrection brought hope to the followers of Jesus, so we are seeing clear signs of hope in South Africa today. Matric pass rates are improving. The media continues to play a crucial role in exposing bad governance. Our Finance Minister tells us that levels of government debt are stabilising. Load shedding is largely something of the past, and reforms in power generation and transport networks are giving hope for better economic growth and therefore job creation. Business leaders with strong liberation movement credentials tell me they are cautiously optimistic about the prospects for investment in new economic activity. There is growing recognition that blindly enforcing the prescriptions of ideologues, whether on the left or the right, will not help our country to grow. Instead we are seeing the tens of thousands of highly-qualified graduates emerging from our universities looking for more pragmatic solutions to our problems. 

Thirty years ago, Desmond Tutu used to say that our country’s festering wounds needed to be opened, cleaned and cauterised before we would see healing. Today I believe the Madlanga Commission can perform that role – as long as its report is followed by strong and courageous action to root out the rot in our justice system. The challenges posed by its report will present President Cyril Ramaphosa with the most consequential decisions of his presidency. Fortunately he has on his side the unprecedented ferment in political parties, underpinned by our tradition of vigorous debate and civic engagement, which has the potential to sideline ageing leaders with entrenched positions and to create innovative new alliances.

Make no mistake, friends, the challenges we face are enormous, but turning around the ship of state in South Africa is more like altering the course of a supertanker than that of a speedboat – it will take time.

So this Easter, let us celebrate the signs of progress and our potential to do better as a nation. Prophetic faith insists that celebration itself can be an ethical act – a refusal to let cynicism have the final word. To rejoice responsibly is to affirm that goodness, beauty, and human dignity are not illusions but signs of God’s intention for the world.

As we engage our future, our season of new life, we keep in our hearts the reminder that resonates through Matthew’s Gospel – Jesus’ repeated assurance, “Be not afraid!” As we are told in Ezekiel, if we follow God’s statutes and observe God’s ordinances, “then you  shall be my people, and I will be your God.” (Ezekiel 36: 27-28) 

With a confused and often chaotic world around us, with brokenness in our hearts, and amidst communities that are deeply fractured, Easter consoles us, challenges us: “Be not afraid!” and so gives us hope for all that lies ahead. 

Alleluia! Christ is Risen! Christ is Risen indeed! 

* * * * *

Sunday, 1 March 2026

“Men of violence have nailed diplomacy into a coffin” – Archbishop Thabo on the Middle East war

Archbishop Thabo Makgoba addressed the war in the Middle East at the beginning of a service for the Lay Ministers of the Diocese of Cape Town on March 1:

Sisters and brothers in Christ, you will know by now that the United States and Israel have launched a war against Iran, attacking many sites across the country and killing hundreds of people, including Iran's Supreme Leader. And a prosecutor in Minab in southern Iraq has told media that a girls' primary school in the town of Minab was hit, killing more than 100 people.
    At this time, we can do no better than to read the response to the war by the Anglican Archbishop in Jerusalem, Archbishop Hosam Naoum, who is a close friend of our church, having studied at the College of the Transfiguration in Makhanda.
     Archbishop Naoum sent the following pastoral letter to the Anglican Communion yesterday:

“Dear Beloved Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

“As you are all now painfully aware, in the early hours of this morning, February 28th, a coordinated and massive military assault was launched by the United States and Israel against numerous cities and installations within Iran.

“This operation, described by the leaders of the two nations as a 'pre-emptive' attack, has brought fire and destruction to the heart of Tehran, Isfahan, and beyond, striking at the very centers of governance and civilian life. Moreover, just prior to these events, Israel had also “pre-emptively” attacked various targets in southern Lebanon, where the number of casualties has yet to be determined. 

“Tragically, the cycle of violence has expanded with terrifying speed. In the hours following, Iran launched a widespread reprisal, with missiles and drones targeting Israel and U.S. military assets across the Gulf—striking installations in Kuwait, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, Kurdistan-Iraq, Jordan, and Qatar. Sirens also blared across the Holy Land, warning of incoming missiles from Iran. Suddenly, our people from the Mediterranean to the Persian Gulf find themselves once again huddled in shelters, fearing for their lives as the shadow of a total regional war looms over us.

“These developments strike at the very soul of our [Anglican] Province of Jerusalem & the Middle East. Every single nation now engaged in this combat, and those bearing the brunt of the retaliatory strikes, resides within our ecclesiastical boundaries. 

"Our brothers and sisters in the Diocese of Iran are currently enduring the terror of aerial bombardment; our members in the Diocese of Cyprus & the Gulf are witnessing the arrival of war at their doorsteps; and our faithful in the Diocese of Jerusalem—extending across Israel, Palestine, Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria—face an unprecedented threat of military escalation.

“In the face of such overwhelming force, we recall the words of our Lord Jesus Christ: 'Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God' (Matt 5:9). Today, that calling feels heavier than ever before. When the 'spirit of fear' threatens to consume our hearts, we must anchor ourselves in the 'spirit of power, and of love, and of a sound mind' (2 Tim 1:7).

“First, I call upon the global Church to join us in urgent, unceasing prayer. We implore God to protect the innocent—the mothers, the children, and the elderly—who are caught in the crossfire of this 'Operation Epic Fury' and the subsequent 'crushing responses.' We pray specifically for a 'sound mind' for the leaders of the United States, Israel, and Iran, that they might recognize the futility of this bloodshed and turn back from the precipice of a global catastrophe.

“Second, we must offer each other the sanctuary of Christian love. I therefore urge our clergy and laity to be beacons of comfort. In a time of 'regime change' rhetoric and military ultimatums, let our message be the unchanging promise of Christ’s peace: to build each other up (1 Cor 8:1), for our hope is not in the strength of armadas or missile shields, but in the Prince of Peace.

“Finally, we must remain 'Bridge Builders.' Even as diplomatic windows seem to slam shut, the Church must keep the doors of reconciliation open. We refuse to see our neighbors as enemies, whether they be in Tehran, Tel Aviv, or the military bases of the Gulf. I extend an urgent invitation to the wider Anglican Communion and all people of goodwill: Intercede for us now. The hour is late, and the danger is great. We remain “battered and bruised, but not defeated.” May the peace of God, which passes all understanding, guard our hearts and minds in Christ Jesus.

“In Christ,
The Most Reverend Dr Hosam E. Naoum
Primate and President Bishop
The Province of Jerusalem & the Middle East”


For our part in South Africa, it is abundantly clear that the men of violence have nailed diplomacy into a coffin and  decided that anyone can  kill and invade anyone. In the light of this, we have to call for a de-escalation of the conflict, but just as importantly, we must ask, what does it mean in practical terms to pursue Jesus's exhortation, “Blessed are the peace makers”. What does a sustainable peace mean, because anything short of this should be repudiated?

Now let us pray:

Loving God, Prince of Peace, we pray today for our sisters and brothers across the Middle East;
Look with mercy upon those who fear the terror of bombs from the sky,
Protect the innocent caught in the crossfire,
Be with those fleeing from their homes in a desperate search for places of safety;
Comfort those who mourn,
Defeat the schemes of men of violence; and
Strengthen the hands of those who even now work for peace.

Lord God,
    Bless the people of the Middle East;
    Protect their vulnerable children;
    Transform their divided leaders;
    Heal their wounded communities,
    Restore their human dignity,
    and give them lasting peace.
    Amen.