Alleluia,
Christ is Risen! He is risen indeed! Alleluia!
Sisters
and Brothers in Christ, as we hear again the glorious story of the
Resurrection and its message of new beginnings, may each one of you
experience the fullness of Christ’s gift of abundant life. May you
know the joy, the hope and the peace that the Season of Easter
brings.
Thank
you to the Dean, the clergy, the Churchwardens and other lay leaders
of the parish, the music director and the organist, the choir, lay
ministers, servers, those who arranged the flowers, and everyone
responsible, year in and year out, for this wonderful service and,
indeed, all the worship in this, the mother church of our Province.
We are indebted to you all.
Luke’s
account of the Resurrection tells us of two men in dazzling raiment
who meet the women at the tomb. In Mark, it is a young man with a
long white robe. In Matthew it is an angel of the Lord. In John it is
two angels, and yet for all the discrepancies, there is no querying
the most basic fact and that is that the tomb was empty. And that is
what matters. The empty tomb is what constitutes the beginning of
something new, of seeing things differently. In Luke’s poetic way,
he describes it as “the first day of the week”!
It
is the threshold of something radically new. It comes up hard against
the details of the neatly-folded grave clothes, the stone that has
been rolled away and the perennial question of why – when Jesus
seems to have “evaporated” out of the grave clothes and left them
lying in perfect order, why did He need to roll the stone away?
Could he not just as easily have evaporated through the rock of the
tomb? But that kind of speculation is surely missing the point of the
empty tomb and the stone which is rolled away: it is not about
finding a way for Jesus to get out of the tomb, it is about opening
the tomb so that we can enter.
It
is about helping us to come face-to-face with all that lies dead
inside of us, all the possibilities and potential that have been
crushed, the inspirations that we have been too afraid to follow and
have buried safely out of sight. It is a call to enter the tomb and
acknowledge that something new has come to life, that those powerful
negative forces in our lives do not have to define us or paralyse us
eternally. Something greater is at work here.
Before
reflecting further on the hope that Easter can bring, let me talk a
little about the reason we need it so desperately in our national
life in South Africa today. For Easter’s message of hope, of new
beginnings, can be a powerful counter to the mood of hopelessness and
fear that pervade the lives of many as we contemplate the state of
our nation at this time.
Why
do I say there is a mood of hopelessness? Well, many live without
hope because 50 to 60% of our young people are unemployed, and those
without jobs see no sign of the growth in the economy that we need if
we are to create decent work. Many live without hope because some of
the teachers responsible for preparing the young for jobs in the
modern economy are failing – in many cases they are failing even to
turn up on time to take their classes. Many people live without hope
because their relatives are dying unnecessarily in badly-run public
hospitals. Many live without hope of seeing efficient service
delivery to their homes – witness the 14,700 public protests over
poor service delivery every year.
And
many are living in fear because they see no clear prospects for a
better future. In the Old Struggle, that against apartheid, I recall
living in fear because at 15 I was too young to carry a pass, but
looked older than I actually was, so got arrested and disappeared
into a jail until I could persuade a magistrate that I had a valid
reason for not carrying one. I recall the fear of being chased by a
Hippo armoured car and being hidden by a mechanic in Alexandra
Township under the oily cars he was fixing. Later, in my activist
years, I feared the knock on the door at night.
Now
my, and our, fears are different. But they are just as real and they
weigh down on us just as much as our old fears. I am feeling a heavy
burden of fear – fear for my family and yours, fear for South
Africa. We fear the consequences of a downgrade in our
creditworthiness, leading to recession and even more job losses. Will
those of us who have jobs lose them next month or next year? What
will we do to replace our wages if we do? What happens when the State
runs out of money to pay social benefits? And as your Archbishop,
when I see the absence of moral authority in our country, I feel
fear. When I see public representatives on gravy trains of sleaze and
dishonesty, oblivious to those who are hungry, I feel fear.
Someone
said recently, “This isn't the South Africa we all want!” In the
case of those who benefit from the corrupt awarding of government
contracts, I disagree. This is the South Africa they want. Those on
the gravy train of corruption don't want to get off. They
don't want the “train” to stop. They love this South
Africa just as it is – serving their and their families’ needs.
They have forgotten the poor and they are shameless about having done
so.
Why
is it, when I watch what goes on in our Parliament, as I did on the
night of the State of the Nation Address, am I so disheartened? A
friend of mine quips that if there was a roll call in Parliament,
many MPs wouldn't know whether to say “present” or “not
guilty”. There is no sign that Parliament as a whole, comprised as
it is of people deployed by their parties to serve party interests,
shows any interest in holding the Executive accountable.
The
outcome of the ANC’s national executive meeting last weekend gives
me no more hope than Parliament does. I read that the meeting
mandated the ANC's top six officials and its National Working
Committee “to gather all pertinent information about the
allegations (around the Gupta family) to enable the ANC to take
appropriate action...” But President Zuma is one of the top six and
a member of the National Working Committee. How can he be both player
and referee?
From
this pulpit at Christmas, I said we should not make the mistake of
thinking that the solution to our problems lies in simply replacing
one leader with another. I said our new struggle for justice and true
liberation is about values and institutions rather than
personalities. I stand by that, despite the feelings of some in the
religious community that we should issue a joint call for the
President to step down from office. But on this matter of
investigating his relationship with business families, President Zuma
needs to step aside – not step down as President of the country,
but to step aside from his party role and recuse himself from the
ANC’s deliberations. He cannot investigate himself.
The
only alternative to him doing that would be for the ANC to do what it
did very credibly when there were accusations of abuses in its
military camps in exile, and that is to appoint an independent
commission made up of elders of the movement, respected by all sides,
to investigate and make recommendations on the matter. I cannot see
how anything else will have credibility, even for those within the
movement.
I
appeal to President Zuma: Mr President, give the country hope. We,
and you, deserve better. We, and you, can do better. We, and you,
must do better. We need to rise up and find the same courage that
emboldened us to fight and win the Old Struggle, to fight the New
Struggle, a struggle to end inequality, especially the inequality of
opportunity.
For
us as Christians, Easter empowers us for this struggle. Easter
dispels hopelessness. Easter banishes fear. I came across a
thought-provoking line in the reflections of the spiritual writer,
Ronald Rolheiser. He says: “I received an Easter card which said
‘May you leave behind you a string of empty tombs.’ That is the
challenge of Easter: to resurrect daily, to leave behind us a string
of empty tombs, to let our crucified hopes and dreams be resurrected
so that, like Christ, our lives will radiate the truth that in the
end, everything is good and reality can be trusted.”
In
times of personal darkness, in times of national distress, when
hopelessness and fear seem to be all around us, it is worth holding
onto the truth which Rolheiser underlines, that given half a chance,
life wins out over and above all our tombs, healing breaks through
even the most stubborn grief, hope emerges in places that we often
least expect to find it.
That
truth, not the discrepancies of the number of witnesses, is – I
believe – at the heart of the empty tomb, and that makes every
Easter a wonderfully consoling moment for us.
May
God bless you and your family this Easter.
†Thabo Cape Town
†Thabo Cape Town
Wonderful homily. God bless you Archbishop ..
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