The Archbishop's column in the July issue of Good Hope, the newsletter of the Diocese of Cape Town. July 18 marks the centenary of the birth of Nelson Mandela.
This month we celebrate the 100th anniversary of Madiba's birth. As Christians, we know that our God in Jesus Christ, is the God of the living and the dead. In that spirit, we give thanks for Madiba's life.
This month we celebrate the 100th anniversary of Madiba's birth. As Christians, we know that our God in Jesus Christ, is the God of the living and the dead. In that spirit, we give thanks for Madiba's life.
During his last years, I had the opportunity to
touch and feel his spirituality when I ministered to him. His
faith was complex, but believing as he did that “religion is in
our blood” as South Africans, he of all our presidents ensured
that the voice of faith – not only of Christians – was heard in
public life.
I am sad when I see young people attacking Madiba's legacy and claiming he “sold us out” by not building us the Promised Land in his lifetime. We ought not to take the events of history and look at them through the lens of today's eyes; when we do, we are bound to be insensitive to the realities that our forebears faced and to pass naïve and shallow judgements on their achievements.
We need to remember that 30 years ago, as Madiba entered discussions ahead of his release, then began negotiations with apartheid leaders, our country was at war. Historians describe it as a low-intensity civil war but for us and those communities who saw thousands of men, women and children killed it was most definitely a high-intensity war. And if you want to end a war you don't do it through more war – especially when your forces, in this case MK and APLA, have no prospect of military victory any time soon.
Madiba and his fellow leaders had to make compromises to end the war, and yes, we are feeling the impact of those compromises today. But they had to be made for the sake of peace and for the luxury of being alive to look back and criticise them. As it was, our fathers and mothers, our grandfathers and grandmothers, made huge sacrifices for our liberation for most if not all of their lives.
I am sad when I see young people attacking Madiba's legacy and claiming he “sold us out” by not building us the Promised Land in his lifetime. We ought not to take the events of history and look at them through the lens of today's eyes; when we do, we are bound to be insensitive to the realities that our forebears faced and to pass naïve and shallow judgements on their achievements.
We need to remember that 30 years ago, as Madiba entered discussions ahead of his release, then began negotiations with apartheid leaders, our country was at war. Historians describe it as a low-intensity civil war but for us and those communities who saw thousands of men, women and children killed it was most definitely a high-intensity war. And if you want to end a war you don't do it through more war – especially when your forces, in this case MK and APLA, have no prospect of military victory any time soon.
Madiba and his fellow leaders had to make compromises to end the war, and yes, we are feeling the impact of those compromises today. But they had to be made for the sake of peace and for the luxury of being alive to look back and criticise them. As it was, our fathers and mothers, our grandfathers and grandmothers, made huge sacrifices for our liberation for most if not all of their lives.
If you question what they achieved, then look at Syria
today, where more than a quarter of a million people have been
killed, more than six million have been forced to flee the country
and another six million have been driven from their homes and
displaced within the country. Or look at South Sudan, where the
Anglican Church is a strong force. There, Salva Kiir and Riek
Machar, who once served as president and vice-president together,
fell out two years after they achieved their independence. Five
years later they are still at war and successive rounds of peace
talks have been abortive. There's no spirit of compromise, and
what's happening as a result? There's no movement and people
continue dying.
Would we have time, or even be alive, to criticize the compromises of Madiba's generation if they had not made them? Rather than look backwards at what we cannot change, let us rather look forward. Our forebears brought us into the Promised Land: it is up to us now to build it.
Would we have time, or even be alive, to criticize the compromises of Madiba's generation if they had not made them? Rather than look backwards at what we cannot change, let us rather look forward. Our forebears brought us into the Promised Land: it is up to us now to build it.
We need to focus on the challenges of today,
raise them to a higher level and re-negotiate how we move our
country forward to deal with the horrendous inequality we still
suffer. We need to end inequality of opportunity. We need to put
justice at the heart of what we seek to achieve, and be
sacrificial in redistributing that which God has given to all
South Africans to benefit the poorest of the poor – who seem to be
ignored in the current debates. Above all, we need to become
courageous like Madiba, wise like Madiba, and take the debates and
decisions over the structuring of the economy and the distribution
of land to a higher level and ensure apt policy to achieve these.
As we celebrate Madiba's life, let's also celebrate the long lives of those in our own Diocese who have lived to the age of 90 and beyond; let's congratulate them, wish them well and show them that we love and care for them too. Let's also join others in service of our communities, and especially the poorest of the poor, on Nelson Mandela Day, Wednesday July 18. As the Letter of James said, faith without works is dead. So I urge you in Madiba's memory to commit yourself to voluntary service of some sort – you can find details on this page of the Mandela foundation's website: https://www.mandeladay.com/pages/what-can-i-do
Thank God for the recent rain, pray that it may be sustained, and please continue to limit your usage to 50 litres a day each.
God bless you
As we celebrate Madiba's life, let's also celebrate the long lives of those in our own Diocese who have lived to the age of 90 and beyond; let's congratulate them, wish them well and show them that we love and care for them too. Let's also join others in service of our communities, and especially the poorest of the poor, on Nelson Mandela Day, Wednesday July 18. As the Letter of James said, faith without works is dead. So I urge you in Madiba's memory to commit yourself to voluntary service of some sort – you can find details on this page of the Mandela foundation's website: https://www.mandeladay.com/pages/what-can-i-do
Thank God for the recent rain, pray that it may be sustained, and please continue to limit your usage to 50 litres a day each.
God bless you
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