Sermon preached at the Thanksgiving Service for Mrs Nontsikelelo Albertina Sisulu, on her 100th birthday, at Holy Cross Parish, Orlando West, on October 21, 2018:
Readings: Job 38: 1-7 (34-41), Psalm 104:1-10, 35-36; Hebrews
5:1-10; Mark 10:35-45
May I speak in the name of God the Father, Son and the Comforter. Amen
A warm welcome to you all on
this wonderful occasion where we commemorate one of the icons of our
struggle. Welcome especially to you, leaders in Government, and to
all the members of the Sisulu family here present.
Thank you also to the church
representatives present, to you Bishop Steve for hosting us in your
Diocese, and to the Revd Lankiri Thaba, the Rector of Holy Cross
Parish, situated just across the way from the home from which Mama
Sisulu held her family together through so many years and through so
much sacrifice.
Thank you for inviting me to
share in this Thanksgiving Service with you as we mark the 100th
year of Mama Sisulu's birth. When we gathered for her funeral at
Orlando Stadium across the valley seven years ago, I shared a message
about encouragement and comfort, of how Mama Sisulu, who never saw
herself as a leader, embodied
the
characteristics of a great leader. She inspired others to dream more,
to learn more, to do more and to become more. Today,
celebrating Mama’s 100th
birthday. we meet to give thanks to God for her life.
Nontsikelelo Albertina Sisulu
was never here merely
to exist. She lived to make a difference, and her contributions are
what makes her life so significant. She not only made South Africa a
better place, but she made the world immeasurably better, and that
ultimately is what reallly counts. We are her legacy.
I am grateful that there are
others here whose task it will be to pay an adequate tribute to Mama
Sisulu, since the scope and quality of her life and work is such that
it defies description in a short sermon. However, there are a few
points that I do feel qualified to make. The first arises from my
own experience as a young person growing up in Pimville. One of my
most vivid memories is going with other young activists to consult
Mama in the 1980s to guide us around the Release Mandela Campaign. We
were embarking by bus from Johannesburg to Cape Town for the launch
of the United Democratic Front, of which she was to become the
co-president. And what I remember most clearly is the forthright
questioning she subjected us to. It wasn’t enough that we were
protesting – she wouldn’t let us leave until we had clearly,
carefully and succinctly explained to her, not what we were doing,
but why we were doing it. She was both confirming and galvanizing our
conviction, so that our cause was driven by our hearts as much as by
our heads.
I remember that during her
funeral, I reflected on the fact that these days – or at least in
those days – criticism was too often labelled anti-revolutionary.
It is a refreshing ray of hope and sunshine that our current
administration encourages, not discourages, speaking out. We’re
seeing the rule of law taken very seriously, and our most senior
leaders are following both Mama and Jesus’ admonition, “the truth
will set you free.”
The second observation I want
to make is that in many ways, the story of Mama Albertina Sisulu
encapsulates in a single, remarkable human being, the story of our
people, and especially the story of our struggle. She was both a
leader in her own right, as her presidency of the UDF demonstrates,
and at the same time she was also the matriarch of a generation of
fighters against injustice and oppression. If she were alive today,
I’m confident that she again would be on the front lines of the New
Struggle: the struggle for equality of opportunity.
As one writer said in the
early 1990s, Mama’s family story is heroic: “There can be few
families in the history of South Africa,” the writer said, “that
have been torn apart as relentlessly by the political struggle, and
few that have survived it so intact.” That is a sad fact, but it's
true. For a period of 30 years, at least one member of the family was
always in prison and at least one in exile. At one time in the 1980s,
six were in prison. Albertina spent most of the 24 years Walter was
in prison either restricted, under house-arrest or detained—and
once, in solitary confinement for almost a year.
My third observation arises
from my second. Elinor Sisulu writes in her wonderful biography of
the Sisulus of how when Mama went to a Roman Catholic boarding school
at Matatiele in 1936, she was introduced to a routine in which the
school day began at 4 am. Elinor quotes Mama as saying, "We were
generally trained to be orderly and organised." It seems to me,
that this could be said of Mama Sisulu for the whole of her life.
Through all of her suffering and the suffering of her children, she
remained a model of heroism, and a figure of dignity and discipline.
I like to think that it was in recognition both of her own leadership
in the struggle and her status as a disciplined member of her
movement that she was chosen in 1994 to be the Member of Parliament
who would rise to formally propose that Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela
should be elected as the first President of a democratic South
Africa. I think we can justifiably describe Mama Sisulu as one of the
mothers of our nation.
Turning to today's readings,
the writer of the Letter to the Hebrews (5:1-10) says that those
called to high priestly office have to fulfil certain qualifications.
A candidate had to be selected from among the people and thus be able
to represent them before God. Also he or she had to be called by God.
The writer moves on to show how Jesus more than fulfilled these
qualifications during his time on earth.
This is through the reference
to Christ’s agony in the Garden of Gethsemane. He did not shrink
from physical suffering and death by crucifixion, but accepted the
indescribable agony of taking humankind’s sin on himself. Jesus was
made perfect through temptation, suffering and his ordeal on the
Cross. Though he was the eternal son of God, it was necessary for him
as the incarnate son to learn obedience – not because he was
disobedient but because he was called on to obey to an extent he had
never before experienced. The temptations he faced were real and the
battle for victory was difficult. Where Adam failed and fell, Jesus
resisted and prevailed.
Friends, when we look at the
life and witness of Mama Sisulu today through her struggle for
freedom and what the Hebrews scripture is saying, there are
parallels. What can we learn from the example set before us by Jesus?
What can we learn from the example set before us by Mama? Mama was
one of my and South Africa’s most influential teachers. As such she
affected
eternity; history still cannot accurately record where her influence
stops.
In our Gospel reading, Mark
(10:35-45) gives us another picture of leadership during Jesus’
time, in the story of the desire for positions of prestige and power
of the sons of Zebedee, James and John. Matthew in his Gospel
(20:20,21) mentions that this request came through their mother,
Salome, the sister of Mary – Jesus’ mother. So, James and John
would therefore be first cousins to Jesus. This was a family attempt
to gain position, probably to steal a march on – to have a
surreptitious advantage over – Peter, a third member of the trio.
Jesus’ response to their
request was that it would be realised only if they willingly
submitted to servanthood. He told the two brothers that the positions
to which they aspired – to sit on Jesus's left and right – were
only for the Father, that is God, to bestow. And those positions
would be bestowed not as a result of favouritism but on the basis of
fitness of character.
It is as if Jesus was saying
to the relatives of a local mayor in South Africa today: you can get
a job if you are fit and qualified to do it, not because you are the
mayor's cousin. What would Jesus be saying today to directors of the
VBS bank in Venda, whose directors and the politically connected
stole from the poor instead of serving them? The sons of Zebedee had
forgotten their mission and had misunderstood the mission of Jesus
Christ: they were drunk on power, status and position and had
forgotten that they were called to be servants of the people. Jesus
explains that those who are truly powerful are the ones who deliver:
so we can see that service delivery is in the Bible!
When the other disciples
heard this, they were bitter at the two brothers. Jesus responded by
taking them aside and explaining the essential difference between
worldly greatness and spiritual greatness. In the kingdom of God,
true greatness flows from lowly and voluntary service, as the Letter
to the Hebrews also indicates.
Friends, what is unique about
Jesus in this Gospel is that he practised what he preached. He is the
embodiment of his own ethic. His work is presented in two parts –
to serve and to give. Mark clearly explains that the ministry of the
Son is to serve or be of service. What can we learn from the example
set before us by Jesus and from the example of service and sacrifice
presented to us by Mama Sisulu?
What do their examples tell
us about how to respond to the role of values, of values-based
decision-making and of moral leadership? We need to support those who
are courageously fighting corruption and greed in our country. The
worst diseases in the the world are not just AIDS, Ebola or malaria;
they include corruption. And while there might not yet be cures for
the first three diseases, there is one for corruption. And that is
transparency.
As our leaders sit here in
God’s church today, please know, we the Church stand with you,
behind you and for you – if you say “No” to corruption! You can
do better. You must do better. I know, you will do better.
What is our pledge as we move
forward from the centenary of Mama Sisulu's birth? It must be to be
of service to God's people and our nation. It must be to join the New
Struggle with the same fervor, the same passion, and the same
conviction as Mama Sisulu had for the Old Struggle. The gap between
the rich and the poor is increasing daily. The poor are highly
marginalised. The crime rate is alarming. People are picketing for
better service delivery in their thousands, in hundreds of places
around the country every year. This is a great concern, especially if
we are to ensure peaceful elections in 2019. There is a great need to
address political stability, education, health care, job creation and
the economic welfare of our people.
As Archbishop, I commit
myself today to play my part, and to keep on pressing politicians and
government to play theirs also. At the same time, we acknowledge the
many positive achievements since the dawn of democracy, many bright
light achievements which we need to celebrate.
As the Psalmist praises God
for all creation and the glory of the natural world, may we also
praise God for creating the terrestrial features of sea and land, for
supplying our needs and enabling our lives. And may we respond to
God's generosity to us by following the examples of Jesus and Mama
Sisulu by sharing that generosity for the benefit of all of God's
people.
God loves you… and so do I.
God bless you, your families,
our President, and God bless South Africa.
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