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| A Zoom meeting with young people | 
On
          Easter Monday I had a wonderful discussion with the youth of
          our
          Province, from Angola to South Africa to Mozambique, which
          they
          joined on the Zoom video-conference facility. 
    
The
          young people, including those involved with the Provincial
          Youth
          Council and the Anglican Students' Federation, as well as
          others,
          were exuberant and irreverent, demonstrating a sense of
          purpose and
          energy. They believe this time of the coronavirus will come
          and it
          will go, and that it will in the end be resolved. I was also
          touched
          by a number of their concerns – for example, that priests will
          continue to be paid despite lockdowns, and that parishioners
          ought to
          keep up their giving. 
    
I
          have been very disturbed by the photos circulating in the
          media of
          brutal treatment of people by the security forces in South
          Africa
          during the lockdown. They have a difficult job to do, and we
          praise
          them and appreciate them when they do well. But I am pained
          when
          people's rights are trampled on by the army, and I call on the
          SANDF
          to ensure that their troops behave humanely. 
    
The
          worst reports have come from Alexandra in Johannesburg, where
          I grew
          up, and the scenes there evoke bad memories of police and army
          abuses
          there in the 1970s and 1980s. When I see them, much as I want
          to
          maintain hope, I shiver inside with fear because I know that
          such
          behaviour can trigger unintended consequences. The rule of law
          remains the rule of law, even in a crisis. 
    
I
          want to thank Bishop Charles May for representing me at a
          meeting
          which the South African Council of Churches had with President
          Ramaphosa in
          recent
          days. The SACC is in the process of compiling valuable
          recommendations for both short- and long-term responses to our
          situation, and must be commended for their work. Many of you
          will
          have received details via MyAnglican of their new website,
        coronachurch.org.za which
          has useful and
          accurate
        information on the
        pandemic in
          all 11 of South Africa's official languages.
As
          the Season of Easter begins and we move towards Low Sunday, I
          want to
          make a renewed call for us never to tire of praying. Often at
          a time
          of trauma, we first go through a stage of disbelief, and then
          of
          despair. But let's keep on focussing, as the youth did, on the
          fact
          that even this shall pass. 
    
Thank
          you to those who have voiced your concern about me looking
          after
          myself. As we look ahead, I am inspired how the Psalmist
          throughout
          the Psalms often starts out by lamenting, then remonstrates
          with God,
          then petitions God, and finally ends up thanking and praising
          God. 
    
I
          want us to look at that formula, and say, “Yes, we are going
          through difficult times, yes, this is a virus which can spread
          exponentially and will get worse before it gets better, but we must thank God for all those who are working to overcome the
          disease and
          for the fact that its spread is not as bad as it could have
          been.”
We
          should also look ahead to life after lockdown, and to a time
          when I
          believe we should arrange huge thanksgiving events and
          services,
          acknowledging that mistakes have been made, that people have
          struggled with grief and loss, that people have gone hungry,
          but that
          when we thought we were alone, God through his mercy and grace
          was
          walking with us and continues to walk with us. And I hope such
          thanksgiving will happen annually, into perpetuity. 
    
Two
          final notes:
- 
        The Consecration service of Bishop-elect Joshua Louw as Bishop of Table Bay has been postponed to a date yet to be decided;
 - 
        A very happy birthday to Professor John Suggit, that theological powerhouse in our Church, who turned 98 today. Yes, 98! What a blessing he has been and remains for our Church over many generations.
 
God
          bless. 
††Thabo

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