Funeral of the Revd Canon Thomas Matthew Karl Groepe
Cathedral of St George the Martyr
Preacher and President
The Most Revd Dr Thabo Makgoba
Archbishop of Cape Town
24th June 2023
Funeral of the Revd Canon Thomas Matthew Karl Groepe
Cathedral of St George the Martyr
Preacher and President
The Most Revd Dr Thabo Makgoba
Archbishop of Cape Town
24th June 2023
The text of Archbishop Thabo's June Ad Laos, published in the Cape Town diocesan newsletter, Good Hope:
June
is Youth Month in South Africa, and the youth uprising of June 16,
1976, is a painful reminder that if we are determined enough, we can
use our agency and the Holy Spirit to take practical action to
address the ills of our society and turn around the lives of our
young people, many of whom face very bleak prospects at present.
In
our national life, the prospects of big business coming alongside the
government to help revive our transport and crime fighting agencies –
in the form of Transnet, the Hawks and the National Prosecuting
Authority – is a good sign, both in addressing the desperate need
to grow the economy and create jobs, and in ensuring that the corrupt
do not undermine the prospects of fixing our nation.
But
as we address corruption and growing our economy, we must urgently
find practical ways of addressing youth unemployment in Southern
Africa. Youth Day is of course followed by Mandela Day on July 18th,
when the Nelson Mandela Foundation urges us to volunteer for the good
of our communities. This year, I encourage you to follow how God
leads your heart in deciding how to observe both days, but please
spare a thought and take some practical action to improve the
employability of our youth.
In your parishes and
dioceses, I strongly urge you to look at implementing the suggestions
made by the report of the church's Commission on Youth Unemployment,
which included the following recommendations:
• Establishing a database recording the personnel resources
available among church members:
• Using
the database to set up mentors to provide guidance to young people
needing work;
• Budgetting to employ more
young people in parishes and dioceses;
•
Organising workshops to help young people write their C. V.s and
develop their skills; and
• Making
church-owned land available for business ventures.
You can read
the full report here >>
At Easter and in last month's Ad Laos I challenged you to
adopt the “Archbishop's Ballot Challenge (ABC)”, the aim of which
is to persuade young people to take their futures in their hands, to
end the understandable scepticism they have about the political
process in South Africa, and to register to vote. This month I am
pleased to say that the SA Council of Churches' Youth Desk, as well
as their Gauteng and Western Cape branches, have taken seriously the
ABC and its invitation to the youth. We will be having a webinar on
June 24th to explore ways of engaging this initiative further.
I
also want to repeat my appeal of last month for generous donations to
the College of the Transfiguration in Makhanda as it celebrates its
30th anniversary in August. Pray too for the College, and if you feel
called, consider joining a preaching course, or devoting a year of
your life to teaching there.
In a year’s time, from
June 13th to 15th 2024, we will hold our Diocesan Synod. Please do
start planning and reflecting on what missional and ministry matters
are vital for you for the extension of God’s reign, especially post
Covid, so that we can plan appropriately for the future.
Finally,
winter in Cape Town is wet and cold, and especially so this winter.
Please continue and if possible step up your pastoral work of feeding
and clothing those without shelter and food. Your action and presence
in their struggle for human dignity is a vital and real prophetic
witness which is desperately needed.
Once again thank you
for your prayers for my cataract procedures on both eyes. They have
been successful, so now I can chuckle and sing along with Johnny Nash
or Jimmy Cliff, “I can see clearly now the rain is gone” (though
not yet in Cape Town!).
Keep warm, stay safe and God
bless you.
†† Thabo Cape Town
DIOCESE OF GEORGE
The Chrism Eucharist and Renewal of Ordination Vows
The Most Revd Dr Thabo Makgoba, Archbishop and Metropolitan of ACSA
The Cathedral Church of Saint Mark the Evangelist
Thursday, 8th June 2023, 10:00
As published in the May issue of Good Hope, the newsletter of the Diocese of Cape Town:
As we look ahead to Youth Day on June 16, when we celebrate the
contributions of young people to winning freedom in our country, I want
to extend the “Archbishop's Ballot Challenge” which I issued to the
youth at Easter, and urge Rectors, all our clergy and Parish Councils to
take a lead in this campaign.
Please make our houses of worship “voting sanctuaries”, where young
people can be inspired to follow the example of previous generations,
and use the freedom denied to their forebears to transform South Africa
into the country we want.
As I said at Easter, I understand the attitudes of young people who are
disillusioned with politics and public life, and scornful of the
self-dealing and corruption of some of our politicians. But most of us
neither can nor want to leave the country, and the only way to turn the
situation around is to do something about it ourselves.
So in the lead-up to next year's national and provincial elections, I
urge parishes to adopt your Archbishop's Ballot Challenge (ABC) and to
provide voter education for young people. Perhaps using the slogan,
“Registering to vote is as simple as ABC”, you could facilitate voter
registration for both those who have become eligible to vote since 2019,
as well as those who have not bothered to register in the past. You
could also host workshops on voter education and provide instruction on
our electoral system, if necessary partnering with local businesses to
finance such an effort.
Then encourage young people to campaign for the parties, the candidates
and the policies of their choice, and help them get to polling stations.
In that way we can bring about a peaceful revolution in which we
eliminate corruption, ensure good and efficient governance and save our
country.
This month I also urge clergy to take care of themselves by joining
“Caring for the Shepherd”, clergy wellness meetings being organised by
our Safe and Inclusive Church initiative on May 20th. After the
devastation and intense pastoral pressures of the Covid-19 pandemic, we
need to say to our clergy in particular, “Sawubona! We see you and we
are anxious for your welfare.”
And of course, load-shedding now brings its own pressure to bear on
clergy, causing serious disruption and emotional distress to many of us.
At Bishopscourt, we have assumed our Sawubona Archdeaconry teas, to
which we invite the clergy of the Diocese to meet and share tea with one
another and their archbishop. Please come and be welcomed when you
receive the date for your Archdeaconry tea. I look forward to seeing you.
Looking ahead to an important Provincial event, the College of the
Transfiguration in Makhanda celebrates its 30th anniversary from August
2nd to 6th this year. Please pray for the College, and visit them if you
can make it. If you are a New Testament scholar and feel called to share
your expertise, there is a vacancy for a lecturer there, so you might
offer yourself to teach.
But whoever you are, clergy or lay, please donate generously to CoTT for
their 30th anniversary – residential theological education is a powerful
instrument of our church, and the College needs your financial support.
As we celebrate our Lord's Ascension and look forward to the celebration
of the empowering of the Holy Spirit on the Day of Pentecost, please
keep in your prayers those who have been bereaved this Eastertide,
including the family of Dean Michael Weeder, who lost their mother,
Sheila (Sarah) Weeder at the age of 90 on May 6th. May the souls of the
departed rest in peace and rise in glory.
God bless you.
†† Thabo Cape Town
The Most Revd Dr Thabo Makgoba
Archbishop and Metropolitan
Opening remarks for “Existence is Resistance”
Images from Palestine
Sunday May 14th, 2023
Sisters and Brothers, Friends,
A very warm welcome to the launch of this exhibition, which, with its illuminating photographs documenting the plight of the Palestinian people, is a fitting commemoration of Nakba Day. Our congratulations go to Jimi Matthews for this important contribution to publicising the 75th anniversary of the beginning of the process in which Palestinians have been uprooted from their homes, forced to flee as refugees and continue to suffer in the Occupied Territories and elsewhere.
Jimi, there are many in Cape Town who recall the courage you and your fellow television journalists displayed in Cape Town and elsewhere in the 1980s, when you sent out into the world graphic footage which exposed to an international audience the oppression of apartheid. This exhibition reflects your continuing commitment to documenting the truth about oppression, one which is in the best traditions of the craft to which you have dedicated your life.
As men and women of faith who are concerned about the injustices of the Middle East, who are distressed by the pain of the occupation of the West Bank and Gaza, and who long for a just peace for Palestine and Israel, the people of the wider Cathedral family have been on a long journey. It goes back many decades, to the visits of Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu to Palestine and Israel in the 1980s and 1990s, to my own visits to the Holy Basin, and more recently to the declarations of the ruling bodies of the Anglican Church. During Lent this year, we heard a series of very good Bible studies which led us into a deeper understanding of the relevant theological issues.
Both our Anglican forums and the South African Council of Churches have highlighted the situation in the Holy Land, firstly because, for Christians, it is the place where Jesus was born, nurtured, crucified and raised. Our hearts ache for our Christian brothers and sisters in Palestine, whose numbers are rapidly declining. If Palestinian Christians disappear from the Middle East, what does that say about our commitment to our heritage? We dare not allow the agenda of Christian Zionism, which seeks to conflate the Biblical Israel with the 20th century political state of Israel, to prevail, the more so because many Christian Zionists envisage the ultimate demise of Jews as well as Muslims.
But of course our concern for Palestine and Israel goes beyond the narrow interests of Christians. People of all faiths in South Africa have both a deep understanding of what it is to live under oppression, as well as experience of how to confront and overcome unjust rule by peaceful means. And so people of all faiths can identify with the words of Desmond Tutu: “People of religion have no choice... Where there is injustice and oppression, where people are treated as if they were less than who they are, those created in the image of God, you have no choice but to oppose, and oppose vehemently... that injustice and oppression...”
In expressing our concern for the plight of Palestinians, we have experienced push-back from both Jewish and Christian Zionists. But as Desmond Tutu reiterated time and again, we are opposed not to the Jewish people but to those policies of the governments of Israel which oppress Palestinians.
I think particularly of the growth of Jewish settlements on the West Bank of the Jordan. Last year at the Lambeth Conference the world's Anglican bishops endorsed a statement by the Episcopal Diocese of Jerusalem and the Middle East stating that a two-state solution remains the best hope of ending the occupation and fulfilling Palestinian aspirations for self-determination. But speaking for myself, I have to say that the expansion of settlements, combined with changes to Israeli law, are increasingly rendering the idea of a two-state solution as one that is unattainable.
As a civil society consultation organised by the United Nations concluded just a few weeks ago, the Palestinian people continue to experience, and I quote, “increasing levels of dispossession, displacement, violence, human rights violations and insecurity.” Indeed, the consultation described their current plight as “an ongoing Nakba”.
Faced with such a situation, if we stand by and keep quiet, we will be complicit in the continuing oppression of the Palestinians. Last year, our church's Provincial Standing Committee urged Europe and North America to take stronger action to ensure that Israel is held accountable for its actions and that Palestinian rights are upheld. In the spirit of the PSC resolution, I urge the government of the United States to ensure that Israel is held fully accountable for the killing a year ago of the Palestinian American journalist, Shireen Abu Akleh of Al Jazeera. The statements of Democratic senators in the U.S. Congress suggest that the Biden administration is an accessory after the fact to a cover-up of her shooting by an Israeli soldier. As Senator van Hollen of Maryland has said, “we need to make sure that this isn’t swept under the rug.”
Will we ever celebrate peace for Palestinians in our life time? If we are to do that, we need to pray and work for the land we call holy, for an end to the occupation of Gaza and the West Bank and for full recognition of their inalienable right to self-determination.
We yearn for the peace and wholeness of God to be made manifest in Palestine, in Israel and among their neighbouring countries. And so I conclude with a prayer we adopted at the last meeting of our Provincial Synod:
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
* * * * *
Address to the 2023 Western Cape Synod
of the Nederduitse Gereformeerde Kerk
Archbishop Thabo Makgoba
Monday May 8th, 15h30
Voorsitter – my vriend, Dominee Nelis,
Ondervoorsitter,
Aktuarius,
Skriba,
Ander lede van die Moderatuur,
Susters en Broers in Christus:
Ek groet julle in die heilige naam van onse Here en Verlosser, Jesus Christus: Goeie Middag!
Dit is vir my 'n besondere groot voorreg om hierdie nege-en-veertigste sitting van die Sinode van Wes Kaapland aan te spreek. En dit is nie net 'n groot voorreg nie; as 'n mens die lang geskiedenis van verhoudings tussen ons twee kerke inagneem, is dit miskien 'n historiese gebeurtenis. Baie, baie dankie vir die uitnodiging. Namens die hele Anglikaanse Kerk van Suidelike Afrika, ons waardeer die uitnodiging meer as wat ek in my swak Afrikaans kan sĂȘ. Ek is net jammer dat ek nie fisies by julle kan wees nie. Alhoewel hierdie nuwe tegnologie ons help om meer verpligtinge in ons skedules in te pas, kan dit nie persoonlike kontak tussen ons vervang nie.