Church unity and democratic transformation: perspectives on ecclesiology and ethics in South Africa.
De Gruchy, John W.
A semi-personal preface
In 1968 I was appointed jointly to the staff of the South African
Council of Churches (SACC) as director of communication and studies, and
as secretary to the newly established Church Unity Commission (CUC). My
work during the five years I served the SACC was determined by the
growing church struggle against apartheid. This found expression in the
publication of "The Message to the People of South Africa",
the Study Project on Christianity in Apartheid Society (Spro-cas), and
the conflict within the churches and between them and the state which
erupted with the launching of the WCC's Programme to Combat Racism
(PCR) in 1970. My work, as secretary of the CUC, was very different, for
the mandate of the commission was to unite the participating churches,
Anglican, Congregational, Methodist and Presbyterian, within a common
organic structure. My twofold task was, in many ways, schizophrenic.
Whereas the witness of the SACC invariably created division and tension
within the churches, the mandate of the CUC was to try and overcome the
traditional sources of division and foster unity. The former task called
for courage, the latter for ecumenical diplomacy.
At a time when both church and society were being tom apart by
racial conflict and the escalation of violence, it was exceedingly
difficult to interest church leaders, ministers and church members,
especially among the black constituency of the churches, in church union
and issues of faith and order (ministry, eucharist, creeds and
confessions). Indeed, some regarded church union negotiations as a
cop-out from ecumenical participation in the apartheid struggle, a
luxury remote from the real issues facing the church and its witness.
But in any case, the very witness of the ecumenical church in South
Africa, embodied primarily in the SACC and the Christian Institute, went
in the opposite direction. Witness to the truth of the gospel meant
conflict. Confessing Jesus Christ separated sheep and goats, it brought
division not unity, at least not the kind of unity which was the
traditional goal of church union negotiations.
It was within this context that I was also busy completing my
doctoral dissertation on the ecclesiology of Dietrich Bonhoeffer,
reflecting day by day on the comparison between the German Kirchenkampf
and what was happening within our own context. In 1971, I was sent by
the CUC to the Faith and Order meeting on church unity in Salamanca in
Spain. En route I visited Eberhard Bethge, the biographer and friend of
Bonhoeffer. As he said farewell to me at Frankfurt airport he remarked,
"Of course, Dietrich would never have gone to a Faith and Order
meeting!" For Bonhoeffer, Faith and Order at the time, like the CUC
in South Africa, was busy with an agenda that was far removed from the
urgent issues of the day. And yet Bonhoeffer was deeply concerned about
the unity of the church -- but unity based on a faithful confession of
Jesus Christ. This was the issue which he addressed in his celebrated
essay on "The Confessing Church and the Ecumenical Movement"
in 1935.
The Confessing Church, Bonhoeffer declared, confronted the
ecumenical movement "in all its totality with the question of
confession".(1) I The major problem of the ecumenical movement was
its inability to be the church and speak with the voice of authority in
proclaiming the demands of Jesus Christ to a world spiralling into war.
The unity of the church, which was the concern of the ecumenical
movement, was impossible without such a concrete confession in truth.
Several decades later in South Africa the "Message to the People of
South Africa" and, later and sharper, the Kairos document likewise
rejected any cheap reconciliation among Christians or within society.
How could there be reconciliation and unity between the oppressed and
the oppressors, even if they were both baptized Christians, unless there
was repentance and a just reparation, unless unity was based on truth
and justice?
At the same time, in the encounter between the Confessing Church
and the ecumenical movement, Bonhoeffer also acknowledged that the
ecumenical movement confronted the Confessing Church with the ecumenical
imperative. The Confessing Church dared not allow its confession of the
truth to force it into an arrogant, sectarian, ghetto mentality. It had
to remember that the unity of the church, its ecumenical character, was
an integral part of its confession of Jesus Christ. So in the same way
in South Africa, we dare not ignore the imperative of church unity or
stand aloof from the worldwide discussions of Faith and Order, if we are
to be part of the ecumenical movement and discover what it means to be
one in Jesus Christ today within our own context.
In some respects the tension evident in Bonhoeffer's
description of the encounter between the Confessing Church and the
ecumenical movement has changed character since his time, not least
because of ecumenical reflection on the Kirchenkampf and
Bonhoeffer's own contribution to ecumenical thinking and praxis.(2)
Out own "church struggle" against apartheid has also
contributed in some way to this change. Nonetheless, as our project on
ethics and ecclesiology indicates, it remains a tension within the
ecumenical movement -- a tension which, if not dealt with creatively and
faithfully, could destroy our efforts to express the unity of the church
or undermine our commitment to justice, peace and the renewal of
creation. This is of particular concern to those of us who are committed
to both the search for union and the struggle for democratic
transformation in post-apartheid South Africa.
But how do you confess Jesus Christ concretely in the new
democratic context with its strong emphasis on religious plurality and
multi-culturalism, and where the issues do not have the same clear-cut
character as they had during the apartheid era? All of a sudden, the
church in South Africa finds itself in the same place as many other
churches within the oikoumene, churches which found some inspiration
from the antiapartheid witness of the church in South Africa and even
sought to develop their own "kairos theologies" modelled on
the Kairos document. Now we are all asking the same question within the
ecumenical movement: how do we confess Jesus Christ concretely and with
authority in a post-cold-war/post-apartheid, indeed, post-modern world,
both in terms of our search for unity and our struggle for justice? In
what follows I will attempt to explore the issues as they have developed
within the South African context, and relate this to our focus on moral
formation within the life of the church.
Church unity and moral formation prior to apartheid
From the perspective of our theme, the history of the church in
South Africa until recently has been one of failed attempts to express
unity and achieve union, and at the same time, a history of church
fragmentation and division.(3) I refer, for example, to the failed
attempt to unite the Anglican (CPSA) and the Dutch Reformed Church in
the 1870s, and the failure through much of the 20th century to unite the
English-speaking churches, or the settler churches and the mission
churches.(4) On the contrary, divisions within these churches were far
more common. Moreover, the rise of African independent or initiated
churches (AICs) in the late 19th-century, as well as their rapid growth
and continuing fragmentation throughout this century, and the arrival of
new denominations, notably the Pentecostal, have ensured that the church
in South Africa today is a vast and complex set of denominations and
institutions, bedevilled by the past as well as present social forces
and realities.
The reasons for this sorry story of failed church union attempts,
and the concomitant history of division, seriously exacerbated by the
ongoing fragmentation within the AICs, are many and complex. Although
matters of doctrine, theology and liturgy are often referred to in this
regard, they were by no means the sole or even chief cause of division
or the reason for the failure of church union negotiations. As in many
other places, social, personal, cultural and political forces were far
more prevalent. The churches could not unite because they reflected the
social realities present in a highly stratified country. By the same
token, they fragmented precisely because these realities often proved
stronger than any convictions about the unity which Christians have in
Jesus Christ, especially at moments of national crisis. All of this has
had serious implications on the witness of the church in the shaping of
South Africa as a country, and in the moral formation of both church
members and citizens. Christianity, instead of uniting the church and
helping to create a united nation, became the tool for legitimating
ethnic division and unjust social structures. In some respects, of
course, this may well have been providential. If, for example, the
Anglicans and the Dutch Reformed Church had united in 1870, the united
church would have reinforced white hegemony, even though it might have
helped to overcome the divisions between English and Afrikaner. This
would have resulted in a much more deeply entrenched segregation in the
church in South Africa in the long term.
But just as Christianity served a legitimating function for ethnic
division, it also provided sources for overcoming racial separation and
resisting injustice. This was the case from early on in the history of
Christianity in South Africa, and it gathered momentum in the 20th
century when Christians and Christian values played a formative role in
the emergence of the African National Congress. For the early leaders of
the ANC, Christian division, especially among blacks, was regarded as a
serious threat to the cause of African advancement. But it was also
acknowledged that Christian commitment enabled Africans to transcend
ethnic division and struggle together for their rights. Fundamental to
this was the moral formation in liberal Christian values which many
received through mission education. Whatever the failures of the
missionaries and mission education -- and there were serious ones -- and
without denying other important factors in the process, there can be
little doubt that this moral formation both united African Christians
and provided an ideological basis for the struggle against colonialism
and racism. This was part of the attraction of the Ethiopian movement,
and it also led to several attempts to create a black church, though
without success. One reason for the failure to establish a united black
church, incidentally and ironically, was the fact that there was
disagreement on doctrinal issues inherited from confessional disputes in
Europe.
This very brief sketch provides the context within which the story
of the ecumenical movement in South Africa, as embodied first in the
general missionary conferences which started in 1904, then in the
formation of the Christian Council of South Africa in 1936, and finally
in the Christian Council's reconstitution in 1967 as the South
African Council of Churches, must be located. This strand of ecumenical
endeavour has not been engaged in church union negotiations as such, but
has been focussed on mission and social witness. But in doing so it has,
of course, brought Christians and churches together in an attempt to
oppose injustice. Whatever its faults, the ecumenical movement has
attempted to be a counter-force to the prevailing powers of division and
fragmentation within Christianity, and also an agent of moral conscience
and protest even though it often found itself compromised by conflicting
interests and theological perspectives within its own ranks. The fact
is, however, that until the post-Cottesloe period (1960-), and more
especially after the Soweto uprising in 1976 when the church struggle
against apartheid began to intensify, the ecumenical witness in South
Africa was largely ineffective to counter the prevailing political
forces at work, especially Afrikaner nationalism.
Church unity and moral formation in the struggle against
apartheid
As already indicated, in the struggle against apartheid faith and
order issues, along with the search for union through the CUC, were
forced onto the back-burner of ecumenical concern. Until its banning in
1977, ecumenical unity and action were expressed through the work of the
Christian Institute and the SACC, and within those quarters the lines of
ecumenical communication were between Church and Society and their
equivalents worldwide. We discovered our unity in the struggle, not in
the resolution of doctrinal differences inherited from a European past.
We had neither the time nor the energy to deal with matters which were
of little immediate socio-political importance. More often than not, the
unity of the church within the black community was most evident at
funerals, especially those of community leaders and anti-apartheid
activists, and at political rallies held within the context of space
provided by churches. The four churches represented in the CUC were not
necessarily those which were united at the grassroots in witness and
social concern. In many local situations, other denominations, including
African indigenous churches, were sometimes more evident. From this
perspective, the CUC in distinction to the SACC was potentially divisive
as far as the struggle was concerned.
Our experience of unity in struggle was not simply pragmatic, a
form of cooperation brought about by strategic necessity. The unity
which we discovered was rooted in a commitment to Jesus Christ,
expressed in worship as well as social action. It was a unity based on
theological substance, grounded in a common confession that Jesus Christ
is Lord, that apartheid was a false gospel and a heresy, that all human
beings irrespective of race are created in the "image of God",
and that God is a God of the oppressed and of justice. We shared the
bread and cup at the eucharistic table on the basis of this common
confession of faith, even though we had not yet resolved the problems of
ministry and sacrament which historically divided us. None of us doubted
that Christ was truly present through word and Spirit. So it would be
false to suggest that the unity we discovered in the struggle was a
marriage of convenience which would inevitably lead to divorce once the
struggle ended.
At the same time, it would also be misleading to assume that the
unity we discovered was either automatic or unproblematic. Although
matters of faith and order were on the back-burner, they were not
without significance. The advances achieved at Vatican II made Roman
Catholic cooperation possible in a way which would not have been the
case otherwise, even though Roman Catholics could not share fully in the
eucharist with others with a clear conscience. And unless there had
already been progress on historical confessional issues within the
ecumenical movement worldwide through the efforts of Faith and Order and
interconfessional family dialogues, as well as through the work of the
Church Unity Commission in South Africa, unity expressed in eucharistic
fellowship for the rest of us would have been very difficult. It was of
considerable importance, for example, that in 1974 the churches within
the CUC reached sufficient consensus on such issues to enable them to
adopt a declaration of intention to seek union in which they agreed to
intercommunion.
Indeed, while relegated to the back-burner of ecumenical action,
the CUC continued to fulfill its mandate in the search for union,
increasingly sensitive to the criticisms levelled against it. The CUC
remained convinced that the unity of the church and the creation of a
new non-racial society in South Africa were inseparably related. Church
union required both the resolution of confessional issues, and the
expression of unity in Christ in the solidarity of witness and social
praxis. So the unity discovered in struggle was backed up by an ongoing
attempt to overcome those theological differences which always
threatened to keep apart those whom the struggle had joined together.
Even though South Africans were not very prominent in the work of Faith
and Order, and even though the work of Faith and Order got virtually no
publicity in the country except for the celebration of the Week of
Prayer for Christian Unity, developments within that field of ecumenical
effort were important for what was happening on the ground in the
struggle
Discovering unity in struggle was only one side of the equation,
however. The other side was that of moral formation. After all, the
struggle against apartheid was essentially a moral struggle, yet one
which was also profoundly theological, as the declaration that
"apartheid is a heresy" showed. Those Christians who
discovered their unity in the struggle did so around a set of common
moral convictions, a confession of faith which was at the same time a
declaration of ethics -- apartheid was morally and theologically wrong,
it was equally an "ethical heresy" and an "ecclesial heresy". Apartheid and the segregation of the church went hand in
hand. Racial injustice and Christian division were partners in crime.
Thus as Christians -- and people of other faiths, let us remember
-- became involved in the struggle for justice, so their moral sense of
justice was shaped and deepened just as they discovered unity with each
other in a new way. You may have become involved in the struggle for a
variety of reasons, including moral ones, but it was within the
structures of struggle that moral sensitivity to injustice and the abuse
of human rights was developed in a way not possible within the college
or catechetical classroom. This does not mean that there was no place
for ethical or theological reflection on the moral issues pertaining to
the struggle. On the contrary, even though this was a "second
order" activity it was essential to the struggle. Of particular
note in this regard were the debates about violence and pacifism,
conscientious objection and economic sanctions, in which the burning
issues of the day were reflected on from the perspective of both
engagement and Christian tradition. Moral formation, however much it may
take place at the level of principle, cannot be pursued out of context
nor in ways unrelated to moral engagement or conversion.
Just as unity in the struggle built on work done by those engaged
in faith and order issues, so moral formation in the struggle assumed
that the churches had, over the years, tried to form their
constituencies around a set of values consonant with the gospel. Moral
formation does not just happen in a moment. Yet the sobering fact
remains: many churches, especially within the white section of the
population, failed at precisely this level. They did not morally prepare
their constituencies to discern the evil of apartheid or oppose it as
they should have. Often, in fact, quite the reverse. So it was
frequently involvement in the struggle which led to a crisis of moral
conscience, and a conversion to a new set of moral values faithful to
the gospel. And as the struggle against apartheid progressed, so
division among Christians intensified, leading in several instances to
schism and further denominational fragmentation around such issues as
the PCR or conscientious objection.
There were, of course, matters of moral value which were either
neglected in the struggle or remained unresolved because of the nature
of the struggle. The focus was primarily on racism and strategies for
combating it. For that reason, many other issues were put on one side in
the interest of defeating apartheid. In the struggle it was difficult,
and it often appeared strategically unwise at the time, for example, to
debate gender equality or the ethics of sexual preference. Even the
question of the ordination of women within some churches was left
unresolved. Moreover, much happened within the ambit of the struggle
which was morally indefensible yet justified or glossed over in the name
of the struggle. Some of this has come to light recently through the
work of the commission on Truth and Reconciliation, a subject which
brings us, then, to, the post-apartheid era in which we now have to
consider the question of ecclesial unity and moral formation.
Church unity and moral formation in democratic transition and
transformation
We must neither overestimate the role which the church played in
the struggle against apartheid, nor assume that the transition to
democracy in South Africa means that the struggle for justice is now
complete and the churches can rest on their laurels. The struggle
against the legacy of apartheid remains one of the greatest challenges
we face in democratic transition and transformation. The political
struggle might have been won, but the struggle against racism and
injustice in its many forms remains. The struggle against the
ideological falsehood of apartheid might be accomplished, but the
struggle to overcome the past through the uncovering of the truth of
what happened, and the achievement of national reconciliation, remain.
So it is not true to say that there is no longer an agenda of struggle
to bind Christians in South Africa together.
Yet is undeniable that the transition to democracy saw an initial
back-tracking on ecumenical commitment and a concomitant strengthening
of denominational identity and resolve. It is also true that the SACC is
no longer as publicly prominent as it was during the days of the
struggle. The danger of a loss of ecumenical commitment and will is
real. It could be argued that this mirrors what is happening more widely
in the world and for many of the same reasons. So in that sense the
ecumenical movement in South Africa now finds itself in a similar
position to that of churches elsewhere. But this does not mean that we
can or should understand the ecumenical task in South Africa today as
one of getting back to the "normal business" of the churches.
For one thing, we dare not forget what we have learned during the
struggle, nor can we deny the confession we made in "The Message to
the People of South Africa", the Belhar confession, or the Kairos
document. For another, the struggle for justice and transformation must
continue, and must continue to make its impact upon the way in which we
seek to express the unity of the church and engage in moral formation.
So it is not the case that, whereas previously we were united in
struggle, now we have to patch up our traditional doctrinal differences
and try to bring about church union. Rather the search for the unity of
the church, including the task of seeking to unite churches, cannot be
the same as it was before the struggle. The search for church union now
must be understood in the light of our experience, and in relation to
the struggle which continues. This is the framework within which the
agenda of the "ethics and ecclesiology" discussion must take
place in South Africa, and perhaps elsewhere as well. But at the same
time, the unity we discovered in social praxis in the past, and which we
will continue to experience as we participate in social transformation,
cannot be separated from the theological tasks associated with faith and
order if the unity of the church in South Africa is to be strengthened
and expressed in life and witness. In other words, I am not suggesting
that the traditional problems separating churches from each other do not
need to be dealt with and overcome; what I am saying is that they can no
longer be dealt with in isolation from our contextual experience as the
church in South Africa. How we relate these two is surely at the centre
of our discussion about ethics and ecclesiology.
Significantly, during the past few years, the work of the Church
Unity Commission has taken on a new lease of life. In 1995 the
participating churches agreed to recognize each other's ordained
ministry within the church of God. This means, for example, that a
Methodist can now serve as rector of an Anglican parish without having
to be re-ordained, though if he or she wishes to become an Anglican
priest re-ordination at this stage would still be required. Despite this
latter reservation, the step that has been taken is very significant and
prepares the way for the next phase in the search for union. What is
interesting now is that the work of the CUC has support from the black
leadership within the churches in a way which was not previously the
case. But it is not only among the CUC churches that steps have or are
being taken towards unity. The formation of the Uniting Reformed Church
in Southern Africa in 1994, the recent uniting of the formerly white and
black churches of the Apostolic Faith Mission (Pentecostal), and the
discussions about union between the black Reformed Presbyterian Church and the Presbyterian Church of Southern Africa, suggest that church
union negotiations are coming in from the cold.
Undoubtedly the changed political situation and the strong
emphasis on national reconciliation and reconstruction are having an
impact on the churches. Certainly, what needs to be recognized and acted
upon is the fact that the church in South Africa will miss a moment of
ecumenical opportunity if it does not seek to structure the unity
experienced during the years of struggle in ways appropriate to the
challenge facing the ecumenical church in the reconstruction of South
Africa today. It is important to stress that we are not trying to unite
the churches of various confessions in Europe; we are seeking to
discover the unity of the church in South Africa. This means that while
it is still appropriate and urgent to work for the unity of those
churches which participate in the CUC, as well as between those other
denominations who are engaged in unity discussions, these conversations
cannot be ends in themselves, and they by no means encompass the search
to express fully Christian unity in our context. For one thing, they do
not directly involve the Roman Catholics, the Orthodox or Coptic
communities. Perhaps even more importantly, they do not deal with the
ecclesial reality of the AICs and the challenge they present both to
ecumenicity and to the inculturation of the church in South Africa.
Their place within the ecumenical church in South Africa is clearly
problematic if the issue is approached along the traditional lines of
faith and order dialogue. Perhaps nothing more profoundly highlights the
difficulty of relating "koinonia ecclesiology" to the way in
which ecclesiology has in fact developed since the time of primitive
Christianity.
Church unity is, after all, not simply about uniting denominations
in common structures and institutions; it is also, and maybe even more
importantly, about developing koinonia. If the major sources of division
are, as they have so often been, social, cultural, sexual and political,
then church union has to deal with these divisive realities if it is to
be an authentic expression of the unity we have in Jesus Christ. The
importance of this for the church in South Africa is self-evident, but
it should be even more evident now given the fact that the struggle for
democratic transformation is precisely a struggle to deal with these
sources of national division and conflict.
What divides South Africa today is no longer apartheid as a legal
system, but injustices which have to do, certainly with race, but also
with gender, and economics, and the multi-cultural and multi-faith
character of our society. The unity of the church, and therefore the
"faith and order debate", cannot be pursued in isolation from
these very forces, not only because of the churches' social
witness, but precisely because these forces can either prevent koinonia
or contribute to its enrichment. A visible expression of the church
through a union which is culturally or socially monochrome, even if it
is the overcoming of historic divisions, is not really an adequate
expression of the koinonia which is given in Christ. Sharing the common
life of the Spirit does not simply mean sharing with others who are of
the same culture, race, nation, gender, or class -- that is assumed; it
means, rather, sharing in a life which is given in Christ and therefore
one which overcomes the limitations of natural relationships. This
almost invariably occurs as Christians seek to engage in a mission
praxis of justice and reconciliation, for it is precisely then that such
boundaries are and have to be overcome. This being so, "the most
authentic support that the church can give to the nurturing of a
democratic order" within society, as experienced in South Africa,
"remains that of an effective and increasingly profound praxis of
communion within itself'.(5)
The most divisive social force impeding the reconstruction of
South Africa today is undoubtedly economic injustice. The growing gap
between rich and poor, between the employed and the unemployed, between
those who have accommodation and those who are homeless, has to be
overcome if South Africa is to achieve its goal of true reconciliation.
This concern obviously impinges directly, not only on the mission of the
church, but also on its unity and moral formation within its life. The
fact is, the church in South Africa is divided along precisely these
same lines of economic well-being or suffering. Perhaps even the vast
majority of the poor and unemployed are members of the church, as are
the middle-class and at least a segment of the wealthy. The New
Testament admonition to "remember the poor" within the
Jerusalem church, and the message of the letter of James, have a direct
bearing on the unity of the church. There is, in fact, a close link
between just economic structures and koinonia within the church.
The connection between the search for ways to express the unity of
the church and moral formation within the church at this moment of
democratic transition and transformation is, therefore, self-evident.
The ongoing search for unity and the never-ceasing task of pursuing
justice have to proceed together. Only in this way can we hope to
overcome the legacy of the past and build a moral community without
which a just democratic order will not be possible. Apartheid, after
all, subverted and eventually destroyed those values which are essential
for a just democracy. Apartheid laws and practices led to a disrespect
for law and authority, the cheapening of life, the destruction of the
family, the subversion of the truth with lies, the manipulation of
natural cultural differences, the abuse of human rights, the
strengthening of the rich through corruption at the expense of the poor.
Hence the urgent need to create a democratic culture in which the
transition to democracy can take place, but even more, where democratic
transformation can be pursued in ways consonant with the biblical vision
of shalom. This indicates that just as the struggle for justice never
ends, at least this side of the eschaton, so too the search for union
within and between the churches is an ongoing task. To put it
differently, the search for church union is open-ended, and we have
continually to relate matters of faith and order to the unfolding agenda
of the church's ecumenical task in the world. This, in turn,
relates directly to the church's task in democratic
transformation.(6)
Let the search for union and the struggle for justice continue!
NOTES
(1) No Rusty Swords, London, Collins, 1970, pp.321-33.
(2) See Konrad Raiser, "Dietrich Bonhoeffer and the Ecumenical
Movement", in Bonhoeffer for a New Day, John W. de Gruchy ed.,
Grand Rapids, Eerdmans, in press.
(3) I have written elsewhere at length about 19th- and early
20th-century attempts at church union in South, Africa, and the
emergence of the ecumenical movement within our South American context.
See John de Gruchy, The Church Struggle in South Africa, 2nd ed., Grand
Rapids, Eerdmans, 1988, and Christianity and the Colonisation of South
Africa, Grand Rapids, Eerdmans, 1997. (4) The first union in which
settler and mission churches united was that of the United
Congregational Church of Southern Africa in 1967.
(5) Giuseppe Alberigo, "Ecclesiology and Democracy: Convergences
and Divergences", in The Tabu of Democracy within the Church, James
Provost and Knut Walf eds, Concilium, vol. 5, London, SCM, 1992, p.23.
(6) On the relationship between Christianity and democratic
transformation, and the role of the churches in the transition to
democracy in South Africa, see John de Gruchy, Christianity and
Democracy: A Theology for a Just World Order, Cambridge, Cambridge UP,
1995. See also Charles Villa-Vicencio, A Theology of Reconstruction,
Cambridge, Cambridge UP, 1994.