Daily Dispatch

EC churches set to end 20-year feud

Reformed finds another place after battle over hall

- By LULAMILE FENI

THERE is hope that a 20year-old feud between the Reformed Presbyteri­an Church of Southern Africa and the Uniting Presbyteri­an Church in South Africa over church property will soon end.

Despite a countrywid­e merger between Presbyteri­an churches, the two churches under the Ross Mission in Mthatha refused to conform and have been at loggerhead­s ever since. They have taken each other to court, indulged in a number of fist fights and both groups regularly attempt to block the other from using the church hall.

Now the Reformed Presbyteri­an Church has decided to find another place after the Mthatha High Court ruled in June that the existing property, including the church hall and the mission house, belonged to the Uniting Presbyteri­an Church.

Reformed Presbyteri­an session clerk Ayanda Matiso said they had decided to find a new site to avoid further clashes with the Uniting Presbyteri­ans.

“We do not want to have bloodshed and be drained in faith and spirituali­ty by the ungoldy things happening. We decided not to be involved in the fights. One can see this as a sign of defeat but to us this is strategic victory and we will have time to worship our God in peace without harassment from police and interrupti­on of sermons. A church is a holy place and those in it should treat it as such,” said Matiso.

Yesterday a group of about 200 congregran­ts were led to the new site by their church leader Reverend Velile Notununu, who is also the moderator.

The site is in the sports grounds of Ross Primary School which is among the hundreds of schools that have been closed by the department of education.

An elder from the Reformed Presbyteri­an Church, Zolanu Tiles, said the feud cost both sides a great deal of spiritual growth and filled many with hatred and vengeance.

“Now we are fed-up with all those things. We are not here to fight but to only worship God. The church is a holy place to worship and praise God, not fight.”

He said that the Reformed Presbyteri­an Church was establishe­d in 1800 but the merger announced in 1999 that all Presbyteri­an churches would become the Uniting Presbyteri­an Church.

“But we as the Ross Mission with 28 branches never agreed to the merger and we are still operating as the Reformed Presbyteri­an Church in Southern Africa.

“We were never part of the Uniting Presbyteri­ans and never will be,’’ said Tiles.

Colbert Dawethi, a local traditiona­l councillor, said the whole community was fed-up with the feud, and that was why they had decided to give the group that lost the court case a site.

The Dispatch could not get comment from the Uniting Presbyteri­an Church.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa