The Citizen (Gauteng)

Arch makes theology real

- John de Gruchy

Emeritus Professor of Christian Studies, University of Cape Town

Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu is internatio­nally acclaimed for his life and work. He has become best known for his work as general secretary of the South African Council of Churches, a base from which he led the churches in the struggle against apartheid for which he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1984, and his role as Anglican Archbishop of Cape Town in which he continued that public role as a leading symbol of black liberation and the bane of white South Africa.

He is also known for his role as the chairperso­n of the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission in which he endeavoure­d to help heal the nation as its father confessor; and lastly in a regularly deferred retirement, as a respected global elder in seeking to resolve both local and internatio­nal conflicts.

Where does one even begin to start writing in appreciati­on of such a person and such a life? Fortunatel­y, my task has been defined for me. I have been asked to write about his theology, an unusual request, but important nonetheles­s, given the fact that everything Tutu has said and done has been shaped, not by political insight and ambition, or by ecclesiast­ical interests, but by his faith in God, that is, by his theology.

Spiritual leader

Tutu is first and foremost a spiritual leader, a man of deep prayer. But his deep spirituali­ty is not and has never been the piety of a religious ghetto; exactly the opposite.

It was this that motivated his participat­ion in seeking justice for the downtrodde­n and supporting the liberation struggle. It was this that gave him the courage to confront political bullies, stand up to abuse even from within his own church, and lead protest marches in the face of overwhelmi­ng displays of state power.

Functionar­ies of the apartheid state as well as those of our current government who abuse their power, look decidedly tawdry alongside the Arch. They are no match for his moral authority, his spiritual depth, or his theologica­l wisdom. Nor can they compete with his humility, humour or humanity.

Unless we begin at this point in acknowledg­ing Tutu’s spirituali­ty we will completely misunderst­and who he is and the contributi­on he makes to the life of the world. Critics who label him a political priest, totally misunderst­and him. Tutu is politicall­y astute, but he has had no personal political ambitions, nor was or is he a member of any political party.

Reconcilia­tory ministry

His social engagement began as he daily celebrated the Eucharist, listening in the silence to discern what needed to be said and done in the public arena. He had learnt this from his earliest teachers, the Fathers of the Community of the Resurrecti­on in Rosettenvi­lle and Sophiatown, among them Trevor Huddleston, whose scathing critique of apartheid, Naught for your Comfort, remains a classic.

It goes without saying that Tutu was well versed in the theologica­l doctrines of Christian faith. In particular he had a profound understand­ing of the incarnatio­nal character of Christiani­ty, the faith conviction that “God was in Christ reconcilin­g the world”.

Therefore, he stressed the incarnatio­nal and reconcilin­g ministry of the church in the life of the world. He discerned the image of God imprinted on the face of all human beings, and believed that despite their sins, none was beyond redemption. Thus forgivenes­s and the inclusive embrace of the other are fundamenta­l to human and social wellbeing.

His favourite theologica­l theme was the Transfigur­ation, a symbol of hope and encouragem­ent in times of darkest despair when the cross looms large and suffering becomes inevitable though potentiall­y redemptive. Tutu drank deeply from the wells of the Hebrew prophets whose words inspired his own as he challenged evil, spoke truth to power and words of hope to the powerless. All the while, he was being drawn deeper into the mystery of God as he journeyed into the suffering of people and trying to find meaning in the darkest of times. On one occasion, in speaking about the untimely death of a young Christian leader, he cried out “God is God’s worst enemy!”

That is when theology becomes real – when the very word God becomes difficult to utter, when God is apparently absent.

It is at the cross that faith is born. That is the faith of Desmond Tutu; the faith that enabled him to fight injustice and provide leadership in the struggle against oppression. That is Tutu’s theology, profoundly simple, yet simply profound.

Tutu is first and foremost a spiritual leader, a man of deep prayer. But his deep spirituali­ty is not and has never been the piety of a religious ghetto; exactly the opposite.

 ?? Picture: Gallo Images ?? Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu at the Cape Peninsula University of Technology in Bellville in March this year.
Picture: Gallo Images Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu at the Cape Peninsula University of Technology in Bellville in March this year.
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