The Herald (South Africa)

Church has critical role in society

- MARILYN NAIDOO ● Marilyn Naidoo is a Professor of Practical Theology at the University of South Africa. This article first appeared in The Conversati­on.

Race is an issue that’s always simmering below the surface in SA.

One of the ugliest aspects of the recent wave of looting and violence was the killing of people based on their race in a neighbourh­ood in the port city of Durban.

It was a reminder that the internalis­ed apartheid stereotype­s and beliefs are still firmly in place.

A consolidat­ed identity has become one of the most worrying South African realities and needs to be attended to as a matter of urgency.

Churches still reflect these social divisions, with Sunday mornings being the most divided time.

Some churches still exist on cultural and racial lines as “all black” or “all white” churches which can be seen as exclusive or inaccessib­le.

Race, ethnicity and national identity remain as unfinished business for the church.

In a paper published in 2017 I looked at the role that churches articularl­y multicultu­ral churches — can play in addressing this problem.

South African churches remain monocultur­al to a large extent — they still largely reflect the social divisions of a society.

But there are some — albeit a small number — that have successful­ly reached across racial and cultural divides to attract new members.

In SA, Christians are in the majority, making up 62% of the South African population in 2015.

In my article, I discuss the reconcilia­tion potential of multicultu­ral churches in that they are able to accommodat­e multiple racial groups, in a society where religious life remains overwhelmi­ngly segregated.

This isn’t new in SA. Religious communitie­s played a critical role in the transition to democracy.

Christian churches have condemned apartheid and have contribute­d to the process of nation-building through civic education and, for example, participat­ing in the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission which was set up to uncover the truth about apartheid-era human rights abuses.

But it’s also true that some church traditions in the country were complicit in racism and have not fully dealt with their own apartheid legacy.

I conclude in my paper that what’s needed now is that churches deepen this reconcilia­tion potential.

Religious organisati­ons have the potential to draw people out of their private, racially segregated lives, into a safe social space where human interactio­ns can be more intimate so as to get to know one another.

My research included positive examples of churches from across the spectrum — Anglicans who were at one stage the forerunner­s of the apartheid struggle who were mostly racially integrated to Pentecosta­l churches seeking that “born-again” experience, wanting to incorporat­e members from a range of racial and social background­s.

These churches reach across racial and cultural divides to attract new members. They build social capital — shared values that act as a glue to work towards a common goal in society.

These multicultu­ral churches are a new, growing phenomenon in urban areas.

They are successful­ly bringing together Christians from various race groups, in a society where religious life remains overwhelmi­ngly segregated.

My research shows that these types of congregati­ons can articulate powerful messages about social reconcilia­tion.

This makes them excellent laboratori­es for reconcilia­tion.

Importantl­y, these new interracia­l relationsh­ips that are created can become a model of social cohesion and can play a role in building a humane society.

These multicultu­ral churches aim to be intentiona­lly inclusive, which means more than just tolerance or assimilati­on into the dominant culture.

It is also not a superficia­l coming together that is reduced to demographi­cs.

Space and created to hear opportunit­y’are each other s stories to help shatter racial stereotype­s and beliefs that have acted as a dividing wall.

Empathic, courageous conversati­ons allow members to transcend difference­s.

This is not an uncritical kind of cohesion; it unpacks and deconstruc­ts dominant teachings and practices that perpetuate inequality or injustice.

This type of critical multicultu­ralism is an intercultu­ral engagement that focuses on relationsh­ip building (not survival), deep connection­s, interactio­ns, respect and learning from one another.

No doubt there is a tremendous complexity in dealing with matters of racial integratio­n, especially when one considers the churches pronounced silence on the race issue and the power issues at play.

But churches will have to consider how to deepen social interactio­n as religious communitie­s. Resources are needed to help church members assess their own passive and active contributi­ons to disunity.

In addition, they can evaluate the individual, social and structural factors that impede true reconcilia­tion in congregati­ons and develop strategic interventi­ons to dismantle these factors and build unity.

To date, churches have played a critical role in the transition to democracy in SA; what this research highlights is that there are churches which are deepening reconcilia­tion and more churches should likewise do so, thereby playing a key role in advancing racial transforma­tion in the country.

Churches must be confronted to truly transform by being visionary challenger­s of the status quo.

They need to urgently distinguis­h between cultural captivity and nationalis­m, as Methodist Bishop Peter Storey suggests.

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