The Unity of the Body of Christ – what sort of Priority? (Part 2)
Chapter
11 Outreach to Jews down the Centuries
Due to anti-Semitism, outreach
to Jews down the centuries has been very sparse indeed. For the first 100 years the majority of believers
were Jewish, but as the apostles and disciples obeyed the last instruction of
the Master to go and make disciples in all of the nations, Yeshua's body began to fill up with non-Jews from the Middle East
and Europe.
Most non-Jewish believers understood that they have been grafted into Israel (Romans 11:11) and had become citizens of the Commonwealth of Israel (Ephesians 2:11-19). They had begun to attend their local synogogue (there were no churches in those days) and thus were learning and adopting Biblical Jewish customs, and were celebrating the Feasts of the LORD. At this time Israel was under Roman occupation and there were 2 main revolts, or wars that were carried out by Jewish zealots against the Roman Empire. Because of these revolts anyone considered to be Jewish or associated with Jews, were persecuted by the Roman Empire.
Non-Jews seen as unclean
Most non-Jewish believers understood that they have been grafted into Israel (Romans 11:11) and had become citizens of the Commonwealth of Israel (Ephesians 2:11-19). They had begun to attend their local synogogue (there were no churches in those days) and thus were learning and adopting Biblical Jewish customs, and were celebrating the Feasts of the LORD. At this time Israel was under Roman occupation and there were 2 main revolts, or wars that were carried out by Jewish zealots against the Roman Empire. Because of these revolts anyone considered to be Jewish or associated with Jews, were persecuted by the Roman Empire.
Non-Jews seen as unclean
Non-Jews were not always accepted by the
non-Messianic Jews, and were often not allowed to enter a synagogue because
they were seen as unclean. Many Messianic Jews were ejected because of their
faith in Yeshua. Both the
Jewish and the non-Jewish Christians found themselves rejected by both the Jews
and the Romans. This caused a large number of Jewish disciples to leave
the faith, and it gave birth to a resentment of Israel and anything Jewish
amongst the non-Jewish believers. By the end of the 2nd Century the Church was predominantly non Jewish. The 2nd
and 3rd generation of believers were almost totally disconnected
from the roots of the Olive Tree – Israel and the Jews.
Church Fathers as anti-Semites
Church Fathers as anti-Semites
Most of the men who are seen as the Church
Fathers were previously disciples of Plato, Socrates and other Greek
philosophers - Ignatius, Origen, Justyn Martyr, Marcion and John
Crystostom. They began to teach what we today call Replacement Theology –
that because the majority of the Jewish people rejected Yeshua, God had rejected
them. Now the Church was the true Israel or the New Israel of God. They
left the curses for the Jews and took the blessings and promises for the New
Israel. They taught that the Torah was superseded by the ‘New Testament’
and that the Sabbath, the Jewish Feasts and the ‘OT’ commandments were now
obsolete.
Many of the so-called Church Fathers were nasty anti-Semites. They seemed to resent the Jewish people. Ignatius, an early Bishop of Antioch, said in The Epistle of Ignatius to the Magnesians (ca. 110 A.D.): 'Do not be deceived by strange doctrines or antiquated myths, since they are worthless. For if we continue to live in accordance with Judaism, we admit that we have not received grace. For the most Godly prophets lived in accordance with Christ Jesus.” He also said ‘Let us therefore no longer keep the Sabbath after the Jewish manner ….. Not in relaxation nor eating food prepared the day before, not finding delight in dancing and clapping which have no sense.’ Justin Martyr (100 -165 AD) stated in his letter to a Greek Jew named Trypho: ‘God gave the Jews the Torah as punishment for their exceptional wickedness and because of His special hatred of the Jewish people. We too would observe your Sabbath days and Festivals if we were not aware of the reason they were imposed upon you, namely because of your wickedness and hard hearts.’ Marcion taught that the Jesus of the ‘New Testament’ had defeated and even unseated the evil God of the Jews. John Chrystostom (4th Century) delivered a series of sermons in Antioch against the Jewish people. His sermons were filled with hateful anti-Jewish venom. He singled out Torah observance and keeping the Feasts of the LORD as a disease in Christianity.
The Roman Emperor Constantine had supposedly converted to Christianity, while continuing to worship the Sun god until he died. He made the already Biblically apostate Christianity the official religion of the Roman Empire. He said ‘Let us have nothing to do with the detestable Jewish rabble.’ The Council of Nicaea in the year 325 defined the future course of the Church. Legislation was introduced that prohibited Christians from following the Torah and observing the Sabbath and the Festivals including the Passover and threw everything Jewish out of Christianity.
On this anti-Semitic seed-bed outreach to Jews was almost non-existent. Before the Reformation anti-Semitism was wide-spread. And, even within the realm of the Reformers, Martin Luther resorted to the worst kind of anti-Semitism when his project to convert the Jews failed. The prime Swiss Reformer, John Calvin, was no better. Calvin has been quoted as calling Jews “profane dogs” who, “under the pretext of prophecy, stupidly devour all the riches of the earth with their unrestrained cupidity.”
Many of the so-called Church Fathers were nasty anti-Semites. They seemed to resent the Jewish people. Ignatius, an early Bishop of Antioch, said in The Epistle of Ignatius to the Magnesians (ca. 110 A.D.): 'Do not be deceived by strange doctrines or antiquated myths, since they are worthless. For if we continue to live in accordance with Judaism, we admit that we have not received grace. For the most Godly prophets lived in accordance with Christ Jesus.” He also said ‘Let us therefore no longer keep the Sabbath after the Jewish manner ….. Not in relaxation nor eating food prepared the day before, not finding delight in dancing and clapping which have no sense.’ Justin Martyr (100 -165 AD) stated in his letter to a Greek Jew named Trypho: ‘God gave the Jews the Torah as punishment for their exceptional wickedness and because of His special hatred of the Jewish people. We too would observe your Sabbath days and Festivals if we were not aware of the reason they were imposed upon you, namely because of your wickedness and hard hearts.’ Marcion taught that the Jesus of the ‘New Testament’ had defeated and even unseated the evil God of the Jews. John Chrystostom (4th Century) delivered a series of sermons in Antioch against the Jewish people. His sermons were filled with hateful anti-Jewish venom. He singled out Torah observance and keeping the Feasts of the LORD as a disease in Christianity.
The Roman Emperor Constantine had supposedly converted to Christianity, while continuing to worship the Sun god until he died. He made the already Biblically apostate Christianity the official religion of the Roman Empire. He said ‘Let us have nothing to do with the detestable Jewish rabble.’ The Council of Nicaea in the year 325 defined the future course of the Church. Legislation was introduced that prohibited Christians from following the Torah and observing the Sabbath and the Festivals including the Passover and threw everything Jewish out of Christianity.
On this anti-Semitic seed-bed outreach to Jews was almost non-existent. Before the Reformation anti-Semitism was wide-spread. And, even within the realm of the Reformers, Martin Luther resorted to the worst kind of anti-Semitism when his project to convert the Jews failed. The prime Swiss Reformer, John Calvin, was no better. Calvin has been quoted as calling Jews “profane dogs” who, “under the pretext of prophecy, stupidly devour all the riches of the earth with their unrestrained cupidity.”
Great Minds of the Past
However,
some of the greatest minds of the past did not only have a high view of Jews
and Israel, but simultaneously also for the Unity of the Body of Christ. Francis Bacon (1561 – 1626) discovered and popularized
the scientific method, whereby the laws of science are discovered by gathering
and analysing data from experiments and observations, rather than by using
logic-based arguments. He
introduced the essay form to the English language and completed The New Atlantis, which mixed his scientific approach and his
Christian beliefs. In New
Atlantis, Christianity is depicted as the right way of life and anything
different is frowned upon. However, only a few pages later, Bacon made positive
references to parts of Jewish culture.
Jan
Amos Comenius, John Drury and Samuel Hartlib form an interesting threesome.
They had a vision for the Unity of the Body of Christ and all three of them had
a positive view of Jews and the Hebrew Scriptures. Of Comenius it was said that
he almost knew the ‘Old Testament’ by heart.
After attending
the University of Cambridge, Hartlib settled in England and associated himself with the educational philosopher John Dury, sharing his
ideas on the necessity for the unity of the Protestant churches, school
reforms, and teacher training. Dury was educated at Sedan, Leyden, and Oxford. By 1630 he had already
begun working for unity between the churches, traveling among the courts and
churches of the German states. His life became a constant round of travels,
discussions, correspondence and publishing in the pursuit of his cause. In 1645
he married a wealthy Irish woman. He thereafter established his home in Kassel (Germany)
in 1661 and lived there until his death, still campaigning for the unity among
the churches. He wrote that the only fruit of his efforts was ‘that I see the miserable condition of Christianity, and that I
have no other comfort than the testimony of my conscience.’
Famous Preachers with a Positive View
of Jews
The renowned Bishop Jan Amos Comenius
was a faithful scholar of Desiderius Erasmus of Rotterdam who taught: ‘teach first the Jews and the
neighbours nearby, thereafter all the nations of the earth' (Van der Linde, 1979:197).[1] Both parents of Comenius belonged to the Unitas Fratrum, the (Moravian)
Unity of Brethren. Bishop Comenius later became one of the leaders of that
pre-Reformation Protestant denomination.
Contrary to the practice of his time, Comenius refrained from polemic writing.
He differentiated between important and less important things, teaching that
unity ultimately only rules when faith, hope and love are present. He furthermore suggested that the holy books
of the Jews, the Law, Psalms and the Prophets are to be valued highly. He
furthermore reminded that the Jews are collectively to be regarded as a
light to the nations, which is a prophetic teaching from Isaiah. Isaiah 49:6
“I have a greater task for you, my
servant. Not only
will you restore to greatness the
people of Israel who have survived, but I will also make you a light to the
nations — so
that all the world may be saved.”
Comenius
highlighted that Isaiah
42:6 states: I will take you by the hand and guard you,
and I will give you to my people, Israel, as a symbol of my covenant with them.
And you will be a light to guide the nations. Even though the Jews have generally rejected the
Messiah and the apostles, they were allowed to keep their law and rituals until
God would reveal the truth to them in his good time. The light of Moses (the
Pentateuch), the rest of the Hebrew Scripture and the light of Christ (the ‘New
Testament’) - form together the bright light for all nations. Comenius
furthermore said that we as Christians have to respect Jews as our librarians,
to expound the prophetic Word that had been entrusted to them. The resistance
of Israel is merely temporary.
Count
Zinzendorf had a similar view. He propagated strongly that the Gospel must be
preached to the Jews. If Zinzendorf had his way, a greater effort would have
been made by the Herrnhut Moravians to reach the Jews with the Gospel. The Losungen Watchwords for everyday that
was printed as a booklet from 173, was soon translated into other languages,
thus serving as a unifying tool of the body of Christ. Today it is still
printed in over 50 languages and used by believers of many denominations.
We have already
seen how the 18th century Moravians applied biblical principles to
facilitate Church unity. I would like to
examine how the Moravian and other philo-Semites have been using the love for
the Jews to good effect. Count Zinzendorf appears to have been one of very few
church leaders to have recognized the primacy of the Jews and Israel in biblical
Theology. In general, the Jews and the Muslims have been neglected where
missionary work is concerned. Moravians
were the first denomination to add a prayer for Israel to a Church Litany. In one of the Sunday morning prayer liturgies
also Abraham's prayer for Ishmael (Genesis 17:18) is included: O that Ishmael might live
before thee! Bishop August Spangenberg (1773-75:1181) reports how
Count Zinzendorf was filled with compassion when a Jewish couple, Daniel Nunez
da Costa and his wife, approached him just before their return from the
Caribbean in 1739. The Count paid their fare to enable them to get back to
Europe. Zinzendorf understood very well that border-crossing mission work
implied a holistic approach. He even went the second mile, giving his state-room
to the couple, while he himself shared a cabin with other passengers (Weinlick,
1956:146).
Through personal contact with the
Jewish community in Amsterdam and especially with the Portuguese refugee Nunez
da Costa, Zinzendorf came to appreciate
the distinctiveness of Judaism. For a while, Nunez da Costa was one of
Zinzendorf ’s closest friends, and he attempted to live with the Moravians in
Europe. Eventually Zinzendorf helped set him up in business in Amsterdam. It
was around the time of the contact with Da Costa that Zinzendorf added the
petition for Israel to the Herrnhuter Litany.
Certain Moravian communities, such as
Bethlehem (Pennsylvania), celebrated Yom Kippur as a Christian festival,
even though there were no Jews in the community, to emphasize the Jewish roots
of Christian doctrine. Count Zinzendorf hoped that this would make it easier
for Jews who wanted to follow Jesus to live in a Moravian settlement.
Zinzendorf and his household ate kosher so as not to offend Jews or create a
barrier between Jews and Christians. He criticized the Western Church for
adopting the name “Ostern” (Easter) instead of holding to the original 'Pasch'
Lamb.[3]
(This was the preferred dinner at the annual resurrection celebration for many
Moravian families throughout the 19th century.) 'Pasch' makes clear
the connection to our Lord as the Passover Lamb.
Interest and Love
for the Jews
Count Zinzendorf had a special
affinity for the Jews, because Jesus was also a Jew (Spangenberg, 1773-1775:1105). Already as a
teenager at the boarding school in Halle he was impressed by August Hermann
Francke’s sermons that stressed our responsibility towards the people of the
'Old Covenant'. Already in his teenage years ‘the conversion of the Jews’ can
be found before ‘the conversion of the heathen’ in the hopes and expectations
of the Order of the Mustard Seed
(Steinberg et al, 1960:25). When he was a student, Jews were included in
Zinzendorf’s prayer lists (Beyreuther, 1957:187). Count
Zinzendorf’s open interest and love for the Jews were however not generally
welcomed.
At the
castle Ronneburg, the Jews who were living there, trusted the Count because he
not only respected their religion, but he also vocalized his love for them
fearlessly. Many Jews of the vast area between Darmstadt and Giessen in
southern Germany called Zinzendorf their great
friend (Beyreuther, 1965:95). Yet, it
was never his intention to wipe away differences in inter-faith fashion. He
strived for a good and harmonious living together between Christians and Jews,
but simultaneously he challenged the Jewish people to fulfil their divine
calling to be a blessing to the nations. In order to do this, they had to bow
before the Man of Nazareth who came from their ranks as the King of Kings. The
Christians on the other hand were admonished not to forget Israel as their
first-born brother (Beyreuther, 1965:94).
Zinzendorf
took the evangelization of the Jews seriously. He gave a rule that once a year,
on the Day of Atonement, the Moravian Church should pray for the
conversion of Israel (Spangenberg, 1773-1775:1105).
Zinzendorf believed that the time for the conversion of nations on a big scale
had to await the conversion of the Jews (Weinlick, 1956:100). This high expectation from Messianic Jews brought him to
some special translations and paraphrases of Hebrew Scripture portions. Thus he
would paraphrase the old father Jacob’s prophecy over Naphtali (Genesis 49:21, Naphtali is a doe set free that bears
beautiful fawns). Highlighting that the northern land given to Naphtali is
the region where the later Galilee would be situated, Zinzendorf interpreted
the verse in the following way: ‘From Naphtali
will come the flight-footed messengers, who will carry the Gospel to the ends
of the world’ (Steinberg, 1960:39). At
a Moravian conference in Berlin in 1738, the work among the Jews was seriously
discussed (Spangenberg,
1773-1775:1100). The Moravians demonstrated the
priority of the outreach to the Jews by allowing one of their best men,
Leonhard Dober, to minister to them. (He had been recalled from St Thomas in
the Caribbean to be the chief Elder after the sudden death of Martin Linner,
and subsequently requested to pioneer this ministry.) Dober promptly moved into
the Jewish quarter of Amsterdam with his wife. When Dober was needed elsewhere,
the very able Samuel Lieberkühn who had studied Hebrew thoroughly in Halle and
Jena, was asked to lead the ministry in Amsterdam. Lieberkühn preferred to go
and work among the Jews in Holland, rather than accepting an offer to become
professor of Semitic languages in Königsberg.[4]
A Jew
to the Jews
Like very few others before or after him, Samuel
Lieberkühn practiced the Pauline instruction to become a Jew to the Jews,
refraining from all food which Jewish custom prohibited. He respected the views
of Messianic Jews when they still preferred to follow Jewish Law, as well as
their expectation of a significant return of Jews to Palestine in the last
days. Lieberkühn used the life and testimony of Jesus, rather than Hebrew Scriptural
quotations, to prove the Messiah-ship of our Lord in his altercations with
Jews.
Many
Jews came from Amsterdam to the Moravian congregation in Zeist (near Utrecht)
when Samuel Lieberkühn became the pastor there from 1751. Although the Christo-centric
Count Zinzendorf differed with Lieberkühn
on some of his opinions and approach, he respected that. The Moravian Synod of
1764 endorsed the ministry of Samuel Lieberkühn. For
both Comenius and Zinzendorf the 'Old' and 'New' Testaments belonged together.
Thus the Count did not see the beginning of missions with the Great Commission
(Matthew 28:19 or Mark 16:15), but rather where the ‘mission’ of the Saviour
started, it is before the foundation of the earth (Ephesians 1:4). His wish to
see a separate Jewish sector of Moravian missionary work, was however never
fulfilled, although various missionaries had a vision for it. (The astounding go-getter
Christian Richter, who pioneered work amongst slaves in Algiers, wanted to see
work started among the 8,000 Jews who were living in that city in 1740.[5])
On the opposite side of First Day Sabbatarianism, Jewish Evangelism as a priority could have united the Body of Christ if
the biblical injunction of 'Jews first, and then also the Greeks' (Romans
1:16f) had been discerned properly. The example of the Moravian involvement in
outreach to Jews in Amsterdam and a philo-semitic lifestyle in Bethlehem (Pa,
USA) appears to have remained worldwide exceptions.
A special Jew
Many a Jew who came to faith in Christ made a big difference
on the Christian scene. This was definitely the case with Joseph Samuel
Christian Frederick Frey, born in Stockheim, Franconia, Germany, in 1773; At
six years of age he was reading the five books of Moses in the original
language. He was also daily instructed by a private tutor in the Jewish law and
Talmud. Every opportunity was used to inspire him with a resentment of
Christianity. At the age of nine the study of Mischna and Gemara –
the components of Jewish Talmudic traditions - were added to his theological
textbooks. On attaining early manhood he moved to Hesse, teaching Hebrew
children as a private tutor.
At twenty-one Joseph Frey became a leader
in the synagogue, reading the prayers and the Torah. During this period, while
journeying from Hamburg to Schwerin, he met a Christian, who suggested to him
ideas regarding the Messiah. Frey was intensely impressed by the doctrines of
the Christian religion. After three or four years of mental struggle, he became
a follower of Jesus. In May 1798, he was baptised and received into the
Protestant community. In 1800 he entered the theological seminary established
in Berlin for the education of missionaries. He studied there for one year, and
then went to London, with the intention of going to Africa as a missionary. He
afterwards changed his purpose, deciding to remain in England to be an
evangelist to his own people, the Jews. Frey's family, on learning of his
apostasy, enacted all the rituals, which would have been performed at his
death. For the next seven years he studied and laboured in connection with the London
Missionary Society, travelling through the United Kingdom, preaching to
whatever Jewish congregations he could muster, suffering much opposition but
meeting with little encouragement.
In
1816 Joseph Frey moved with his family to New York where he established the Mulberry
Street Congregationalist Church, and was ordained its pastor in 1818. In
1820 he founded the American Society for ameliorating the Conditions of the
Jews. The object of this association was to establish an asylum for
Christian Hebrews from all parts of the world. The enterprise proved a failure,
and occupied several years of fruitless labour. In 1827 Joseph Frey, convinced
of the necessity of immersion, left the Congregationalist Church and
became a Baptist. He held several small charges as a member of that
denomination, and in 1837 resigned his pastorate to go to Europe as an agent
for the American Society for the Conversion of the Jews. He remained
abroad three years, but the mission was not favourably received.
Church
Ministry among the Jewish People
The Church’s Ministry among the Jewish People, known
in South Africa as Messiah's People, began in the early 19th
century, when leading evangelicals, including members of the influential Clapham
Group such as William Wilberforce and Charles Simeon, decided that there
was an unmet need to promote Christianity among the Jews. In 1809 they formed
the London Society for Promoting
Christianity Amongst the Jews. The Jewish missionary Joseph Frey is often credited with the
instigation of the break with the London Missionary Society. Abbreviated
forms such as the London Jews' Society
or simply The Jews' Society were
adopted for general use. The original agenda of the society was:
Declaring the Messiahship of Jesus to
the Jew first and also to the non-Jew
Endeavouring to teach the Church its
Jewish roots
Encouraging the physical restoration of
the Jewish people to Eretz Israel - the Land of Israel
Encouraging the Hebrew
Christian/Messianic Jewish movement
The society's
work began among the poor Jewish immigrants in the East End of London and soon
spread to Europe, South America, Africa and Palestine. In 1811, a five-acre
field on Cambridge Road in Bethnal Green, east London, was leased as a centre
for missionary operations. The complex was named Palestine Place. In 1813, a Hebrew-Christian congregation called Benei Abraham (Children of Abraham)
started meeting at the chapel in Palestine Place. This was the first
recorded assembly of Jewish believers in Jesus and the forerunner of today's
Messianic Jewish congregations.
The London
Jews Society was the first such society to work on a global basis. In 1836,
two missionaries were sent to Jerusalem: Dr. Albert Gerstmann, a physician, and
Melville Bergheim, a pharmacist, who opened a clinic that provided free medical
services.
In its heyday, the society had over
250 missionaries. The society was active in the establishment of Christ Church,
Jerusalem, the oldest Protestant church in the Middle East, completed in 1849.
The organisation is one of the
eleven official mission agencies of the Church of England. It currently
has branches in the United Kingdom, Israel, Ireland, the USA, Canada, South
Africa, Hong Kong, and Australia.
The first identifiable congregation
made up exclusively of Jews who had converted to Christianity, was established
in the United Kingdom as early as 1860. The first congregation of Jewish
Christians in the United Kingdom was Beni Abraham which came into existence in
London when forty-one Hebrew Christians assembled as Jewish Christians.
In 1866 the Hebrew Christian
Alliance of Great Britain was organised with branches in several European
countries and the United States. These organisations had the combined effect of
encouraging Jewish believers in Jesus to think of themselves as a community
with a unique identity.
In response to changing attitudes
towards outreach to the Jewish people, the society has changed its name several
times over the years, first to Church
Missions to Jews, then The Church's
Mission to the Jews, followed by The
Church's Ministry Among the Jews, and finally to the current name of The Church's Ministry Among Jewish People,
which was adopted in 1995. The International Hebrew Christian Alliance,
established 1925, was an initiative of the Hebrew Christian Alliance of
America (established 1915) and the Hebrew Christian Alliance of Great
Britain.
Chapter 12 Responses
to an unbiblical Unity
In a
very sad turn of events a product of Moravian teaching would usher in liberal
theology. Friedrich Schleiermacher
(November 21, 1768 – February 12, 1834) became influential in the evolution of
'Higher Criticism'. Because of his profound impact on subsequent Christian
thought, he has been called the 'Father of Modern Protestant Theology.'
Schleiermacher
was educated in the Moravian Boarding School at Niesky in Upper Lusatia,
and at Barby near Halle. However, the pietistic Moravian theology failed to
satisfy his increasing doubts as he fell prey to the general tendency to
neglect the Hebrew Scriptures. As an otherwise brilliant theological student,
Schleiermacher pursued an independent course of reading, neglecting the study
of the Hebrew Scriptures and Oriental languages. In due course he developed a
deep-rooted skepticism as a student, and soon he rejected orthodox
Christianity. The German theologian and philosopher became known for his
impressive attempt to reconcile the criticisms of the Enlightenment with
traditional Protestant orthodoxy. This ultimately ushered in a deceptive
demonic Church unity - liberal theology that swept like wildfire over Europe in
the mid-19th century. The Inter-faith movement and Chrislam became
the spiritual descendants of liberalism.
Foils
to Liberalism An
effective foil operated quietly from Moravian soil – the 24 hour prayer that
was still going strong in Herrnhut. The prayer movement resonated also in
Bethlehem (Pennsylvania, USA) on the other side of the ocean and in other
places where Moravian missionaries had started fellowships, also in the Western
Cape mission station Genadendal where three new missionaries arrived at
Christmas 1792. William Carey's seminal ministry, influenced by one of Bishop
August Spangenberg's writings, was another important factor, blazing the trail
for missionary work.
The influential Izaak da Costa, a converted Portuguese Jew who wrote
poetry,
was born on January 14, 1798 in Amsterdam. Through his Hebrew teacher he became
acquainted with the great Dutch poet Willem Bilderdijk, who,
at the request of Izaak's father, agreed to supervise the boy's further
education. Bilderdijk taught him Roman law. An intimate friendship between them
developed in due course. As the son of an
Amsterdam physician, Willem Bilderdijk grew up with strong monarchical and
Calvinistic convictions. Willem Bilderdijk and Izaak da Costa led the spiritual
renewal in the Netherlands. Bilderdijk
had contempt for government-controlled Christianity that was softened by
indifference. Izaak da Costa attacked the liberalism and ethical decay of the
times.
One of the effects of this spiritual renewal in the
Netherlands was the revival of Calvinistic thought, and in particular its
outworking in the political arena. This revival of Calvinism was not simply a
return to the 16th century, but a contemporary application of the
insights and principles of Calvinism to the issues of the day. There was also
criticism, correction and expansion of various aspects of the teachings of Calvin and his spiritual heirs. In 1817 Da Costa went to Leiden, where he met Bilderdijk
often. There he took degrees as doctor of law in 1818, and as doctor of
philosophy on June 21, 1821. Three weeks later he married his cousin, Hannah
Belmonte, who had been educated in a Christian institution; and soon after, he
was baptized with her at Leiden. Da Costa was a faithful adherent of the religious
views of his friend Bilderdijk. His religious views and efforts were severely criticized
by liberal opponents, but his character, no less than his genius, was respected
by his contemporaries. Da Costa issued a powerful protest against the
religious degeneracy of the times, which he entitled Grievances against the Spirit of the Age. His denunciations were
too severe and unbalanced. A storm of indignation broke over his head. His
house had to be guarded by special police.
Da Costa did not
protest in vain. He gathered a few good friends, of whom the most prominent was
Groen van Prinsterer, a jurist, historian and statesman. Da Costa and Groen,
the poet Nicolaas Beets, Dr. Capadose and others, formed the circle known as
"Christian Friends”. Da Costa wrote much
on missionary matters, but to the end of his life, he felt reverence and love
for his Jewish co-religionists. He was deeply interested in their past history,
and often defended them.
Messianic
Jewry - an ally of the Cross
Two Jewish converts are recorded to have
been baptized at the Cape as early as 1669. It is not clear whether these and
other Jews of that era who professed their faith in Jesus openly, did it out of
convenience or conviction. Everybody who came to the Cape at this time had to
be of the Protestant Christian faith. The constitution of the Dutch East India Company required this
from all its employees and settlers.
By
the 19th century restrictions on Jewish people were relaxed. On September 26,
1841 seventeen Jewish believers celebrated the Day of Atonement and a week
later the first congregation ‘Tikvath Israel’ (The Hope of Israel), was
established at the Cape. To me it is not co-incidental that this was also the
time when a mini revival was taking place among the slaves in the wake of the
emancipation in 1838.
Dutch
Revival Influence on the Cape
The Revival movement in Holland, where it
was known by its French name of Reveil,
would influence the Cape intensely via John and Andrew Murray who went to study
in Utrecht in 1845. Its leaders were Willem Bilderdijk, the chief Dutch poet of
the nineteenth century, and his pupils Izaak da Costa and Abraham Capadose,
both Jewish converts. Those gatherings in Amsterdam during the decade 1845 to
1854 ‘kept
alive the flame of religious fervour in Holland in the dark days of tepid
orthodoxy and chill rationalism’ (Du Plessis, The Life of Andrew Murray, 1919). After his return to
South Africa, where Andrew Murray was elected moderator of the Dutch Reformed
Church many times, he spear-headed the battle against Liberalism when it
reazred its head at the Cape.
Theologians
in fierce Rivalry
Two Jewish
brothers, both theologians, profoundly enriched evangelical Christianity at the
Cape - Jan and Frans Lion Cachet. Both had been influenced deeply by Izaak da
Costa. In 1873 Ds. Frans
Lion Cachet pleaded in the Cape Dutch Reformed Church Synod for a
mission to his people, the Jews, to be started. He moved to the Cape village of
Villiersdorp in 1876. He found a ‘deep
sea of love’ for the Jews among Dutch
Reformed Church ministers, elders and deacons, even among the most distant
congregations (Cited by Hermann, 1935:201). The passionate plea of Frans Lion
Cachet was however also a provocation to the Jews. Notably, the opposition was
coming from their Rabbi at the Cape, Joel Rabinowitz. Hermann (A History of the Jews
of Cape Town, 1935:201) cited ‘violent opposition on the part of the Rabbi.’ Rabinowitz’ letter of 30 October 1876
to the Cape Argus was definitely not cordial, accusing Cachet of
condescension and ‘casting doubts on …
his motives.’ But Ds. Cachet’s
reaction was not in the spirit of Christ either. The ‘lively correspondence’ between
Christians and Jews – perhaps one should rather say polemics - continued in the
Cape Argus for over a month.
The Struggle for Cape Outreach to
Jews
The result of the controversy and discord was that by
1876 favourable conditions for Messianic Jews to win their cultural compatriots
at the Cape over to faith in Yeshua
had passed temporarily and it was left to Gentiles to challenge such people to
believe in Jesus as their Lord and Messiah. Outreach to Jews was hereafter
merely discussed in a commission of the Dutch Reformed Church Cape
Synod. Only in 1894 the resolution was passed: ‘… the time has come for the DRC to pay its debt to
Israel by commencing its own mission to the Jews’ (Gerdener, 1958:131). Three years later a commission recommended that a
missionary be appointed. European mission agencies were however not so eager to
assist as it initially seemed. A certain Rev. Cohen was appointed for outreach
to Jews in Transvaal, but for the rest, this outreach was hardly attended to.
In 1906 the mission to Jews was discussed once again at the DRC Cape Synod. Mr
Reitmann, a Mildmay Mission to the Jews (today it is called Messianic
Testimony) missionary, was approached. He started to serve at the Cape.
This was the first formal outreach to Jews with the Gospel in this part of the
world.
Jews as Mediators between Boer and Brit
At the turn of the century
Boer-Brit relations were at fever pitch almost everywhere. An atmosphere of
estrangement and hostility discouraged contacts that might have developed into
co-operative co-existence. The country town of Oudtshoorn was one of the few
exceptions. Rabbi Abrahams (1955:71f)
pointed to the role Jewish children were playing. Jewish school children
‘often assumed,
quite unconsciously, the role of mediators. Their knowledge of both English and
Afrikaans enabled them not only to have playmates among both groups, but to
rope them in, with juvenile impartiality, into common games and partnerships of
fun.’ An ‘invaluable bond between the Boervolk and the People of the Book…’ developed among the young folk
of Jewish and Afrikaner stock. Abrahams also highlights a ‘curious
‘trilingualism’ in Oudtshoorn at the time. Jannie de Jager, the mayor, got to
learn jiddish fluently and ‘quite a number of local famers and not a few of the Coloured
inhabitants were well-acquainted with the mother tongue of the Lithuanian Jew.’
Correction
of Replacement Theology
The philo-semitic lifestyle and teaching of Count Zinzendorf
and his Moravians appear to have remained worldwide exceptions for centuries
thereafter.
In the last quarter of the 19th
century John Wilkenson, the Founder and Director of the Mildmay Mission to the Jews, made
a major attempt to correct 'Replacement Theology' through his book Israel,
my Glory: or Israel's mission and missions to Israel that went through a
few printings. He pointed out what should have been obvious, viz. that the
terms Israelites and Gentiles are not interchangeable in the Bible, 'but are as distinct
as are the peoples to whom they apply. To call Israelites, under any
circumstances, Gentiles, is not less unscriptural than to call Gentiles
Israelites. How strange it would seem to find Jews appropriating promises made to Gentiles by name,
and yet it is far from uncommon to find Gentiles exclusively appropriating
promises made to Jews or Israelites by name. We must let Israel mean Israel,
and Gentiles mean Gentiles, or we miss the purpose of God in the miraculous
origin, history, and preservation of the
natural and national Israel.' The Mildmay Mission to the Jews changed
its name a few times and is now called Messianic Testimony.
The story has been told how Hudson Taylor as head of the China Inland Mission (now Overseas
Missionary Fellowship) sent a cheque to the Mildmay Mission to the Jews, London, on which was written, “To the
Jew first.” And, at the same time, John Wilkinson, leader of the Mildmay Mission, sent his personal
cheque to the China-Inland Mission with the note, “And also to the Gentile.”
Chapter
13 The Word as uniting Dynamite
The
role of the invention of printing is paramount in the disseminating of the
Word. In this regard it is good to be reminded that exactly this was the
motivation of the German Johan Gutenberg. When he saw that the Christian truths
were kept imprisoned in a few manuscripts, he wanted to give wings to the
truth.
The Cape
has its own version of the same phenomenon. Arnoldus Pannevis, a Dutch school
teacher who came to the Mother City in 1866, noticed that the people at the
Cape were speaking a language which was quite distinct from Dutch. He was
driven by a passion to see the Bible translated into the language spoken by the
people. However, he was met with derision for his idea to have the Bible
translated into a patois, a kombuistaal.[6]
Pannevis’ plea with the British and Foreign Bible Society was flatly
refused: ‘We are by no
means inclined to perpetuate jargons by printing them.’
On
the other hand, the move of the reformer Martin Luther in putting the Bible
into the hand of the rank and file German has also been interpreted as the cause
of the first big split of the Body of Christ after the schism that has resulted
in the East-West divide when the Orthodox Church and Rome parted ways.
Only in the 1960s the second Vatican Council permitted
ordinary Roman Catholic Church
members to read the Bible for themselves. In the 1980s we saw a mighty turning
to Christ in that denomination in South America when all church members were
encouraged to read the Bible. This led to a substantial exit from the Roman
Catholic Church and the simultaneous growth of Evangelicalism in South
America.
A
similar phenomenon occurred in the Middle East in recent years. Every Muslim
who has access to Internet can now read the Bible in their own language (This
was preceded by ten years of prayer for the Muslim world). Thousands became
followers of Jesus and many others are still secret believers.
The
Purpose of the Scriptures
The
prophets knew that God’s Word was the vehicle to bring His rebellious and back-slidden
people back to Himself. Repeatedly a promise is connected to obedience to the
Word and its teachings on the one hand and punishment for disobedience on the
other. Down the ages the preached Word was divinely used to call back-sliding
Christians back to God and His ways.
The
purpose of the Scriptures should be stressed: guidance and correction. David
exclaimed: "Your word is a lamp to
my feet and a light for my path" (Psalm 119:105) and Paul advised
Timothy: "Every Scripture is ...
useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness"
(2 Timothy 3:16).
Paul
emphasized that the Word should dwell richly in us (Colossians 3:16). Of
course, this does not mean that we have to imitate Ezekiel who literally seems
to have eaten the scrolls (Ezekiel 3:3). It does mean however that we may be
radical in our obedience to scriptural teaching. In fact, Paul encouraged us in
a similar way that Christ should dwell in us and from there we must be rooted[7]
and established in love (Ephesians 3:17). The Word in us has the quality of
purification. Therefore John can say that whosoever remains in Christ, sins not
(1 John 3:6). There is of course always the occasion of lapses, when one leaves
the close communion with Christ. This is the time when the enemy loves to
strike, when we are overcome by sin (Galatians 6:1). In this regard there is a
definite difference between wilful sinning and accidental sinning. However,
confession and the conscious refraining from sinful behaviour (Proverbs 28:13)
opens a clean slate for the road of victorious living in the footsteps of the
resurrected Son of God (1 John 1:9 ‘if we
confess our sin … He … will purify us from all unrighteousness’).
Linked to this is the conscious communion with the Lord, connected as branches
to the true vine (John 15:1ff).
Persecution as Gospel Seed
Carsten Thiede,
in his book - Jesus: Life or Legend
(1990:117) dubbed Tertullian ‘a
master of the art of how to turn the tables’. This was especially the case with
the adage, which stemmed from his pen: ‘The blood of the martyrs is the seed of
the church.’ Tertullian referred pertinently to the sadder part of early
Christianity: how Christians were hated, persecuted and martyred, though all they
were offering was a message of kindness and neighbourly love.
In
recent decades the martyrdom of Philip James "Jim" Elliot (1927 –1956) who was one of five missionaries killed while
participating in Operation Auca,
an attempt to evangelize the Huaorani people of Ecuador.
His journal entry for October 28, 1949, expresses his belief that work
dedicated to Jesus was more important than his life (see Luke 9:24 in the
Bible). "He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain that which he
cannot lose." This is the quote that is most often attributed to Elliot,
which is very close to a saying of the English nonconformist preacher Philip
Henry (1631–1696)
who said "He is no fool who parts with that which he cannot keep, when he
is sure to be recompensed with that which he cannot lose."
One
of the most spectacular examples of the Tertullian adage took place in a North
African village in the 1980s where God ‘sovereignly descended upon this coastal township with
gracious bounty... He did not rest till every member of the Muslim community
was properly introduced to His only begotten Son, Jesus’ (Otis,
1991:157). A massive conversion involving some 400 to 450 villagers ensued.
Stunned by this special divine visitation, mission workers sought for the
reason. They discovered that this took place at the site where Raymond Lull, a
Spanish missionary from Majorca, had been stoned in June 1315. Lull wrote in
his book The tree of Love, that Islamic strongholds are best conquered
by ‘love and
prayers, and the pouring out of tears and blood’ (Cited in Tucker,
From Jerusalem to Irian Jaya, 2004:58).
Subsequently,
thousands have been coming to faith in Jesus in Algeria. In 2006 the Algerian government promulgated a
law that allowed evangelism of any kind and commanded several churches to close
down. The churches refused to obey the government and said “You had better
build more prisons because we are not going to do what you are commanding.”
Since 2006, because of the persecution of Christians, the church has grown
faster than before and the Algerian government has come to understand that they
will never be able to stamp out the church. Recently the Algerian government
said to the church “You must train your pastors!!!” and the government has
given permission for a Bible Institute to be set up. Through
a fasting and prayer chain the change came about.
Another noteworthy
occurrence in recent Church History was achieved by the conversion – and
rejection by his family – of Abdul, a Muslim-background believer of South Asia,
This spiralled into hundreds of thousands of his Bangladeshi compatriots
becoming Isahi Muslims, followers of
Jesus. (An abbreviated version can be found in The Camel, as narrated by
Kevin Greeson (2007:23-30). An unresolved question is in how far the spiritual
growth of new believers becomes limited or stifled if there is no clear break
with the Islamic past. Experience and the biblical injunction seems to support
this notion. Didn't Jesus teach that those who put their hands to the plough
should not look back? On the other hand, the so-called 'Insider Movement' has
definitely been a divine instrument to assist many Islamic followers of Christ
to begin a journey with the Lord. Unfortunately, many of these believers
remained in Islamic bondage in this way, some going back to Islam to all
intents and purposes.
The Special Gifts of
Women
The special gifts of women are still by and large not
used properly and sufficiently. It is fortunately no big debate any more
whether females should be in the pulpit or not. The discrimination of the
'weaker sex' in the Church, the Synagogue and the Mosque has a long sad
history. Talmudic Jewish writers entrenched base discrimination against women.
This even found its way into the form of morning prayer for a Jewish man -
thanking God every morning that he was not ‘a
Gentile, a slave or a woman.’ In Jewish law a
woman became a thing. She had no legal rights whatsoever; she was absolutely in
her husband’s possession. He could do with her as he willed. Islam seems to
have drawn richly from this sad heritage, an aberration of the creation model. It is sad to have to note that the Church by and large
disregarded the revolutionary teachings of Jesus and the ‘New Testament’ with
regard to women (and youth). It was only in the Assyrian (later Nestorian) Church
where women were treated with exemplary dignity for some length of time.
Research of recent decades shows that even widows had leadership roles in the
first century or so in the Assyrian Church.
But in the rest of the Church women were pushed into lesser roles of
leadership and responsibility. Tertullian (and later Jerome) verbalised
sentiments with regard to women,[8] of which we
as Christian men should be ashamed. Women have been silenced in the Church.
Expression of regret and remorseful confession by Global Church leaders in this
regard is long overdue.
Occasional Need
of Confrontation
In no way should we condone an airy-fairy covering up of
differences. Jesus used God’s Word as a prime weapon against the devil when He
was attacked in the desert. But also the assistants of the arch enemy had to be
opposed. Because the Lord had observed their ways meticulously and listened
carefully to what they were saying, Jesus could venture into enemy territory,
telling his religious opponents to their face that they were hypocritical. He
gave Simon, the Pharisee, a lesson in hospitality, while he uplifted the
prostitute who 'wasted' precious nard ointment to anoint him and drying his
feet with her hair (Luke 7:37ff).
The
Master furthermore spoke of ‘binding the strongman’ (Matthew 12:29).
Paul wrote about ‘taking captive every
thought’ (2 Corinthians 10:5), about ‘strongholds’
(2 Corinthians 10:4) and ‘weapons of
righteousness in the right hand and in the left’ (2 Corinthians 5:7). The
full ‘armour’ of the believer (Ephesians 6:11ff) belongs of course to the very
well-known portions of Scripture which have even been taught to children in
Sunday school. In traditional theology these warlike terms have generally been
over-spiritualized. (This probably happened when the superficial impression
could be gained that it could clash with the impression that Christians should
be peace-loving or even pacifist. Islamic adherents love to say – albeit not
quite accurately as they would refer only to the Meccan Surahs and verses of
the Qur’an - that their religion is a peaceful one.)[9]
In Galatians 2:11-15 it is reported how
Paul criticized Peter to his face in the presence of others when he detected
hypocrisy. Jesus did this also in a stinging attack on the religious establishment of his
day, as we can read in Matthew 23. If the actions of
fellow brothers and sisters confuse young believers, it might be necessary to
do the unusual thing to reprimand them publicly.
Paul had
been taught at the feet of the renowned Gamaliel. As a Pharisee, he thus had a
head-start. But, like the Master, he dared to confront his opponents on their
own turf. In Athens he challenged the
learned Greeks who were constantly debating on the Areopagus (Acts 17:16ff). In
the same vein, the apostle did not beat about the bush in his condemnation of
hand-made gods as idols. This made the Ephesians very nervous, causing uproar
in the process. The presence of him and Silas caused a furore in Thessaloniki,
especially when Paul spoke about Jesus as the Christ (Acts 17:1-9).
Persecution at the Heart of the Gospel
The world religions, the Jewish Faith and Islam
even more specifically, have difficulty with the atoning death of Christ on the
Cross. All religion which has ‘works’ as its base - the earning of one’s salvation
in one or the other way - has hence opposed evangelical Christianity in one or
other form. Persecution goes back to the heart of the Gospel.
The
persecution of the first generation of Christians however also caused the
spread of the Gospel to the ends of the earth. From Jerusalem Jews and
proselytes returned after Pentecost (Acts 2:8) – many of them to places in the
Middle East that are Islamic today. From Antioch the believers who hailed from different nations and races
formed a dynamic congregation with the Cypriot Barnabas and North Africans in
leadership. The Samaritans and the Assyrians, the ancestors of many Muslims,
were possibly part and parcel of the teams spreading the Gospel from places in
Assyria, the present-day Iraq, together with Jews. Thomas and Peter (1 Peter
5:13) were probably at the helm of the churches that took the Gospel to India
and as far afield as China.
This phenomenal outreach was hardly discerned, let alone
acclaimed in (Western) Church History although John Stewart, a British church
historian, described the work of the Assyrian-Nestorian Church already in 1928
as ‘a church on fire’. This Church, that later had
its centre in Baghdad, stemmed from believers, who returned to Asia after the
first Pentecost. Stewart suggests that Jewish believers, of whom many ancestors
had once been exiled to the rivers of Babylon, took the Gospel to Central Asia,
for example to the Uigur people of North West China already by 61 CE. Was it
merely politically inexpedient to highlight that the ancestors of Jewish
Christians and Muslims worked together to spread the Gospel? Or was the arch
deceiver behind this move?
The ancestors of this
Muslim tribe in North West China would thus belong to the first century
followers of Jesus. Recorded history has still not solved how the Christian
female slave Marotta, whom the first Moravian missionaries found on St Thomas
in 1732, had been influenced in the Guinea Coast of West Africa. The amount of
biblical knowledge she possessed was just too much to be incidental. The
possibility of African missionaries from either Egypt, Sudan or Ethiopia cannot
be ruled out.
Serious
Bible Study
An example of a much better use of Scripture than the
false alternatives which are sometimes derived from it is seen in the life of
Count Zinzendorf and the Moravians after 1727. From a very early age the Count
was searching the Scriptures, later becoming the spearhead and driving force of
the Order of the Mustard Seed when he
was still at secondary school. Here it
was already clear that a missionary spirit was evolving. The choice of the name
of their order has of course the biblical parable as its origin, when Jesus
referred to the small seed which grew into a mighty shrub (Matthew 13:31f).
In
the congregation at Herrnhut the Bible Study was thorough and deep. Those
brothers, who had a gift of Scriptural exposition, received full freedom to use
it. Spiritual leadership was charismatic rather than based on formal academic
training (Weinlick, 1956:87). The Herrnhut Moravians were not apologetic about it at
all. When someone suggested that the group was shallow and superficial,
Zinzendorf retorted in passing how eager the congregation listened to the
splendid scriptural exposition of
Leonhard Dober, who used the Hebrew text for this purpose although he was no
academic. He was merely a potter. His
brother Martin Dober - also a potter - often found distinguished and learned
people in his audience. How they appreciated his teaching is proved that they
even went to sit next to the potter’s wheel to listen to his teaching. ‘... he might be visited by a count, a nobleman or a professor, who
found him barefoot in his shop’(Weinlick, 1956:87). Martin
Dober was also the most popular preacher at the morning devotions at 5 a.m.
(Uttendörfer and Schmidt, 1914:34). Count Zinzendorf set the good
example to use Scripture to unite rather than divide. Thus he would use Bible
verses to reconcile parties who were at loggerheads. Yet, he was humble enough
to acknowledge his own limitations, by avoiding difficult or controversial
portions from Scripture (Weinlick,
1956:91).
Bible Verses out of Context The
Herrnhut fellowship took the Pauline exhortation at face value that the Word
should dwell richly in us. The Watch Word, which started in 1728, was
primarily a verse from Scripture which was passed on orally and memorized. They
cannot be faulted that later generations of Moravians used these verses out of
context or that the Watch Word became a substitute for the reading of the Bible
itself, abusing it as a sort of oracle.
How seriously they treasured the Word, is evidenced by
the fact that Bishop August Spangenberg (1971:1033) quoted various Bible verses when the community deviated
from biblical practice. His book Idea
fidei fratrum (The Faith Idea of the Brthren) had such a deep impact because of the profound use
of Scripture. It does not seem however that the private study
of the Bible – in contrast to communal reading and studying – was generally
encouraged in Herrnhut extensively. But there would have been little time for
that any way. The first communal daily 'Andacht' (devotions) took place
already at 5 a.m. Daily meetings and prayer events occurred almost 24/7. This
eventually led to a practice where in later years only the daily texts - thus
verses out of their context - were read. Similarly, we cannot generally applaud
the practice of using a Bible verse at random, but I am only too aware that a
scriptural word out of the blue - sometimes given by a stranger - has often
been a special word of encouragement. It was clearly the leading of the Holy
Spirit when Zinzendorf used a Bible verse randomly for an impromptu sermon
which staved off a rift in the Herrnhut congregation in 1728 (Weinlick, 1956:81).
The Observance of
the Lord's Day
A very careful study
of the 'Church Fathers' will reveal that, almost to a man, they did not support
a legalistic approach to Lord's Day observance. The testimony of Bishop Ignatius
is typical. In The
Epistle of Ignatius to the Magnesians
(ca. 110 A.D.) we read:
'Do
not be deceived by strange doctrines or antiquated myths, since they are
worthless. For if we continue to live in accordance with Judaism, we admit that
we have not received grace. For the most Godly prophets lived in accordance
with Christ Jesus. This is why they were persecuted, being inspired as they
were by His grace in order that those who are disobedient might be fully
convinced that there is one God who revealed Himself through Jesus, Christ His
Son, who is His Word which came forth from silence, who in every respect
pleased Him who sent Him. If, then, those who had lived in antiquated practices
came to newness of hope, no longer keep the Sabbath but live in accordance with
the Lord's Day,...'
However,
the Church Fathers are known – almost to a man as well - as those who have been
supporters of the so-called ‘replacement theory’.
The very same Bishop Ignatius, is possibly the first known Christian writer to
argue in favour of Christianity's replacement of the seventh day Sabbath with the Lord's Day.
Religious
policy in the Roman Empire was about to change with three Imperial decrees
issued from 311 to 313. From Nicomedia, in May, 311, the Emperor Galerius
issued the first Edict of Toleration which gave Christians religious equality
with Pagans and Jews. Christianity was finally a legitimate religion in the
Roman Empire. Galerius was in this way a forerunner of Constantine also in his
prime motive, viz. to get the Christians in support rather than in opposition.
That the Jews were side-lined – actually ditched in the process – was of little
political consequence. Theologically the Jews were now almost completely
isolated. They were gradually marginalised until
finally Constantine decreed in 321 AD that Sunday was a compulsory free day. Jews
regarded Christianity to be de facto in opposition to them.
Constantine Ambivalence
Constantine was strongly attracted to Christianity but
he did not fully commit himself to it until his deathbed. Despite the obvious flaws
of Constantine, the sovereign Lord nevertheless worked through Constantine to
relieve the pressure of the continued persecution of Christians. Superficially Emperor Constantine seems to have
had at least some concern for the unity of the Body of Christ. However, he had
a controversial hidden political agenda, viz. to get the difficult Christians
on his side. He knew that many of them held the first day of the week in high
esteem, even though it was a normal working day. They called it the Lord's Day.
In 321 AD Constantine introduced the first legislation concerning Sunday: "Let all the judges and town
people, and the occupation of all trades rest on the venerable day of the
sun." In promoting pagan worship, he wrote
in a letter dated 323 or 324 AD: 'Finding, then,
that the whole of Africa was pervaded by an intolerable spirit of mad folly,
through the influence of those who with heedless frivolity had presumed to rend
the religion of the people into diverse sects; I was anxious to check this
disorder, and could discover no other remedy equal to the occasion, except in
sending some of yourselves to aid in restoring mutual harmony among the
disputants.' Furthermore,
that he resented Jews, also came through quite clearly: 'I have judged
that it ought to be the first object of my endeavors, that unity of faith,
sincerity of love, and community of feeling in regard to the worship of
Almighty God, might be preserved among the highly favored multitude who compose
the Catholic Church. And first of all, it appeared an unworthy thing that in
the celebration of this most holy feast we should follow the practice of the
Jews, who have impiously defiled their hands with enormous sin... Let us then
have nothing in common with the detestable Jewish crowd; for we have received
from our Saviour a different way... Beloved brethren, let us with one consent
adopt this course, and withdraw ourselves from all participation in their
baseness... For how should they be capable of forming a sound judgment, who,
since their parricidal guilt in slaying their Lord, have been subject to the
direction, not of reason, but of ungoverned passion, and are swayed by every
impulse of the mad spirit that is in them?'
Easter replacing
Passover
At the Council of Nicaea
in 325 A.D the final decree was made that Easter would be observed on the
first Sunday after the first full moon of Spring, and not in conjunction with
Passover, thus side-lining Jews further. After this Council, the emperor
Constantine sent out a letter to all those who were not able to be
present informing them of the decisions made, including the resolution to
reject Passover and to celebrate Easter instead.
Two Types of Christians
On the long term, the side-lining of Jews had a very negative
effect on Christianity. A tragic aberration set in when the Church became the
establishment. The rapidity of numerical and geographical expansion of
Christianity in the third century greatly accelerated the acceptance of a
double ethical standard. Acute theological problems were raised by a doctrine
of two types of Christians, ordinary ones and clergy. (Already in the first century the concept was
known as the doctrine of the Nicolaitans, composed of two words, nikao
meaning conquer and laos which means people.) A Nicolaitan was someone
who conquered the laity, the common people. This germ was disseminated in a
sermon of Origen (184 -254 AD), when he spoke of an elite army that was supported by soldiers
who also fought against evil but who were not involved with the actual fighting
(Chadwick, 1969:176).
The State Church replacing House Churches
The secular advantages given to the Church as a result of the
Constantine military victories and the subsequent reforms had a fatal side
effect. The unified State Church replaced house Churches, which were actually
forbidden. This was of course far removed from the biblical idea of the unity
of the Body of Christ. In the process the Church lost its prophetic power over
social, cultural and pagan habits. The clergy became less dependent on God and
their life-style moved further and further away from biblical standards. Thus
the biblical word paroikia of
which Peter, the apostle, speaks in his first epistle, meaning to be a stranger
on earth, evolved to become a parish. This became almost the opposite of the
original concept, but understandable in the environment of a society without
money. The parish was the security of the priest.
Using Force if Persuasion does not work
The well-known North African Church Father Augustine set the
pattern for Muhammad to react with force if persuasion does not work. He
initially accepted that there would be godless and nominal Christians in the
Church, because wheat and weed should be able to grow next to each other until
the harvest. Church discipline should not be practised forcefully with the iron
rod, but rather like that of an operating surgeon. The erring and back-sliding
folk should be brought back to the fold with the 'Gospel of grace.' The Donatists were however rigid, not to be
moved.
Hereafter Augustine abused
the Bible, requesting the secular authorities to use force to bring the erring
Donatists back to the Church. To motivate his position, Augustine quoted Luke
14:23, ‘Force them to come in.’ Otto
de Jong, a Dutch church historian, concludes: ‘With this
argumentation he paved the way for the inquisition.’ Possibly unwittingly, Augustine legitimized force to subdue
opposition (The Inquisition became known as a harsh international secular tribunal,
where a travesty of justice became the common practice).
This precedent had two major tragic
historical emulations, both affecting Jews, viz. when Muhammad was angered after
theJews had mocked him. He therafter killed thousands of them. Centuries later
Martin Luther turned on them when they would not respond to his Gospel
overtures. Via his table-talk, Luther’s
negative views of Jews supplied the venomous fuel that Hitler would abuse for
propaganda purposes as substantiation and support for the Holocaust..
A total Aberration The
use of force to ‘make’ Christians was a total aberration of what Christ taught
about the expansion of his kingdom. The parables about the kingdom is the model
which Jesus handed down, for example 'The
kingdom of God is as if a man should scatter seed upon the ground... the seed
should sprout and grow up, he knows not how...' (Mark 4:26ff). It spreads
the clear message: it is not man’s labour and effort which bring about the Kingdom. It is God’s sovereign work, which comes to pass
through the Holy Spirit. This parable is obviously a reply to the passionate
striving of those who want to force the coming of the Kingdom of God (Mark 9:24).
One
can somehow comprehend the actions of the Jews of the first century for their
part in the persecution of the Christians. I have more difficulty to understand
Constantine and his successors. But I cannot find any reason to exonerate the
theologian Augustine at all, when he abused the Bible to propagate force and
quoting Luke 14:23 to this end. He set a bad example which had dire results in
subsequent centuries. Religious wars proliferated through the Middle Ages, with
the Inquisition and the Crusades among the best known - next to the Muslim military
conquest of North Africa, Spain and quite a few other countries.
Distortion
of the Word
If we take Jesus’ dual proclamation
of himself as the Truth (John 14:6) and satan as the father of lies (John 8:44)
to be central to Christianity, a very sad development can be traced. What
started as so-called white lies or half-truths such as those used by Abram to
protect his own skin, calling Sarai his sister, one finds a development via Rabbinic-Pharisaic
Judaism’s innovative legalist inventions and ploys to circumvent laws, a tragic
ultimate negative pinnacle followed in Medinan teachings of Muhammad that lists
four types of lies as permissible.[10] And
somewhere along that downward spiral one finds heretical Christianity’s distortion
and dilution of uncomfortable biblical injunctions and truths.[11]
Chapter 14 Cape
Pioneers of Church Unity
Protestant
missionaries were expediently abused to oppose Roman Catholicism in different
parts of the world. An agreement had been reached after the 30 Years War, which ended in Europe in
1648: cuius regio, eius religio. This
implied that colonial powers could enforce their national religion on the areas
that they ‘possessed’, i.e colonized. The Cape inherited religious intolerance
from the early beginnings of the half-way settlement in 1652. Therefore no
other churches except the Dutch Reformed denomination were allowed to
operate at the Cape. Thus it would be ensured that the Catholics would not have
any pretext to come and join the fray. The V.O.C. (Vereenigde Oost Indische Compagne = United East India Company), the
trade company that governed the Cape from 1652, regarded Dutch Reformed Calvinism
to be the obvious guarantee that this would also happen at the Cape.
One of the worst
examples of denominational discrimination worldwide was practiced at the Cape
in respect of Catholics. Around 1800 local inhabitants from this denomination ‘did not have
liberty’ to attend mass with one of their clergymen on one of the ships in the
port (Du Plessis, 1911:368). The three Catholic priests who came here, the
first of whom arrived in October 1805, were requested to leave the Cape at the
British re-conquest of the colony the following year.
Other religions were even worst off.
Muslims were merely tolerated and Judaism was trampled upon. The Dutch
Reformed Church regarded itself as the new Israel.
Early
evangelical Beginnings in the Mother City
The first serious effort in the 18th
century to evangelize the Muslims at the Cape is said to be that of the Dutch
Reformed Ds. Henricus Beck, a Groote Kerk minister, after his
retirement in 1731 (Haasbroek, 1955:58).[12]
A group of evangelical Christians gathered around Ds. Beck. His pioneering
labour provided the spade work for the dynamic Georg Schmidt to start lively
Christian groups in due course.
It
has been reported that Schmidt had a small congregation of 47 and that he was
in contact with 39 other Whites (Schmidt, Afrika
en die Evangelie [pamphlet], Genadendal, 1937). The evangelical group in
the Mother City laid the foundation of what became the Zuid-Afrikaanse Gesticht (Z.A. Gesticht) on the corner of Long and
Hout Street. This would influence the religious life at the Cape for the next
decades decisively.
A few years later in 1742, Cape
residents described the impact of Schmidt’s ministry to Nitschmann and Eller,
two Moravian missionaries en route from
Ceylon (the modern-day Sri Lanka), from where they had been deported. In their
assessment they stated that Schmidt had accomplished in three and a half years
‘what others would not
have affected in thirty years’ (Du Plessis, 1911:56).
Direct fruit in the Mother City of the
evangelistic work of Georg Schmidt were new believers among the colonists. Some
of them were Reformed Christians of the Groote Kerk, others were German
Lutherans. Schmidt proceeded soon after his arrival to pioneer ministry among
the Khoi at the Sergeants River in the Overberg. These indigenous
people were disparagingly called Hottentotten at the time, regarded as
unconvertible barbarians.
The
Dutch Reformed Church and other mainline Protestants
The French Huguenots, who arrived at
the Cape after 1688 were spiritual relatives of the ruling church, but even
they were not allowed to use their home language for worship. (In France the
Huguenots had been persecuted.) After the Huguenot pastor Pierre Simond had
protested successfully against the language ruling forbidding them to worship
in French, Simon van der Stel, the Cape governor, branded him a rebel.
Although
there were many Germans at the Cape by 1700, they were not permitted to have
their own church building. It took the Lutherans almost 40 years of petitioning
until they were finally allowed to bring their own minister to the Cape and to
have their own worship in 1779. Georg Schmidt, the Moravian missionary, was the
first cleric outside of the Reformed ranks to operate at the Cape. Theal (Vol.
3, 1964 [1907]:59) notes that Schmidt initially experienced ‘nothing but kindness’
from the government at the Cape. However, he was seriously handicapped after
Ds. G. Kulenkamp, an Amsterdam minister, issued a pastoral letter of warning
against the ‘extreme views’ expressed by the Count Zinzendorf,
the leader of the Moravian Church movement at the time. The letter branded the
Moravians a mystical society, spreading dangerous opinions detrimental to the
pure doctrine under the cover of pure simplicity (Kulenkamp was actually
erring, referring to the ‘Blut und
Wunden’ [blood and wounds] theology of Zinzendorf’s son Christiaan Renatus,
but the warning was now understood to be against the Moravians in general). But also later there was a basic clash with
Reformed teaching.[13] Furthermore, the free attitude of the
Moravians towards the various denominations caused offence. Count Zinzendorf endeavoured to form a
fellowship of all who accepted the salvation through Christ as the focal point
of their faith.
At
Baviaanskloof Georg Schmidt was
expected to refrain from starting a new church through his mission work,
although the colonial church officials believed ‘less
in the possible conversion of the Khoi than in the conversion of the devil’, to quote Schmidt’s own words
(Bredekamp et al, 1981:43). Schmidt was merely tolerated as long as he worked
far away from company settlements.
A
basic objection against Georg Schmidt was that he had no relationship to the Dutch
Reformed Church. Gerdener (1937:20) highlighted Schmidt’s response to these
‘whisperings’ that were intended to halt his work, a reaction that was so
typical of that generation of Moravians: ‘More
than ever Schmidt sought the guidance of
the Lord of the harvest and declared that this guidance demanded that he should
not only continue but renew his efforts with even greater vigour.’
Worldwide
the Moravians were operating with a low profile in remote places. It is quite telling of the religious
intolerance that this church group was nevertheless ‘treated as criminals for attempting to reach the blacks’ (Cited in Du Plessis, 1955:419 from
the Missionary Review of the World, July 1908). It did not start like
that though.
The
first Converts of Georg Schmidt
Georg Schmidt was a powerful
evangelist. Various sailors on his voyage to the Cape had been touched and
converted. Both corporal Kampen and his successor at the military base at Zoetemelksvlei
described Schmidt as their spiritual father (Cruse, 1947:147). His sense of
purpose is demonstrated by the fact that Schmidt moved on from Zoetemelksvlei
to the Sergeants River soon after the conversion of Kampen, to get to
the original reason for his coming - to evangelise the Khoi.
Schmidt
gradually overcame the ‘apathy of his flock’ with ‘labour
of love and patience of hope’
(Du Plessis, 1911:54). It was however no cakewalk in the light of the growing
opposition against his work. In the beginning of 1742 Schmidt was very
frustrated and despondent after long years of toil and little to show for it.
He wrote to Zinzendorf that he intended to return to Europe, partly because of
the indolence of his folk, and partly because he did not receive helpers. But
then the fruit came in the form of the first converts.
Schmidt came to the Mother City to bid
farewell to his friend and benefactor, Captain Rhenius, who was about to leave
the country on his retirement. On his arrival, Schmidt heard that his
compatriots Nitschmann and Eller, two Moravian missionaries, were on the ship
‘Marquetta’. The ship was expected en route from Ceylon (the modern-day
Sri Lanka), from where they had been deported.
Schmidt’s
extended visit to the Mother City with
Willem, one of Schmidt's converts, resulted in an unprecedented interest among
colonists and officials. It was quite special that during this visit to the
Cape Schmidt could pick up a letter of ordination from Count Zinzendorf. In
March 1742 he thus at last had the ordination to baptise suitable candidates in
his possession. The Count encouraged him
in the same letter to baptise his converts ‘where
you shot the rhino’, i.e. at the
river.
Schmidt had to overcome his own sexist
prejudices. This was possibly the result of deficient teaching in Herrnhut.
Whereas the Count Zinzendorf gave full scope for women and young people – even
teenagers from the age of fourteen - to grow into leadership roles. The
understanding was that females would be leaders within their own gender, but
definitely not ruling over men.[14]
Georg Schmidt initially only attended
to males. At first he found only three men suitable for baptism. Much to his
surprise an intelligent, strong-willed woman wanted to become a follower of
Jesus. In the conversion and baptism of the determined first female convert,
Vehettge Tikkuie, there was a clear supernatural element. Schmidt only
proceeded to test her Bible knowledge on 4 April 1742. Quite prejudiced against
females, he did not expect much, but Schmidt was very surprised by her answers.
He had little choice than to baptise the intelligent Khoi woman as well, giving
her the name Magdalena,[15]
surely hoping that she would spread the news of the resurrection of Jesus
Christ like her biblical namesake. She had been exceptional, progressing
quickly from the Dutch ABC manual, to read the ‘New Testament’ in that language
(Bredekamp, 1987:138).
Schmidt
succeeded - against all odds and contrary to all expectations - to convert
Khoi, baptising them in or at the Sergeant’s River. Much too easily he
shared with the believers at the military post at Zoetemelksvlei that he baptised the five. He was promptly called to book because he had
not heeded the warning, albeit that the Calvinists had a convenient formal
excuse: Schmidt was regarded as ‘not properly ordained’. Count Zinzendorf, the
leader of their church, had merely ordained Schmidt by letter.
To
the church authorities this was unacceptable. The ordination letter had been
signed by a foreign denomination. We can hardly comprehend the thinking that
caused a government to forbid missionaries to baptise their indigenous
converts. This is exactly what happened to Georg Schmidt. A new pamphlet against
the Moravians had arrived at the Cape. Church people expected him to be
banished like the brethren from Ceylon.
A Threat to the colonial Church?
Schmidt was hereafter regarded as a
threat to the colonial church. The three Dutch Reformed dominees at the Cape, Le Seur
(Groote Kerk), van Gendt
(Stellenbosch) and van Echten (Drakenstein) referred to Schmidt unbecomingly in
a letter to their church authorities as ‘deeze
zoogenaamde hottentots- bekeerder’ (so-called hottentot converter), who
pretended to convert ‘de blinde
Hottentotten’ (Dreyer, 1936:196f).
The ministers complained that the converts were not sufficiently
instructed and that Schmidt was not ordained. The ministers referred to
Zinzendorf’s letter of ordination in very disparaging terms. Their real
problem comes through in the sentence ‘ook mogen geen
bejaarden worden gedoopt, dan in de kerken voor de gantsche gemeente’ (my italics,
Dreyer, 1936:196f). They could
not palate it that Schmidt baptised in the river and not in a church building.
Pressure
was successfully exerted by the three ministers to get Schmidt sent back to
Germany. It looked as if Schmidt’s work
in Baviaanskloof was doomed, a complete failure.
Schmidt’s
position had become extremely unpleasant ‘if
not untenable’ (Theal, Vol. 3, 1964 [1907]:61).
But even as he was waiting for a ship to take him to Europe, Schmidt
evangelised among the colonists at the Cape. He hoped for many years that he
could return to Baviaanskloof. It has been reported that Schmidt
continued to pray for his flock in Africa until old age in the East German
village of Niesky where he died in 1785.
Furthermore,
neighbouring farmers instigated the indigenous Khoi of Baviaanskloof and surroundings successfully so that many of them
left the mission post. The letter of the three Cape clergymen spread like a
wildfire in Europe. At this time the Moravians had been banished from Saxony,
in which Herrnhut was situated. This coincided with the Count Zinzendorf’s
absence from Herrnhaag where the revolutionary fellowship had found a refuge.
Doctrinal excesses by his son Christian Renatus exaggerated the problem. The
Moravians were hereafter vilified and branded as fanatics, who held wild views
of Christianity.
Church
Planting by Default
The seed that Schmidt had sown at
the Cape during his stint of not even seven years germinated, both in the
Mother City and in Baviaanskloof, the
later Genadendal. Schmidt was said to have been ‘n man van sterk geloof en ‘n bidder (Schmidt, Afrika en die Evangelie [pamphlet],
Genadendal, 1937), a man of great faith and a prayer warrior. In fact,
colonists told his two colleagues Nitschmann and Eller admiringly during their
stay in Cape Town en route from
Ceylon, how Schmidt succeeded ‘to teach a
Hottentot to pray as he has done. They actually retire from time to time to
pray in solitude’ (Kaapsche
Cyclopedie, nr.48). Apparently, this example rubbed off on Vehettge Tikkuie,
who got the name Magdalena at her baptism. Khoi Christians, with whom later
missionaries had interaction, reported that she was found ‘dikwels
biddend in ‘n knielende posisie’,
often in prayer on her knees. Hanna, the daughter of Joshua, Schmidt’s first
convert, urged the intelligent Magdalena to lead the saddened flock without a
shepherd.
Andreas Sparrman, a Swedish traveller
in the Cape Colony during 1775 to 1776, reported how he had heard of an aged
Khoi lady, who was building on the foundations laid by a German missionary. On
Sundays ‘de oude Lena’ would walk to
the pear tree and pray with her folk where the pioneer missionary had preached,
teaching the believers from the copy of the ‘New
Testament’, which she had received from Georg Schmidt before his (en)forced
departure.
‘De oude Lena’ had the copy on hand
when three new Moravian missionaries arrived in 1792. Lena herself could no
longer read, due to failing eyesight, but the woman whom she had taught ‘opened the sacred
volume and read the second chapter of Matthew’s gospel with considerable
fluency’ (Du Plessis, 1911:73). Even though she could not remember
anything Georg Schmidt had taught her, his example and teaching was evidently
still operating.
Almost 50 years after Schmidt had
left, Khoi witnesses said that they came together at her home every evening
where she prayed with them. In addition to this, she taught the believers from
her ‘New Testament’. If one takes the
finance minister of Ethiopia mentioned in Acts 8 as the absolute first
indigenous evangelist, we can now say that ‘de oude Lena’ was definitely the
first one of Sub Saharan Africa. But she was also the first known indigenous
female church planting evangelist of all time.
Revival and spiritual Warfare
As
a result of the vision of a young reformed pastor, Dr Helperus van Lier, who
arrived at our shores in 1786, about 60 Christians in Cape Town and
its surroundings set aside one day in the week for evangelistic outreach as
early as 1788. They congregated in this way for the religious teaching of ‘the
heathen’ at the Zuid-Afrikaanse Gesticht[16]
on the corner of Long and Hout Streets. The missionary
prayer circle committed themselves in an organized way to weekly prayer (later
twice a week) for the outreach to the ‘heathen’ and the slaves. The influence
of the Moravians operated at these prayer meetings because Van Lier saw to it
that the Idea Fidei Fratrum of kort begrip der christelijke leer in de
evangelische broedergemeenten (1778) by Bishop Spangenberg - and other
writings of the Moravians, including reports of their mission work around the
world – were read (Krüger, 1966:48).
Van
Lier continued to lobby for missionary action, pleading for the establishment
of a Dutch missionary society, for the admission of missionaries to the colony.
He also urged the Moravians to re-enter the field. According to him, three
enterprises were called for: ‘One among the
Hottentots in the Colony, one among the Bantu in the East, and one among the
indigenous peoples to the North’
(Du Plessis, 1911:63f). Van Lier possibly had some indirect influence on the
founding of the London and Rotterdam missionary societies in 1795 and 1797
respectively. What a joy it must have been for him to welcome the three new
Moravian missionaries to his table after returning from sick leave, but his
days were numbered. Tragically, Van Lier was not around to see the actual
founding of the first missionary society in the world outside of Europe at the
Cape in April 1799. Van Lier had already died of tuberculosis in March 1793,
only 28 years old.
Supernaturally Khoi converged on the
settlement Baviaanskloof that was later renamed Genadendal. Soon the
mission station became quite sizeable in terms of population, second only to
the Mother City. One of the inhabitants recalled: ‘I remember what my late father used to say,
exhorting us children to take notice and follow those people who would once come
from a distant country, and show us Hottentots a narrow way, by which we might
escape from the fire, and the true Toiqua (= God)’ (Catherine Pik, ??).
The mission station seemed to have
formed a special attraction for all devout believers.
The second Cape Mini-Revival
The spiritual hunger of the Khoi at Baviaanskloof, has
been attributed to the prayers of the Americans during their second great
awakening (e.g. Terhoven
(1989:153). The 24-hour prayer watch of the Moravians
in Europe and America, together with the faithful prayers of Georg Schmidt
until the time of his death, and those of his convert Magdalena in Baviaanskloof
- will have been at least as contributory.
It is
interesting to note that the three Genadendal missionaries - Kühnel, Marsveld and
Schwinn - recorded in their diary the story of a man
who ‘dreamt that three would come to teach them... They (the Khoi)
say that they spoke about it often because they very much wished for it to
happen’ (Bredekamp
and Plüddeman, 1992:134).
Khoi
came to Baviaanskloof, desiring to know more,
wanting
to accept the Lord into their lives
In the diaries
of these three missionaries one reads again and again of Khoi coming to them,
desiring to know more, wanting to accept the Lord into their lives, wishing to
be baptised. Evidently the Holy Spirit had prepared these people through dreams
and visions. On a daily basis the new Genadendal missionaries were overwhelmed
by questions such as ‘What must I do to be saved? (Viljoen, Khoisan
Labour Relations in the Overberg Districts during the latter half of the 18th
Century, (M.A.
Thesis, UWC,
1993:221). It is striking that those who came to faith in Christ also
sought protection against satanic forces (Bredekamp, Flegg and Plüddeman, 1992:155).
People came to Baviaanskloof from everywhere, drawn to the mission station as if
by a magnet. Some of those from the Cape testified to the obvious: ‘... this is God’s work, no one can hinder
it though many are trying’ (Bredekamp, Flegg and Plüddeman, 1992:252).
A Cape Minister
with a Heart for Slaves and Khoi
Ds. Michiel C. Vos cannot be regarded as one of Van Lier’s ‘trophies’. He
had been called by God independently as a
juvenile after wrestling with God in prayer in such places as the stone quarry
at the foot of Signal Hill. His ‘heart was grieved
at the neglect of the immortal souls’ of the Cape slaves. As an orphan
with a sizeable inheritance, he had a yearning to study theology. To
this end he resorted to the unusual step of getting married to Elizabeth Jacobs
to become legally of age so as to gain access to inheritance from his father,
arranging that he would leave after two years of marriage to go and study
theology in the Netherlands. It was arranged with the in-laws that his wife would
remain in the Cape Colony.
Michiel Vos
was converted or spiritually awakened in the circles of the so-called conventicles,
that is, small house church groups where Christians shared their spiritual walk
and experience with each other.
After initially being overlooked for appointment to a church
at the Cape, Ds. M.C. Vos returned from the Netherlands in March 1794. There he had been inspired anew by the Holy
Spirit to return to his home country to minister to the slaves and the Khoi. Ds. Vos took up the
legacy of Dr van Lier.[17] Although he soon moved to Roodezand (Tulbagh),
his influence was felt all over the Western Cape. He was concerned especially about the spiritual
condition of the slaves in the Cape Colony. In his Dutch Reformed congregation at Roodezand, his first sermon was on
Mark 16: 15, "Go ye into all the
world and preach the gospel to every creature." He told his
congregation that he would therefore preach to the slaves and Khoi-Khoi
(Hottentots) - something that was not generally done at the time. He also used
his personal influence to improve the position of the Moravian missionaries.
In the Mother City itself, Mechteld
Smit(h), a widow who had been discipled by Van Lier, was performing a similar
role to that of Magdalena Tikkuie in Baviaanskloof
(later changed to Genadendal). God used her - along with Ds. Vos as the main
role players - to advance the evangelical cause.
A Cape spiritual ‘Revolution’
A spiritual ‘revolution’, in which the Lord used Dr van Lier,
was the change in the attitude of many White believers towards slaves and other
people of colour. In those days slaves were initially not allowed near the
entrance of the church after the closing of services and they were punished if
they dared to attend the funeral of one of the colonists. Prejudice against
missionaries was still prevalent when Van Lier arrived, but the youthful
minister challenged the congregation through his fiery sermons and personal
example. The young dominee literally
caused an ecclesiastical revolution at the Cape by shortening the duration of
sermons and the length of his prayers during services. Believers were
encouraged to get involved with the spreading of the Gospel.
Cape Town evangelicals – Reformed
and Lutheran - were among the worldwide leaders with a passion to spread the
Gospel. They were not far behind the Moravians of Herrnhut in Germany and
Bethlehem (Pennsylvania, USA). A local newspaper, the Zuid-Afrikaansche Tijdschrift, reported in 1824: ‘When people in many parts of Europe were
still discussing whether slaves and heathen should believe and whether they
could be taught, they had already started with that work in this Colony’.
Start of the SAMS
Mechteld Smit(h) would become a powerful instrument in God’s hand at the
Cape. Some farmers introduced family
prayers for the whole community on their farms, which caused the Khoi to
prefer them to other employers. The South African Missionary Society (SAMS) was
formally constituted in 1799. The first missionaries of the SAMS at the Cape
were significantly not ordained in the Groote Kerk or even in
Stellenbosch, but in Roodezand
(Tulbagh) where Ds. Vos was the minister. It comes therefore as no surprise to
find that a Cape missionary was inducted there on 3 October 1799 in the home of
Mechteld Smit(h), in the presence of forty-seven SAMS members.
Divisive elements in a brittle Cape Church Unity
Due to the combined
effect of the spadework of Georg Schmidt, Ds. Henricus Beck and Ds van Lier,
much of the denominationalism that came along with Dutch colonialism
seemed to have been reduced considerably towards the end of the 18th
century. The LMS missionaries who
arrived from 1799 unfortunately soon caused division. The committed Dutch
missionary Dr Johannes van der Kemp, who joined the newly formed
London Missionary Society (LMS) was one of the first missionaries sent
to the Cape. He was the first missionary to work among the Xhosa
(1799-1800). Strongly influenced by the
philanthropic views of the Swiss philosopher Jean Jacques Rousseau, inter
alia that man was born free but subsequently became chained, Dr Van der
Kemp became interested from the start in the economic plight of the Khoi
('Hottentot') in the Cape Colony and strongly advocated granting them
legal equality with the White colonists.
Influence of Jean Jacques Rousseau
One of the reasons for the negative view of the
government and colonists towards missionaries was the overdrawn uncritical
acceptance of the unbiblical ideas of Jean Jacques Rousseau. Saturated with the
doctrine that the Khoi were free men, with all the rights and privileges of
free citizens, Dr Johannes van der Kemp, the first superintendent of the London
Missionary Society, refused to use any compulsion in his dealings with the
Khoi. At Bethelsdorp Dr van der Kemp and
others did phenomenal work.
Both
van der Kemp and his colleague James Read married Khoi women, to the chagrin
not only of the rank and file colonist. Dr. George Thom, his successor as
superintendent, became an important adversary, with little sympathy of the work
in Bethelsdorp, regarding the mission station to be a ‘nursery of indolence and
filth.’ In a problematic interpretation of the teachings of Rousseau, Van der
Kemp – decades before Hudson Taylor made contextualisation known by wearing the
clothing of the Chinese – would discard hat, shoes and stockings, frequently
returning from some journey to a distant village with his feet lacerated and
bleeding.
Dr
van der Kemp , a widower of over sixty years, married a Khoi teenager. This
alienated the White settlers against his work, especially when he attempted to
baptise her. James Read, another LMS missionary, who held similar views by
accepting all races as equal, caused discord in the LMS team, especially after
it became known that he had fathered a child outside of wedlock. The race issue
was destined to wreck relationships for decades.
Yet, indirectly Dr van
der Kemp blazed a trail for a better understanding between the Dutch
Reformed Church and the missionaries when he stuck to his calling to the
indigenous, refusing to become the pastor of Graaff-Reinet. In a compromise,
his colleague Aart A. van der Lingen, who had once started at the Cape and who
had been refused permission by De Mist, the governor, to work among the slaves
there - became the Graaff-Reinet minister. Hereafter quite a few of the
earliest missionaries sent out by the London and Rotterdam Missionary
societies ended their days as pastors of Dutch Reformed
congregations, blessing that denomination with an evangelical stamp of
commitment to the Word of God. At the same time the gulf between the pastor of
the White church and the mission churches was somewhat lessened and the
negative vibes of the colonists towards the missionary from abroad decreased.
Some
LMS missionaries, including Van der Kemp, who married a young Khoi woman, were
falsely accused of immorality and others of treason for standing up for the
rights of the Khoi and slaves. The missionaries on the other hand ‘regarded themselves as the conscience of the settlers and
the protectors of the “natives”’ (De
Gruchy, 1979:13).
Change of Attitudes
At the end
of the 18th century, the effect of two pastoral stars of the Cape,
Dr van Lier and Ds Vos, were operating
in full force in mission work. Although
Rev. M.C. Vos - born and bred in South Africa - initially laboured in far-away
Tulbagh, his influence and that of Dr van Lier was felt at the Cape ‘soos ‘n suurdeeg in die Kaapse
volksplanting, like a
leaven at the Cape people’s settlement (Haasbroek, 1955:69). A century after their pioneering work, J.I. Marais wrote in the foreword
to the Dutch translation of Nachtigal’s book on missions in South Africa: ‘Het tegenwoordig geslacht plukt de vrucht van hun gebed en arbeid, van
hun tranen en hun strijd. Het waren donkere dagen toen zij optraden... Doch hun
geloofsmoed zegevierde.’[18]
Towards
the end of the 18th century the Dutch Reformed minister of
Stellenbosch at this time, Ds. Meent Borcherds, made no secret of his
resentment of missionary work within the boundaries of his parish. He and his
church council complained about the ringing of the bell in far away Genadendal.
Of course, this situation was nothing new. Years before him, Borcherds’
predecessors at the Cape had applied pressure, forcing Georg Schmidt to
leave the Cape. The complaint regarding the bell was however ludicrous in the
extreme. The missionaries ‘had to construct ... (the bell) in three sections to get it round and
shaped like a bell’ (Bredekamp, Flegg and Plüddeman, 1992:93). The brethren themselves were
not very much impressed by the bell. It was merely an instrument to call the
people of the village together because the indigenous folk had no watches.
The January 1797 visit to Baviaanskloof by Ds. Vos with Machteld
Smith, J.J. van Zulch and other mission friends for a few days caused a marked
changed of public opinion. A few weeks later, farmers told the brethren of a
revival, caused by this visit. The colonist farmers who a few years prior to
this had been ready to attack and destroy the mission institution, now asked
for permission to attend the worship at Baviaanskloof. They even requested that
one of the missionaries should come and live among them.
The
attitude and stance of Ds. Meent Borcherds, once a fierce opponent of the
Moravian brethren, changed after his study of the Moravian Bishop Spangenberg’s
doctrinal exposition Idea Fidei Fratrum, even to the extent of
apologizing to a visiting Moravian brother for his earlier behaviour.
Evangelical Missionaries in
the Dock
Anthropologists were accusing evangelical missionaries at this time of
destroying indigenous cultures. There was a lot of clout in this accusation. It
has been dismissed too easily by evangelical leaders, e.g. defending the role
of missions, notably via humanitarian work in education s and health care. Thus
Richard Twiss, an indigenous American of
Sicangu Lakota, was made to burn
and destroy all his tribal carvings, eagle feathers, and his dance
outfit in another part of the world. 'The pastor told me … that I was a Christian, old
things passed away and all things became new, which meant all my Native
cultural ways needed to be replaced with Euro-American cultural ways' (Mission
Frontiers, September-October 2010, p.7).
Humanist anthropologists
have been claiming that mission work destroys the indigenous culture. To some
extent, this has indeed happened at the Cape. However, with regard to the Khoi,
the contrary is more true to fact. One can safely assume that the pioneering
work of Georg Schmidt and his successors at Genadendal 50 years later probably
saved the local Khoi from extinction at that time. Colonists were furious,
determined to destroy the Genadendal mission station.
A
few decades later, the Anglican Bishop Gray was perhaps the most honest on this
matter. He bluntly conceded in his correspondence with the Secretary of State,
the Duke of Newcastle,: ‘We have taken possession (justly or
unjustly is not now the question) of a new Territory. From it we have thrust
out the Heathen and planted ourselves in’
(Cited by Hodgson, 1984:65). His views on the release of Xhosa chiefs from
banishment might even have assisted their release in 1869. They received a big
tract of land in Kaffraria. This had nevertheless little effect because when
the chiefs returned, they found their people dispersed, the bulk of their land
confiscated and their power gone.
A tragic tendency can be
observed in the preaching of the Gospel in general. Pastors approached slaves
and the indigenous Khoisan with the European mentality of superiority which could hardly
have given them credibility with these people.
Furthermore, discrimination was the order of the day, also in the
Church. A condescending attitude towards the natives was the common pattern.
They hardly gave any encouragement for the indigenous people and slaves to read
or interpret the Bible themselves. Yet, there was also the occasional
exception. In one of his sermons, Rev. Morgan of St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church
acknowledged class distinctions in the Early Church, but he stressed that ‘they were utterly repudiated and condemned by the Apostles, and in the
Church of Christ there is to be ‘no respect of persons’
(Cuthbertson, 1981:60.).
A Travesty of Church Unity The practices in South Africa became a
complete travesty of church unity. The Gospel that was preached was castrated.
The individualistic European pattern of that time was the vogue. Sadly also, the missionaries at the Cape
negated the 'New Testament' principle and practice of full sharing to all
intents and purposes. That would have been so near to traditional African
communal custom of ubuntu.
The majority of missionaries at the
Cape definitely had an imperialist spirit, not appearing to be very interested
in bringing people to a living faith. Their zeal for spreading civilization and
their brand of denominational Christianity was at least just as strong. This
obviously had a negative effect on Muslim outreach. This may be one of the
causes of the cowardly mutual tolerance, which prevails to this day: ‘You
have your religion, I have mine.’ The latter attitude - combined with
indifference of Christians - effectively prevented them from sharing the Gospel
with their Muslim neighbours in residential areas like District Six. A negative
factor was the emphasis on spreading ‘civilisation’. Thus one found that even
within the confines of the S.A. Mission Society (SAMS) this was stated
as the motivation for mission work. None less than Dr James Adamson of St.
Andrew’s was quoted, saying that mission work was imperative ‘ter beschaving
en bekering der wereld’ (cited in
Els, 1971:31). We note the order: civilisation before conversion. This was
typical of the general sense of priorities.
The early missionaries
understood much better to incorporate their converts in the spreading of the
good news. George Barker examined five women in 1816, prior to their baptism.
He discovered that ‘not one of them attributed the beginning of the
work of grace in their hearts to the preaching of the Missionaries, but to
their own people (Hottentots) speaking to them’
(Quoted in Elbourne, 1992:9). In fact,
if the missionaries had been open to learn something from the so-called
‘primitive’ African communal life style, interesting dynamics might have
developed. Even in the late 1970s I encountered scorn and opposition in Holland
when I suggested that Europeans could learn from Africans.
In the 20th century the
clergyman in White Reformed churches was called dominee (from the Latin
word for Lord), the colleague working in one of the Black churches was an eerwaarde,
a reverend but with a connotation of inferiority. In rank-and-file Afrikaner
parlance the latter clergyman was derogatorily called the kafferdominee. Black
clergy with inferior training were called evangelists. In episcopal Protestant denominations
the whole papal hierarchy (minus cardinals and the Pope) is still intact.
The aforementioned attitude and the
indifference of the Church led to the deceptive deduction in due course that
the Islamic Allah and the God of the Bible are identical. This flawed message
was also indirectly spread in the struggle against apartheid when Muslim and
Christian clergymen sometimes shared the same platform. It was regarded as politically
incorrect at the time to speak about the Gospel. That the ‘New Testament’
portrays God as the Father of Jesus, clearly distinguishes Him from the aloof
Allah of the Qur’an who has no Son.
A
supernatural Revival Element
A
supernatural element can hardly be denied as spiritual renewal ensued. On 15
June 1801 - only two weeks after the
missionary Henricus Maanenberg Maanenberg’s appointment - he informed
the directors that he needed a bigger place for the services. The ‘oefenhuis’ had become too small for the
great number of listeners and that it would be almost impossible to have
services there in the summer (Botha, Die twee-eeue erfenis van die SA Sendingsgestig, 1999:16).
A zealous mission-minded group of believers rallied around the SAMS
missionaries Maanenberg and Tromp, supporting Maanenberg’s suggestion for a
bigger building where they could have their prayer meetings, a place for
teaching of the ‘heathen’ and a residence for the missionary. Already on 5
August 1801 the building commission reported that they had bought a plot of
ground in Long Street with a house and ‘pakhuis’ (storage place) for
50,000 guilders. To prevent provocation, the directors of the SAMS decided on 2
March 1802 to refrain from the traditional ceremony of laying the corner stone
(Botha, 1999:19). Thus the ceremony took place without freemason ritual as was
the custom. Apart from a fringe group of Christians, the Gospel outreach to
slaves figured very low on the list of priorities of the first Cape churches.
A
Blessing in Disguise
Maart, a slave
from Mozambique, was blessed ‘with strong intellectual endowments’. He responded so well to the five years of Christian
teaching under Ds. M.C. Vos that the LMS thought of educating him ‘... to
qualify him to accompany some other missionaries to... introduce into his
native country ...that gospel which brings healing and salvation in its wings’. Henricus Maanenberg was forced however to
suspend instruction to the slave Maart because of a ban on teaching reading and
writing to ‘heathen’. The blame for the ban should possibly not be laid solely
at the feet of the secular authorities. It is reported that Ds. Christiaan
Fleck, one of the Groote Kerk ministers,
complained that Maanenberg wanted to teach slaves: ‘want daartoe hebben we hier geen afzonderlike zendelingen nodig... terwijl
van kerkenraadswege daartoe perzonen zijn aangesteld’ (Hofmeyr, Pillay 1994:199).[19] One suspects jealousy
at Maanenberg’s success. Governor De Mist’s reaction to the memorandum handed
to him by the directors of the SAMS may have influenced Maanenberg to resign.
He was so discouraged by the antagonistic attitude of De Mist that he withdrew
from the work to go and live outside the city.
Supernatural
Intervention
The initial interest of the Church and
some colonists at the Cape in reaching out in love to the slaves decreased substantially after a few years.
God intervened - surely because of the prayers of the faithful few elsewhere,
e.g. evangelicals in England, in Germany and the USA. The soldiers
John Kendrick and George Middlemiss couldn’t find a serious Christian among the
1,000 men. They were mocked for their seriousness as Middlemiss became Cape
Methodism’s ‘first leader
and exhorter-preacher’ (Mears, Methodism in the Cape, 1973:7). At that stage Cape Town was given over to wickedness
and immorality and nick-named as the ‘Paris of the South’.
God
sometimes appears to supernaturally use natural disasters to shake people out
of their indifference and lethargy. An earthquake on 4 December 1809 at the Cape caused not only a 8-day revival and
a significant increase in evangelicals (Terhoven, Breath of Heaven, 1989:60), but it also imparted a new
urge towards missionary work among the slaves.
During the earthquake, not a single
person was killed, but the people fled in fear and watched horrified as the
city was shaken as if by the fury of a giant hand. John Kendrick, a Methodist military officer,
wrote in 20 November 1810 that it was the best thing that could have happened
as soldiers and civilians turned to God in prayer and pleaded for mercy. Many persons were led to think
seriously about the salvation of their souls. A weekly prayer meeting was
started every Saturday evening in addition to the monthly one, which continued
for many years. Kendrick mentions revivals at Cape Town and at Wynberg. By 1812
there were 142 men in the Methodist Society ‘all of whom experience the love of God shed abroad in their
hearts’ (Mears, 1973:8).
The
1809 earthquake impacted the SAMS in many ways. Jacobus Henricus Beck, a Cape
colonist who had joined the SAMS, was deeply touched by the earthquake. Before
long he was on his way to the Netherlands, Scotland and England for theological
training. (Later he became the first pastor of the congregation formed at the ZA
Gesticht.)
Another
Cape colonist who was impacted deeply by the earthquake was Martinus Casparus
Petrus Vogelgezang. He was a teacher, who went for missionary training.
Vogelgezang became a powerful preacher and church planter at the Cape, starting
a few small fellowships in Boand Onderkaap (the later District Six).
Other
missionary Efforts of the early nineteenth Century
The work of Z.A. Gesticht flourished despite a significant simultaneous turning
to Islam from the side of the slaves. Under Reverend Jacobus Beck
a living ecumenical spirit prevailed in the best sense of the word. After the
start of the British occupation various denominations started working at the
Cape like the Anglicans, Congregationals, the Methodist and the Presbyterians.
The missionary ‘Genootschap’ at the Z.A. Gesticht enjoyed the support of all
the church and mission agencies at the Cape. After 1824 the Directors invited
the ministers of all the local congregations to become honorary members. Nobody
refused. Their stance was not founded on window dressing, but was based on
sound biblical principles. Thus the secretary Metelerkamp uttered his
conviction at the welcoming of honorary members on 20 May 1824 that the kingdom
of God can only be credibly extended on the foundation of unity of Christians in
line with John 17. Missionaries were also encouraged to come to the Mother City
to meet the other spiritual leaders. Strassberger (1969:6) suggests that the Gesticht
fellowship ‘was probably one of the reasons why
the Dutch Reformed Church decided at their first Synod in 1824 to begin mission
work…’
Racial
Prejudice entrenched
Slavery as such was already in
existence in biblical days. It has been a major tragedy of Christianity that
Paul’s teaching was completely ignored, namely that Christian slaves were to be
regarded as brothers and sisters (e.g. Philemon, verse 16). European colonists came to the Cape as a rule
with racial arrogance. The prowess of Western civilization served to entrench
racism, which had already been prevalent for centuries. The Greek
classification of ‘Hellenes and barbarians’ - which was fairly neutral with
hardly any racial connotation - was replaced by ‘Christians and heathens.’ The former were Europeans and the latter the
indigenous peoples of the Americas, Africa and all the new areas that were
discovered. It needed a ruling from Pope Paul III with his edict of 1537 to
decide that Indians were human! And yet, ‘Bushmen’ ‘Hottentotten’ and
slaves at the Cape remained sub-human in the eyes of Westerners. A theology
developed in which racism was rationalized and defended. Thus dark-skinned people
were ‘distinguished from Whites because
they were said to have been created with the animals on the sixth day. Hence
they were excluded from the Garden of Eden, which was a White paradise!’ (Esterhuyse, Apartheid
must die, 1981:21)
Esterhuyse
suggests that ‘racism as a racial ideology owes its
origin in our Western cultural history to attempts at a moral justification of
slavery as a social institution’ (Esterhuyse,
1981:22). From this basis it naturally developed in South Africa to a defence
mechanism and justification for racial prejudice and apartheid, namely ‘the preservation and safeguarding of vested (in this case
'White') interests.’
As
we have seen, the slaves were perceived as property at the Cape. Even otherwise
exemplary missionaries/clergymen like M.C. Vos not only owned slaves, but these
Christians were also subtly influenced by their prejudicial upbringing. It is
reported by Clinton (The South African Melting Pot, 1937:30) how Van der Kemp directed
new missionaries to a certain Mr Krynauw rather than to Ds. Vos, since he
considered the latter ‘to be not altogether free from the
common … (colonist) prejudices against the heathen nations.’
The
pastors at the Cape lacked the courage to challenge the colonists with the
Pauline teaching that they had to regard the believers among the slaves as
family in Christ. Instead, the slaves were conveniently pointed to their duties
in subordination and obedience. This sad fact represents a major factor of debt
towards the Cape Muslims, that vital tenets of the Gospel have thus been
withheld from them.
Negative
Legacies of LMS missionary Work
Dr Philip
undermined his own efforts by the unloving and untruthful way in which he
presented his case. His writing - painting the picture at the Cape in a distorted
way, exaggerating things here and there - became one of the causes of the Great
Trek. This was expounded by the Voortrekker leader Piet Retief in his
manifesto. All LMS emissaries of the Gospel were hereafter suspect in the eyes
of the colonists, while the Moravian mission at Genadendal became the model.
This diabolic situation was a direct result of Dr Philip’s harsh criticism of
the colonists. Not so long before his stint at the Cape the Moravian
missionaries had also been branded as villains in the eyes of colonists -
accused of ‘corrupting the Khoisan and encouraging laziness’. The absolute
distancing of themselves from politics was a tradition of the Moravians, which
was not always helpful, making it difficult for the LMS missionaries to make a
clear prophetic stand on ethical and racial issues.
The
controversial Ministry of the LMS
The way Dr Johannes van der Kemp and
Dr John Philip presented their case exacerbated negative feelings towards
missionaries. They somehow failed to translate the biblical message of
brotherhood of all believers. Had they done this, it might have made Ordinance
50, which made Khoi and slaves equal to the colonists before the law - more
palatable. The financial losses incurred due to the emancipation of slaves, was
the result of the lies and distortions of Dr Philip and his LMS cronies in the
view of the colonists.
The
other side of the coin was that the LMS missionaries regarded the civilization
of the ‘primitive’ indigenous peoples as a close second motive in the spreading
of the Gospel. White domination seemed to be primary and colonial expansion an
important part of their ministry.
Suspicions were aroused that the Church had ulterior motives, leading
some people in the 1950s and 1960s to reject Christianity in favour of Islam or
Marxism in the struggle against apartheid.
The
compassionate work of the London Missionary Society (LMS)
missionaries like Rev James Read, Dr Johannes van der Kemp and Dr John Philip
on behalf of the underdog slaves had the moral power of biblical truth on their
side, but they were often opposed by their missionary colleagues. They were
furthermore very unfortunate to have to battle against the pace that the
Moravians had set at Genadendal. Nevertheless, the battle that raged at the
Cape around the Khoi and the slaves – in which Dr Philip and Dr Van der Kemp
had a big hand - had worldwide ramifications when it aided the cause of the
abolition of slavery. Dr John Philip discerned that the abolition of the slave
trade in 1808 caused the price of slaves to rise, leading to the enserfment of
the Khoisan. (Between 1808 and 1826 the price of slaves rose by 400% (Theal, Records
of the Cape Colony, 29:427). In a letter to the Secretary of State for the
Colonies, Earl Bathurst, Dr Philip called attention to several hardships
suffered by the Khoi, such as the pass regulations, which prevented them from
settling where they chose to do and sometimes led to the separation of
families. These were thought to be legitimate grievances, which would
ultimately lead to the Ordinance 50 of 17 July 1828.
Co-operation of Mission Agencies
The entry of the Berlin Mission
had an interesting component. It was started in Berlin in 1800 by Pastor Johann
Jänicke, a preacher of the Bohemian Church. (Count Zinzendorf, the
founder of the renewed Moravian Unitas Fratrum, was consecrated as a
bishop by Bishop Jablonsky in Berlin. Jablonsky came from the line of Episcopal
succession of the Moravian-Bohemians.) The mission movement from Herrnhut was
emulated to some extent when 80 missionaries were sent from Berlin until
Jänicke’s death in 1827 (Du Plessis, 1911:211). Learning from the mistakes of
the LMS where the selection of missionaries had been not strict enough, the new
German background agencies - e.g. at Berlin and Basle (Switzerland) - prepared
aspiring candidates for the mission for an ascetic and pietistic lifestyle,
ready for hardship. Many of these missionaries came to South Africa.
It
is special how the co-operation of the mission agencies impacted the Church
life. Thus one finds the same Ds. Borcherds who had been so negative to
missions, opening up to other denominations a few years later. In the pastoral letter of the Dutch
Reformed synod of 1826, of which Borcherds was the secretary, one discerns
remorse over the earlier period in which there had been ‘zorgvuldige
bekommering eene heerschende kerk te willen zijn en blijven.’[20]
He regarded it as ‘better days’ that they were (i.e. in 1826) preaching in each
other’s churches (Dreyer, 1936:255). This formed the basis for the
theologically sound synod decision three years later not to divide the church
on racial grounds. It was even regarded
as ‘een
onwrikbaar stelregel’,
a steadfast rule based on the Word of God (Dreyer, 1936:316).
When
Dr John Philip became the LMS superintendent, the cat was among the pigeons.
Church people regarded the LMS superintendent as ‘too political’,
not behoving a missionary.
Dr
Philip’s visit to England
During Dr Philip’s visit to England
in 1826, he met the evangelical parliamentarian Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton. The
latter had close links to William Wilberforce, the staunch fighter for the
complete emancipation of slaves in the British Parliament. In his subsequent correspondence with Buxton,
Philip linked the slave issue to the situation of the Khoisan in the Cape
Colony already in his first comprehensive report on the LMS stations. He did
make a distinction between the problems with the Khoisan and those pertaining
to slaves (Walker, 1964:153). Ordinance 50 of 1828 and last not least the publication
of Philip’s two-volumed Researches in
South Africa were major factors in the run-up not only to the Great Trek of
colonists to the interior, but also to the final emancipation of slaves
worldwide.[21]
Dr Philip’s role in the proclamation
of Ordinance 50 has sometimes been exaggerated. John Philip however definitely
played a crucial role in the run-up to this ordinance and he became a prime
mover both in the eventual formal abolition of slavery in 1834 and in its
implementation at the Cape in 1838. Yet, this decree dramatically changed the
legal standing of the Khoisan, putting them on an equal footing with the
colonists. It is doubtful if William Wilberforce would have been able to achieve
what he did after his half a century of pioneering fighting of slavery, if he
had not received the support from Dr Philip at the Cape.
The contribution of Dr Philip for
the underdogs of Cape society was phenomenal.
Tension
between Mission Agencies
As deplorable as it was that Dr
Philip gave ‘partial and mutilated extracts from
official documents’ (Shaw,
1836:vii), it has to be seen as unfortunate in historical hindsight that the
Methodist missionary Rev William Shaw deemed it fit to publish the
correspondence between him and the LMS superintendent in the heat of the battle.
It cannot be defended that Philip refuted his injurious statements, but the
issues at hand were definitely not worthy to be fought about in public. It
merely tarnished the image of two great missionaries. The missionary strategy
of Dr Philip - to identify with the underprivileged, defending the rights of
the indigenous peoples in the face of an advancing land grabbing colonial power
- is surely in line with the teachings and example of the Master himself. Dr
Philip was hypocritical in a sense. The LMS – as all mission agencies –
accepted big land grants with little scruple, albeit that it cannot be said
that this was land taken directly from the indigenous population.
Rev.
Shaw had the vision of a chain of mission stations. This inspired many believers
in Britain to come and assist the missionary cause in Southern Africa. It is
disgusting to read however that the editor of a church magazine ‘exerted his utmost ingenuity to excite the indignation of
British Christians against the Wesleyan Missionaries’ (Shaw, 1836:19). Shaw and his
Methodist colleagues would however have done better to leave the defence over
to people from outside their fold.[22]
The mission cause undoubtedly suffered because of the tension as a result of
the polemics fought out in the public domain.
Apartheid Precedents by Churches and
Missions
In 1824 the DRC decided to regard the
missionary as a separate but inferior entity. Nico Smith suggests that this
invariably had to lead to separate churches for non-Whites (Elkeen in sy eie
taal, 1973:68). However, at a 1829 Cape DRC ringzitting (meeting of
the presbytery) it was decided – upon a question to that effect from the
circuit of Zwartland (Malmesbury) - that all members would be admitted to Holy
Communion ‘zonder
onderscheid van kleur of afkomst’.[23]
It was also stated that this issue was not even to become a subject for
deliberation at a synod. Instead, it had to be seen as ‘een onwrikbaar
stelregel, op het onfeilbaar woord van God gegrond...’[24] that no person should be barred on
these grounds (Dreyer, 1936:316).[25] The missionary paper of 1834 provided for ‘gemeenten der
naturellen’ (congregations for
natives) but it was accepted that converts could join the White churches in the
meantime. The watershed decision of 1829 of the Cape presbytery of the DRC was
however significantly watered down. In 1837 the DRC synod mentions that there
should be enough (separate?) seats in churches for ‘heidenen die zich tot de openbare
godsdienst begeven’ (Cited in Geldenhuys, 1982:29).[26]
After
the abolition of slavery in 1834, the London Mission Society established
a separate suburb, isolated from the town Port Elizabeth, for its people. It is
ironic that the establishment of the mission stations, with the rationale to be
a haven of protection for the Khoi people, set a precedent for the “locations”,
which would be established in future.
The
Rift between the British and the Dutch widened
Lord Somerset’s autocratic
anglicising policies widened the rift between the British and the Dutch
colonists. Whether the colonists either conveniently forgot or whether they
were ignorant of the way in which Dutch authorities had discriminated against
German and French-speakers in earlier decades, was actually immaterial. The
blatant discrimination caused a desire among some Dutch colonists for freedom
from British domination. It added to the grudges they bore from the effects of
the emancipation of the slaves. Close to this desire was the Trekker vision of
a Calvinist republic in which neither White ‘aliens’ like the British – they
regarded themselves as Afrikaners, to whom African soil was dear – nor people of colour would be eligible for
a meaningful role in the life of the community. (Of course, they were still
completely blinded. They could not 'see' that the native Blacks and Khoi were
akso Africans).
Cape Churches working together
The endeavour of the missionaries caused
the working together of the Cape churches around the time of the slave
emancipation in 1838. The cordial harmonious relationship between churches
seems to have operated for quite a few years. A special feature of the mission
effort of the early 19th century was the apparent lack of
denominational rivalry. Thus Anglican Church services were first held in the Groote
Kerk.
The Presbyterian Dr James Adamson and
the Lutheran Rev. George Wilhelm Stegmann engaged in combined endeavours. Soon after his ordination as a Lutheran
minister, Stegmann not only felt the need to do something for the slaves, but
he also started with a ministry in Plein Street. He was asked by Dr Adamson to join him in the
outreach to the ‘Coloureds’ (Die Koningsbode, Desember 1958, p.34). At St
Andrew’s Presbyterian Church, Adamson would preach in English in the
morning and Stegmann in Dutch during the church service in the late afternoon. A special event to highlight the actual
emancipation of the slaves was organized at the Scottish Church - as St
Andrew’s was generally known. (Hence the name Schotse Kloof was given to
the area where the Presbyterian ministers were residing). Dreyer wrote in the Christmas edition of the
Koningsbode, 1936 (p.19) that the organized mission to the
slaves started on 1 December 1838 - i.e. the date of the official emancipation.
At the start of St Andrew’s Mission after the slave emancipation. In
this endeavour believers from different church backgrounds worked together.
Another
Blessing in Disguise
In 1837 Martinus Vogelgezang applied
to be ordained, but he did not find favour with the Dutch Reformed Church
authorities. Not having obtained the expected university theological training
(in Holland), they referred him to the ruling for missionaries: ‘onder geene andere wijze, en onder geene andere
bepalingen... dan betrekkelijk het ordenen van zendelingen’.[27]
In the spiritual realms the church
ruling was to influence the Cape in no uncertain way, a blessing in disguise.
The condescending attitude was indicative of the general view by the Church
with regard to mission work. (The indifference to mission work is still rife in
the great majority of churches. It is definitely no complement that many of
them see behind all missionary endeavour only competition for the resources of
the church.) On 17 October 1838 Vogelgezang resigned from the Dutch Reformed
Church to start the first denominationally independent fellowship.
After
the abolition of slavery in 1838, there was a rush of freed slaves to the
city. Many deserted their former owners
in the agricultural areas. The bulk of these newly urbanised freed slaves
turned to Islam. Support from the colonists for the mission work was not
forthcoming at all. It does not credit the churches at the Cape that hardly any
effort was made to reach the slaves at the Cape with the Gospel up to 1838,
apart from what was done at the Z.A.
Gesticht. A lack of perseverance was furthermore prevalent, combined with a
tendency to go for softer targets than the resistant Muslims. And not much
changed thereafter. All the more the stalwart work of individuals like the
evangelist Vogelgezang has to be admired, even though his initial approach to
the Muslims was quite offensive.
Undeterred
by the rebuff from the Church of his day, Vogelgezang preached the Gospel among
the Muslims with zeal. Vogelgezang used a version of ‘tentmaking’ - i.e.
working in some vocation while doing missionary work. He operated initially
simultaneously from his shoemaker’s shop in Rose Street, which is part of
present day Bo-Kaap.[28]
That Vogelgezang gained the respect of his ecumenical contemporaries is
demonstrated by the fact that various ministers of other denominations were
present at his ordination in February 1839 at the Union Chapel including
Dr John Philip and Rev Robert Moffat of the London Missionary Society.
In due course the zealous Vogelgezang planted a few churches, bringing the
Gospel to the Muslims with much authority and conviction.
The
Start of the Alliance Cape Evangelicals assembled in
Cape Town in 1842 to work out an evangelism strategy for Southern Africa.
Pastors of different denominations had a weekly prayer meeting. South
Africans were among the world leaders in church co-operation when the Evangelical
Alliance was formally started in 1857 in Cape Town. The start of the Alliance in Cape Town led indirectly to the opening of
the Stellenbosch DRC Kweekschool in 1859. In due course the Alliance would form a powerful bulwark
against liberalism which reared its head at the Cape in the late 1850s. The
opposition to liberalism was led in the early 1860s by Ds. Andrew Murray as the
moderator of the Dutch Reformed Church and a prime mover in the Cape Evangelical Alliance. (This
worldwide movement brought a major correction in Lausanne in 1974. Marxists had
successfully infiltrated the World Council of Churches.)
The Two
Murray Brothers in Europe
After
graduating from Marischal College in Aberdeen (Scotland) in 1844, Andrew
and John Murray went to Utrecht (Holland), for the purpose of further study in
theology. Spiritual life at this time in the Netherlands was at a low and
rationalism had crippled many of the pulpits and seminaries. Much like the two
Wesley brothers and the Holy Club at Oxford a century before them, John and
Andrew joined a zealous group in Utrecht at the university called Sechor
Dabar (Remember the Word). Here they found like-minded brethren, warm
fellowship, and true missionary zeal. During a vacation from their classes, the
Murray brothers visited Germany, where they had the opportunity to meet Pastor
Johann Christoph Blumhardt. This remarkable man had been used to bring about
spiritual renewal in certain parts of Germany. This revival was marked by
extraordinary manifestations of deliverance and healing the sick through
prayer. Andrew Murray saw first-hand the ongoing work of God’s power. While
studying in Utrecht, they were only a few kilometres from Zeist, where the
Moravians had their Dutch headquarters. This impressed Andrew very much. (Later
he sent his daughters to the boarding school on Zusterplein in Zeist.)
Andrew Murray and his brother John
were in Scotland in 1843 when a controversy between moderates and strict
Calvinists erupted there. John and Andrew Murray aligned themselves to the
evangelicals of the Réveil, the spiritual renewal that swept through
Europe in response to the religious rebellion of the Enlightenment and its
pinnacle, the French Revolution.
The
Murray Brothers back in South Africa While Andrew Murray was still in Bloemfontein, his first congregation, he
got involved in the negotiations between the British government and the Dutch
colonists for the independence of the Boer Republic of the Orange Free State,
the Bloemfontein Convention of 1854. Subsequently he travelled to the UK
where he attempted to recruit missionaries and preachers to come to Southern
Africa. The general unwillingness among pastors there brought him to the idea
of getting a seminary started at the
Cape. Rev.
John Murray became a founder of the Dutch Reformed Seminary at
Stellenbosch in 1859. At this occasion Professor N.
Hofmeyr, the co-founding professor,
complained that no effort was made to bring
all Christians of the country together. A committee organized a conference
fairly quickly. Delegates from the Dutch Reformed, Congregational, Lutheran,
Methodist, Moravian and Presbyterian Churches converged on Worcester
in 1860 for an epoch-making conference. Worldwide it was one of the first of
its kind, preceded only by one in India (1855) and one in Liverpool in March
1860.[29]
Tragic Mistakes
Count Zinzendorf had discerned already in the 18th
century that Christians should not strive after an organic union of all
denominations, but rather work towards unity which would transcend all church
barriers. Andrew Murray somehow did not discern this clearly or otherwise he
did not take it to heart sufficiently. His initiative to attempt a
denominational merger between the Dutch Reformed Church and the Anglican
Church in 1870 ended in a rather tragic disaster. Bishop Robert Gray, his
Anglican negotiating partner, was open to work with like-minded evangelicals
like Andrew Murray, who had been the Groote Kerk minister from 1862. The
timing was however the worst one could imagine.
Gray
experienced a major doctrinal tussle in his own denomination. Bishop John
Colenso of Natal had been giving him headaches with his liberalism. Colenso for
example 'asserted that the atonement is an entirely objective
event. Christ's saving work needed no personal application to the individual' (Hinchliff, 1963:84). Bishop Gray begged John
Colenso in vain to reconsider the distribution of his commentary to Paul's
Epistle to the Romans which disseminated these views or to consult with friends
and advisors in England at least. Doctrinal differences tragically killed not
only the highly promising missionary policy of Bishop Colenso among the Zulus,
but it also stifled the potential of a merger of the Dutch Reformed Church
and the Anglican Church. That could have had worldwide repercussions,
had they succeeded in merging Episcopal and Congregational church structures.
Ds.
Andrew Murray, in his capacity as the Dutch Reformed moderator, had
skirmishes against liberal colleagues which ultimately landed in court.
Bonds forged on a fragile Basis
The suppression of their language (Dutch) and a
misguided paternalist perception as the true custodians of the Gospel in Africa
were main factors for the Great Trek. The Afrikaners went into the interior and
ultimately founded two Boer republics. Their identification with Israel
simultaneously led to their feeling themselves superior to the indigenous
people groups. The fear of of being out-voted helped them to rationalise
discrimination, not only for the exclusion of non-Whites, but also European 'Uitlanders'
who streamed to the Reef after the discovery of gold in 1881. Afrikaner
Nationalism grew on the dubious and fragile basis of fear of Blacks and resentment
to the rooinekke, the British.
All people
who were not White were excluded from the negotiations that led to the
formation of the Union of South Africa in 1910, where a main factor of
Boer and Brit reconciliation was the retention of the colour bar in the
national parliament. As a concession, the Cape Colony could have qualified
franchise for the non-Whites. The suppression and oppression of races other
than White was the fragile basis on which the African People's Organisation (APO)
and the (South) African National Congress were formed respectively in
1904 and 1912.
The
resentment by Afrikaners of the British and Blacks was cancerous. Parallel to
this a dangerous air of superiority on the side of the Brits and Black
nationalism that also surfaced in the Church, were also gangerous. These
features were caving away at any sense of nation building. The clashing of the
various nationalisms was inevitable unless God would intervene.
Chapter 15 Outreach to Jews as a unifying Factor
It is my
conviction that a biblical view of Jews could be a unifying factor for
Christianity at large. There is a special anointing on the Jews as a people
group. Whether one likes it or not, the Word teaches that Israel is the apple
of God’s eye (Deuteronomy 32:10; Zechariah 2:8). Instead of quarrelling whether
it is repulsive/favouritist or not, we would do much better to use their
anointing positively. Matthew 13:52 points to the possibility that the teacher
of the (Jewish) law has a special faculty to bring out of the store-room of the
Hebrew Scriptures treasures which we Gentile Christians could use profitably.
Paul, undoubtedly the greatest missionary of all time, was a Jew.
An orthodox Jew discovers the true Messiah
In the latter part of the 19th century people were
on the move, for many different reasons. It was during this time of tremendous
change that Leopold Cohn was born in Berezna, a small town in eastern Hungary.
Traditional Judaism was all-pervasive in its impact on a daily existence and
there was zeal for the Torah (Law). It was not surprising, then, that Leopold
Cohn became a rabbi. During
years of rabbinic study certain portions of Scripture brought
Leopold Cohn to seek more knowledge about the Messiah. Cohn knew that there was but one course for him to follow: he
must share the knowledge of the Messiah, Yeshua, with his Jewish people. He
explained an early encounter with members of the local community: 'I showed them
from the Scriptures that to believe in Yeshua was Jewish faith, real Jewish
faith.
This became Leopold Cohn's life calling. It also became a guiding principle for
Chosen People Ministries, which he founded in the Brownsville section of
Brooklyn, New York, in 1894. Leopold Cohn began this ministry by
holding meetings in a store which was a renovated horse stable. He founded his
work upon faith, in response to the Scriptural exhortation of Romans 1:16, For
I am not ashamed of the Gospel of Christ: for it is the power of God unto
salvation to everyone that believes; to the Jew first, and also to the Greek.
The ministry's first Bible meeting was attended by eight Jewish people. The
Lord continued to bless this work, and in the course of his lifetime, Leopold
Cohn led over 1,000 people to the Lord.
Chosen
People Ministries melts Judaism with evangelical Christian faith and engages
in evangelism to Jews. It supports development of congregations of adherents to
Messianic Judaism, which it describes as 'faith communities that stress the
Jewish context of the Gospel of Jesus.' The Mission was later relocated
to the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn, New York. From 1924 until 1984 it was
known as the American Board of Missions to the Jews. Since then it has
been known by its current (and original) name, Chosen People Ministries.
The American Board of
Missions to the Jews was instrumental in the growth and professionalism of
the movement during the 1920s -1960s, providing training to many of the new
missionaries. One of its most famous products was Martin Moishe Rosen, who
became notoriously known all over the Jewish world.
Romans
1:16 re-discovered
In modern times
Moishe Rosen, the founder of Jews for Jesus, highlighted ‘to the Jews first …’in his paper
delivered in Manila in 1989 as part of the Jewish Evangelism track at Lausanne
II. Rosen started the evangelical Christian missionary organization
in 1969 that focuses specifically on evangelism to the Jewish people. Coming
from Reform Jewish parentage himself, Rosen and his wife Ceil became Christians
in 1953. After graduating from Northeastern Bible College, Rosen made a
commitment to be a missionary to Jews from 1956. In his paper delivered in Manila, Rosen suggested that
'God’s formula' for worldwide evangelization is to bring the Gospel to the Jew
first. He highlighted the example of Paul in
the same paper that ‘by not following God’s programme for worldwide
evangelisation – that is, beginning with Jerusalem (Israel, and the Jews) – we
not only develop a bad theology because of weak foundations, but we also
develop poor missiological practices’ (Published in the LCJE Bulletin, Issue
101, September 2010, downloadable from the internet.) However, outreach to Jews still has to be
regarded as a 'Cinderella' of missionary work. Even those international mission
agencies who have corrected the neglect with regard to outreach to Muslims
since the 1980s, have still to start in some significant way with outreach to
Jews.
An Outreach with a Sting
It would take many decades before evangelism to Jews really
took off. This can be attributed to Moishe Rosen. Using modern evangelistic
methods like humorous broadsheets, drama and music, Jews for Jesus got a
bad name among Jews for its aggressive methods. On the other hand, many a Jew,
especially in the US, was challenged to at least consider the claims of Yeshua
- not only to be the true Messiah, but also to commit their lives to
Him. Outreach to Jews (and Muslims)
remained a 'Cinderella' of missionary work to this day.
Outreach to Cape Jews
The Dutch
Reformed Church pioneered the ministry to Cape Jews in the 20th
century, remaining apparently to this day the only denomination that formally
had missionaries consistently set aside to minister to the Jews. The Mildmay Mission appointed E. Reitmann
for work among the Jews. As many as 200 Jews attended the Mission Hall in Sea Point. In 1929 Peter Salzberg, a converted Jew
from Poland, came to the Cape via the Mildmay
Mission to the Jews in
London, joining up with the Hebrew Christian Alliance, the worldwide
movement of Messianic Jews. He was not here at the Cape very long when he
passed away. His son Peter, who had just started as a missionary doctor in
Angola, came in his place, working here until his retirement in 1972(3).
Salzberg (junior) led many a Jew to faith in Jesus as the Messiah. (The Mission
returned to the Cape in 2003 under their new name The Messianic Testimony.)
The world
was stunned in 1948 when the state of Israel was formed. Suddenly it was
realized that what was regarded as one of the most unlikely biblical
prophesies, was actually being fulfilled. Jews started planning to return to
Israel as never before. Cape Town also played a role in a new turning to the
‘Old Testament’ when the first heart transplant world-wide was performed on 3
December 1967 on Louis Washkansky, a Jew. The prophecy of Jeremiah that the
Almighty wants to substitute the repentant hearts of stone with a heart of
flesh, received a new actuality in evangelism. The world-wide acknowledgement
by Jews - to regard Jesus as their Messiah - suddenly became more of a
possibility. The Six-Days War of the same year had brought massive land gains
to the Jews, a fact which had already fanned eschatological flames. This was
followed with Jerusalem becoming the capital of Israel in 1980.
The Dutch
Reformed Church appointed various ministers in their
Mission to the Jews until 1983 when Dr Francois Wessels became their man. He is
still linked to this ministry. Cecilia Burger was appointed in 1975 to reach
out to Jewish women and to help create awareness within the denomination
regarding their responsibility of bringing the Gospel to the Jews.
Peter Eliastam, a very creative Messianic Jewish believer, reached out
to Jews through an exhibition called Homage to the Messiah. Rodney
Mechanic, a Jew, came to faith in Jesus as Messiah under his ministry and
influence. Later Rodney Mechanic became
a minister in the Anglican
Church. After coming to the Cape, Rodney started an
outreach ministry to Jewish people called Messiah’s People under the
auspices of Church’s
Ministry among Jewish People (CMJ). Doogie St. Clair-Laing took over from Rodney
Mechanic when Rodney left for the UK and Edith Sher later joined this ministry.
Over
the years a number of Jewish people came to recognize Jesus as their Messiah.
Services with believers were held in homes until they began regular services.
After a few changes of location, the fellowship moved to the Three Anchor Bay Dutch Reformed
Church where they had Friday evening services for a
number of years. From the word go people from Gentile background attended the
services with the Messianic Jewish component in the minority. From the 1980s
annual conferences with prominent speakers were held. Christians came from far afield to attend
these occasions. For many of them it was very special to discover the Jewish
roots of their faith.
In
2008 Messiah's People hosted their first mini-conference at Christ Church in Kenilworth
called Roots and Shoots. The former associate minister of Christ Church, Rev. John Atkinson,
became the director of Messiah’s
People (South Africa) and the International Director of
CMJ, the organisation’s parent body. For ten years Doogie St. Clair-Laing
broadcast a fortnightly half hour programme on CCFM Radio called Messiah’s People. John Atkinson and Edith Sher
took over from Doogie five years ago upon his retirement. It became an hour
long weekly show. Edith Sher therefter has been hosting the programme on her
own.
Herschel
Raysman, who came from a Jewish background, came to believe in Jesus as his
Messiah when he linked up with the Jesus People in the 1970s. In later
years he would lead the Beit
Ariel Messianic congregation in Sea Point. From
2007 Cecilia Burger, as area coordinator for the international Lausanne Consultation on Jewish Evangelism (LCJE),
became a link between the various Christian agencies reaching out to Jewish
people.
The Role of the David and Jonathan Foundation
When
Jack Carstens was the South African Trade Attachė in Israel from 1976-80 he got in touch with four small Messianic Jewish
congregations that met literally underground in bomb shelters. After returning
from there, he started his own business. When Jack took his family back to
Israel from 1990 a few times for the annual Feast of Tabernacles, he linked up with the International
Christian Embasssy Jerusalem (ICEJ) of which Rev.
Johan Lűckhoff, a South African, was the President. (The International Christian Embassy was founded in 1980 by evangelical Christians to express their support for the State of Israel and the Jewish people. This transpired
specifically in protest of the closure of foreign embassies in Jerusalem.) At this time Jack could also see the growth
of the Messianic church movement in the country.
During 1995 Jack Carstens
accompanied Ds Christo Botes of the Logos
Baptist Church in Brackenfell on a trip to the Ukraine, in support of the
struggling post-Communist churches there. On their return Carstens asked Ds
Christo Botes whether they could not start something similar for the Messianic
believers in Israel. This led to the start of the David and Jonathan movement the following year. By this time there
were 20 Messianic congregations in Israel.
After a survey of the needs of
the believers in the wake of the 1st Intifada in Israel, after which
many Jews were in dire straits, Jack Carstens recruited various Bible study
groups to support individuals. At this time, in 2000 AD, he was elected to the
South African Board of the ICJE. He remained the main driving force of David and Jonathan. In South Africa the
ministry focused on sharing in churches the need for supporting Israel from a
biblical point of view, highlighting Romans 1:16, ‘… to the Jews first’. The work expanded such a lot that Jack
Carstens deemed it necessary to resign from the ICEJ to concentrate on David and Jonathan. He formalised the
organisation as a NPO calling it David
and Jonathan Foundation. As of 2016 they are able to support 14 Messianic
Jewish congregations in Israel.
A Positive Tendency
Even in Christian countries people from other faiths who
became followers of Jesus have been confused by the multitude of churches,
which were often competing and vying for their membership. The attitude of the Church
Planting Movement to discourage new believers to attend denominational
churches is however no solution either. To be driven by fear of confusion is
not a good motivation. Love for the body of Christ – all followers of Jesus -
should be primary.
It just
cannot be ignored that there is a special blessing on the descendants of
Abraham, Isaac and Jacob up to this day. Therefore it should be high on the
list of our priorities to pray and work that the Jews’ eyes may be unveiled to
the one who was pierced on the Cross of Calvary, that they may discover that he
is really the promised Messiah (cf. Zechariah 12:10). It is very encouraging
how Christians have started to use this resource in recent years, notably via
Jewesses. Thus Ruth Lapide has featured on television quite prominently in
Germany. Here at the Cape Edith Sher has a regular radio programme on Sunday
afternoons via CCFM.[30]
In Chapter 9 we looked at the
two-pronged approach of Zinzendorf and his Moravians in the 17th century
with regard to Church unity and some of their practices. Love drives out all
fear (1 John 4:18). Negative uncharitable references to 'mainline churches' and
'para church' organisations, as it often happens in charismatic denominations -
or to the 'Church of the Pope' and an unqualified reference to 'sects' by
others - are definitely not displaying the spirit of Christ. It must be
stressed unequivocally that the competitive spirit of unhealthy rivalry is
demonic. Any attempt to defend the disunity of the body of Christ needs to be
emphatically opposed.
Chapter
16 Racial
Prejudice and Correction Attempts
Racial prejudice and paternalism
have been major stumbling blocks against the unity of the Body of Christ in
South Africa. In the attitude towards people of colour there was still a lot of
goodwill among Whites at the turn of the 20th century at the Cape. A
problem was that even radical thinkers among them hardly ever consulted people
of colour. Proper consultation could possibly have averted many a crisis. From
the earliest days at the Cape the ‘natives’ were regarded as inferior, their
culture despised. Paternalism was rife.
This gave rise to the secessionist ‘Ethiopian
movement’. The ‘Ethiopians’ have been typified by the sentence: 'We have come to pray for the
deliverance of Blacks’ (Cited in Elphick et al, 1997:212). The ideological link went back to
the Ethiopian eunuch of Acts 8 and the Church, which developed in Ethiopia
without assistance and mediation of Westerners. The term ‘Ethiopian’ was
derived from the concept that the first indigenous church on African soil
started in Ethiopia. The ‘Ethiopian’ movement began in different parts of South
Africa as breakaway congregations from the Methodist Church.
Disillusioned by the imperfections of colonial society, they withdrew from
White-dominated structures to start exclusively African organisations. Their
policy was to throw off the shackles of White domination and reassert their
former independence, while retaining what they considered to be the best
elements of European civilisation. In a sense the good teaching of the
Methodists backfired when they tried to make the indigenous independent,
because the missionaries kept on patronizing their congregants of colour. The first ‘Ethiopian' church was established
in Pretoria in 1892 after Black Wesleyan (Methodist) ministers had been
excluded from a meeting of White colleagues.
Brit and Boer drift apart
Andrew
Murray tried valiantly but in vain to stave off the inevitable - war between
the two Boer Republics and Britain in the wake of the catastrophic Jameson Raid of the New Year weekend of 1895–96 and the rising political temperature.[31] In June 1900,
after the fall of Pretoria in the South African War (1899-1902) a
meeting of Transvaal Boer military leaders recommended immediate surrender to
avoid disaster. Lord Alfred Milner, the British High Commissioner for South
Africa, came from a small circle of friends in Oxford who embraced British
racial superiority. Unlike the Cape colony statesman Cecil John Rhodes who also
had imperialist ideas but who respected the yearning of Afrikaners for
independence, Milner mistrusted the pragmatic and dynamic Transvaal President
Paul Kruger.
Fired on by a deep resentment of the
British, the President of the Orange Free State, the lawyer Marthinus Theunis
Steyn, resisted anything which would look like capitulation, inspiring young
Afrikaners to fight to the bitter end. This was calamitous on the long run,
especially when the Bittereinders came to be regarded as heroes by many
Afrikaners. The heroics of sabotage and insurrection make interesting reading,
but it was poison for nation building. The pervasive fear and hatred of Blacks
helped the simmering Broedertwis[32]among
Afrikaners to escalate.
Lofty
Intentions derailed Three
idealistic young men, HJ Klopper, HW van der Merwe and DHC du Plessis -
supported by Ds. Jozua Naudé[33] -
founded an exclusively male and white Protestant organization Jong Zuid Afrika,
which was dedicated to the advancement of Afrikaner interests. In 1920 the
organisation was re-styled as the Afrikaner Broederbond, consisting of 37 White
men. They envisaged to use Afrikaner ethnicity and Calvinist Reformed faith as
a springboard to unite White Afrikaans speakers who shared cultural,
semi-religious, and deeply-political objectives for upliftment purposes.
Resentment of the British and bitterness because of the Broedertwis, there however
also formed a groundswell of discontentment. The chairman of the organisation
that turned into a secret clique, verbalised the laudable perception as
follows: 'The Afrikaner Broederbond was born out of the deep conviction that the
Afrikaner volk has been planted in this country by the Hand of God, destined to
survive as a separate volk with its own calling.' The exclusive nature of
the organisation led to its downfall - its lofty intentions were completely
derailed by the 1960s.
Early Impact of Student Christian Outreach
A significant spiritual influence at the Cape was John Mott’s
Student Christian Movement, along with the Edinburgh meeting of
evangelicals in 1910 that became the forerunner to the World Council of
Churches. All this looked set to spawn worldwide evangelization. The Cape
was in the thick of things through the presence of the aging Dr Andrew Murray.
John Mott, the renowned preacher and leader of a global divine work among
students, who mobilized many of them for missions, spoke at the Huguenot
Hall in Orange Street on the outskirts of the City Centre at the beginning
of the century. This ushered in the establishment of the Students’ Christian
Association (SCA). The work of the
SCA at Victoria College, which was to become the University of
Stellenbosch and at the South African College, the forerunner of
UCT, had a significant impact on individuals. One of the most notable
influences was on Jan H. Hofmeyr, who was poised to become the successor of Jan
Smuts as Prime Minister, had the Nationalists not started to govern in 1948.
Hofmeyr, who attended the Cape Town Baptist Church in Wale Street, was a
fervent supporter of the SCA.
Significant
Corrections Worldwide
Events in Europe at
the turn of the 20th century continued to influence the situation at
the Cape and vice versa. Ecclesiastic disunity
impeded spiritual renewal and biblical revival. Serious discord was experienced
at the World Church and Mission
Conference in New York in 1900. Dr Andrew Murray was invited as a speaker,
but he felt strongly led to be in South Africa because of the war. After
receiving the papers of the New York conference Andrew Murray disclosed what he
discerned as a major deficiency. He noticed that prayer did not feature there
as a priority. His booklet The Key to the
Missionary Problem in 1901 was the result.
The
very next year however, the German theologian Ernst Troeltsch - obviously very much under the
influence of Darwin’s theory of evolution - proposed that Christianity was the
highest form of all religions up to
that time, implying thus that a better religion could still evolve. Albert
Schweitzer followed this up in 1906, declaring in his study of the historical
Jesus that Christianity had no absolute authority. The influence from this side
was so pervasive that the 1910 Edinburgh Church and Missionary Conference
- the forerunner of the World Council of
Churches - had an albatross around its neck, where the final authority of
Scripture was seriously compromised. Two groups evolved which made a caricature
of the Good News message, the one group emphasizing the ‘Social Gospel’. This
faction received the tag 'Practical Christianity'. The other group – dubbed
‘Faith and Order’ - stressed good doctrine. The structure of two bodies
fostered a theological fallacy that social involvement and
evangelization/missions are two biblical alternatives.
Soil for Atheism
The disunity of the World Church and Mission Conference was
soon out in the open to all intents and purposes! On this soil, atheism could
grow phenomenally, inspired by the teachings of Karl Marx and Fridrich Engels.
Marx had been angered in his student days by the general impression that
Christianity does not seem to support justice. Some Christians indeed spread
the unbiblical notion – it can also be found today among certain (groups of)
evangelicals – that riches and poverty are willed by God and that one must just
rest in that fact, hoping for compensation in eternity. Believers from these ranks enjoy their
comfort zone, not seeing any need to fight exploitation and corruption. All too
often they enjoy the fruits of such exploitation and economic injustice
themselves!
Basically
it was the age-old problem of ‘faith’ versus ‘works’. The Anglo-Catholic Society
for the Propagation of the Gospel opposed any discussions on Church unity
(Thomas, 2002:18), unwittingly thus contradicting the purpose of its
existence. The impression grew that
evangelisation and missionary work were separate entities, the one local -
performed by the Church and the other one border-crossing, the domain of missionary
societies. The statement of Bishop Azariah
in 1927 in Lausanne that disunity is tantamount to sin, can be seen
against this background.
Correction at World
Mission Conferences
The International
Missionary Conference (IMC) in Jerusalem in 1928 brought some correction,
stressing that evangelisation and missionary work were basically two sides of
the same coin. At this conference the paternalistic undertones of 'native
churches' was changed into 'indigenous churches' where their own architecture,
art and culture would be appreciated more. This encouraged the development of
indigenous leaders in different parts of the world. This unfortunately also had
a negative side effect, what became known as the 'euthanasia of missions'. The positive ‘three-self’ notion, which would
entail that missionaries should attempt to work themselves out of the job,
never got off the ground. Indigenous people groups were not taught clearly and
encouraged to engage in missionary work themselves. Nevertheless, Church leaders
agreed in 1937 to establish a World Council of Churches, based on a
merger of the Faith and Order Movement
with the Life and Work Movement. Its
official establishment was deferred with the outbreak of World War II until
August 23, 1948.[34]
The third mission conference took place
in 1938 in Tambaram, near Madras, India. In a
world where peace was increasingly threatened by fascist-type regimes (Germany,
Italy, Portugal, Spain, Japan), the discussions focused on the importance and
centrality of the Church, in particular the local Church, in mission.
Representatives from the so-called "younger" churches became a
majority in Tambaram. While the conference defended the ultimate truth of the
Christian message vis-à-vis other religions, it also advised missionaries
towards a listening and dialogue approach. In due course that became an end in
itself within the WCC.
Oppression sparked (Prayer) Offensives
The crying to
God in the wake of oppression as the Israelites did in response to the slavery
in Egypt, found emulation in different parts of the world down the centuries.
This was also the case at the Cape. The manyanos (the Xhosa word for prayer
unions) turned out to be instruments of Black empowerment virtually second to
none. Women leaders would not only pray and preach, but here their dignity and
political awareness was also developed. Dawn prayer and nights of prayer were
quite common in Black churches. (These manyanos were however
still very much divided along denominational lines.)
Apartheid oppression triggered united
action by churches, notably after the Message to the people of South Africa,
in 1968. A Study Project of
Christianity in Apartheid Society (SPROCAS) was launched in the wake of the
Message as a combined product of the South African Council of Churches (SACC) and the Christian
Institute (CI). The latter was led by Ds. Beyers Naudé. Its overt political
character however simultaneously created a schism, opposed by the three White
Afrikaner denominations which supported the government ideology. Low-key united
prayer could perhaps have bridged that gap.
Christianity became Church-centric Christianity became
increasingly 'church centric', with foreign missions 'dropping into
insignificance' (An unknown IMC rapporteur quoted
by Thomas (2002:21). So-called 'faith missions'
started to fill the gap, operating cross-denominationally, to the chagrin of churches.
Friction was so to speak programmed because devout church members (and funds)
were regarded to be syphoned away by these agencies. Ecumenical unions, driven by catalysts
like Bishop M.M. Thomas from India, were nevertheless quite effective. In South
Africa the race issue aggravated the differences. In due course apartheid
became one of the dividing lines between ‘evangelicals’ and ‘ecumenicals’. The
decision by the, World Council of Churches (WCC),
the global Church body, to support all agencies that fight racism brought
matters to a head. (This ultimately developed into a strange situation where
many evangelicals in Europe hereafter thought they had to support the apartheid
regime in South Africa because the WCC deemed it their duty to support the
freedom fighters of Southern Africa almost indiscriminately.)
The Caricature of Biblical Christianity
The
caricature of biblical Christianity as it has been exported and practised
around the world is not very attractive. The advantages of superior educational
opportunities and good medical care became the misleading trophies of
missionary work. Indigenous people were regarded as civilized or Christian when
they started to wear Western clothing. No wonder that an oppressive system could
flourish - a set-up where oppression became the order of the day. The more
affluent ‘Coloured’ and Black Christians in South Africa often unfortunately
also adopted repugnant superior attitudes, often playing the boss in the worst
sense of the word. The unity and fellowship in Christ of rich and poor, of
educated and unskilled, hardly got a chance.
Lording and Servility
A lording attitude was often copied and emulated by
non-Western ministers of religion. South Africa has been no exception to this
general statement. Bossing is still one of the problems in churches throughout
Africa. This has sometimes made it difficult for church members to submit.
Often church splits were the result. Some Christians had (and occasionally
still have) their domestic workers living in sub-standard living conditions on
the same premises. What a change would take place in South African society if
Christians of all races start doing things together on a substantial scale -
including the household chores, gardening and drinking tea.
In recent
years the local evangelistic agency Straatwerk set a laudable example on
non-racialism where people from all race groups and from different African
countries work harmoniously side by side, doing mundane work as they have been
keeping our city clean.
A problematic Legacy
South Africa has another problematic legacy, which is
related to the issue under discussion. People of colour have sometimes gone to
the other extreme, which is best described by the ‘ja-baas’ mentality: even educated people went cap-in-hand in an
undignified attitude to get favours from Whites. It was all too often regarded
as ‘Christian’ to suffer under the bossy attitude of a superior. It should
suffice to repeat that although Jesus taught us to have the attitude of a
servant, yes even of a slave, this does not mean that it should transpire in an
undignified way. Paul taught Philemon that he should take his run-away slave
Onesimus back as a brother in Christ. Both the bossy attitude and the
cap-in-hand mentality is outlawed by Scripture! South Africans may have to
repent of both, as the case may be, and ask forgiveness from the Lord and from
the other party where possible. In the true body of Christ there is no slave
and master mentality.
An
Emerging Church Unity high-jacked
The enemy of souls succeeded in high-jacking an emerging
unity of believers in South Africa at the end of the 1950s. Professor G.B.A. Gerdener could
still write in 1959:’With thankfulness we observe signs to come together and work together,
also in our own Dutch Reformed Church’ (Gerdener,
G.B.A., Die Afrikaner en die Sending, 1959:92). Gerdener rightly saw
exclusivism and isolation as a danger to mission work: ‘Nowhere is isolation and exclusivism so deadly and time-consuming than
in the fight against the mighty heathendom and nowhere is co-operation and a
united front so necessary and useful as here.’ Unfortunately, the issue of race was abused
by the arch enemy to send the Dutch Reformed Church on the path of
isolation, causing a deep rift in the denomination. White theologians defended
a biblical heresy of racial separation. Ds. Ben Marais and Professor Keet
fought a lonely but losing battle in their denomination in the 1950s.
The
Black, ‘Coloured’ and Indian sectors of the denomination drifted further and
further away from the Moederkerk,
linking up with other churches that opposed apartheid. Danger signals however
also started to surface, namely a bad compromise with inter-faith notions,
which undermined the unique position of our Lord Jesus as the Son of God.
Pervasive
Racial Prejudice
Sometimes the impression was created
that racial prejudice was only prevalent amongst the Afrikaners. David Thomas
(2002:136) showed how farcical the application in 1955 of the first indigenous
church, the Moravian Church of the Western Cape for membership in the
British-dominated Christian Council of South Africa (CCSA) was handled.
That was in sharp contrast to 1937 when the CCSA took special steps to
commemorate the arrival of Georg Schmidt, the first missionary. The dominance
of the English-speaking White Anglican and Methodist Churches in
the CCSA at this time also co-incided with a stark decline in interest in
missions. This led to a marginalisation of mission societies. Opposition to
racial oppression in the Church would have dire consequences when the World
Council of Churches (WCC) intervened in 1960. One of the major crises for
the churches in South Africa resulted from the Cottesloe Consultation.
On this occasion the
Church's role regarding racism was put under the spotlight by delegates of the
WCC and representatives of South African member churches. After some
far-reaching decisions had been taken by this consultation, there was a strong
reaction from especially the Afrikaans-speaking churches. At synods held in
1960 the Nederduits Gereformeerde Kerk
and the Nederduitsch Hervormde Kerk van Afrika decided to resign from
the World Council of
Churches. Dr
Beyers Naude started the Christian Institute in protest, initiating
Bible Study groups across the racial divide. (Protest is to be
understood here from its Latin root pro testare, testifying for something. The mouthpiece of the CI
was very fittingly called Pro Veritate, for truth.) The Dutch
Reformed counterparts of colour - especially the ‘Coloured’ dominees - politicized the Church. (On
the other hand, the open letter which was signed by 123 Dutch Reformed
ministers in 1982, stressed the unity of the Church. This proved to be a major
correction. The discussion of
the letter in Perspektief op die Ope
Brief (Human en Rousseau, 1982) indicates however that the theologians were
merely speaking about unity in the Reformed church family. It was nevertheless
valuable for the S.A. context that the document stressed that the unity in
Christ is primary and the diversity secondary.)
A significant Power
Encounter
Something happened in Cape Town in August 1961 which unified
Christians unprecedentedly. Ds. Davie Pypers had been called to become the
missionary to the Cape Muslims on behalf of the Dutch Reformed Church,
linked to the historical Gestig (Sendingkerk)
congregation in Long Street of the Cape Town CBD. (It had been the fellowship
where people from different denominations once worshipped, the cradle of
missionary outreach in South Africa.[35]
Ds. Pypers had hardly started with his new task there when a challenge came
from a young imam, Ahmed Deedat,
to publicly debate the death of Jesus on the Cross. In vain Pypers tried to get
one of the Stellenbosch professors to accept the challenge. The young dominee, David Pypers, then prepared
himself through prayer and fasting in a tent on the mountains at Bain’s Kloof
for the event due to take place on Sunday 13 August 1961 at the Green
Point Track.
Because of good
publicity in the media, 30 000 people of all races jammed into the dusty Green
Point sports venue. The stadium quivered with excitement like at a rugby match.
In the keenly contested debate, Imam Deedat started with the assertion that
Jesus went to Egypt after the disciples had taken him from the Cross. He thoroughly
ridiculed the Christian faith, challenging Pypers to give proof that Jesus died
on the Cross. The young dominee rose
to the challenge by immediately stating that Jesus is alive and that his Lord
could there and then do the very things He had done when He walked the earth.
Dr David du
Plessis reported: ‘Taking a deep breath,
he (Pypers) spoke loud and clear, ‘Is there anybody in this audience that,
according to medical judgement, is completely incurable? Remember, you must be
incurable...’ (?? - David Du Plessis,:??) Of course, the stadium
was abuzz by now. And then several men came along, carrying Mrs Withuhn, a
White Christian lady, with braces all over her body. She was completely
paralyzed. Then Pypers went ahead, asking whether there were any doctors
present who could examine her and vouch for her condition. ‘Several doctors came forward, including her own physician,
and they concurred in pronouncing her affliction incurable’ (Du
Plessis, 1977:??).
Pypers simply
walked to her and without any ado prayed for her briefly, proclaiming: ‘In the name of Jesus, be healed!’ Immediately she dropped her crutches and began to move.
The Green Point
Aftermath
The Green Point Track event thus resulted in a victory
for the Cross, with Mrs Withuhn being miraculously healed in the name of the
resurrected Lord Jesus Christ.
Many Muslims
were deeply moved, but something else unfortunately also happened. The booklet The Hadji Abdullah ben Yussuf; or the story
of a Malay as told by himself (in an Afrikaans translation) was re-issued. Its distribution at the gates of the Green Point Track was
definitely not helpful. The booklet refers negatively to the Qur’an and
Muhammad, the founder of Islam.[36]
The Cape Muslim community was enraged by the re-publication of this nineteenth
century pamphlet.
The effect of
the Green Point Track miracle was furthermore
almost nullified by news that came from another part of the globe on that same
day. The report of the building of the Berlin Wall resounded throughout
the world! A new type of battle erupted – the iddeological ‘cold war’ between
Soviet Communism and Western Capitalism!
However, it
was also very bad that Pypers was heavily criticized by leaders from his
denomination for undertaking the confrontation, without getting prior synod
approval. Furthermore, the leaders of his denomination were still clinging to
an untenable interpretation of divine healing – that it belonged to a past age,
to the times of the biblical apostles.
As the ensuing ‘cold war’ increasingly became a hot potato
internationally, the enemy of souls abused Communism with its atheist basis, in
an attempt to stifle the spreading of the victorious message of the Cross, as
it had been proclaimed at the Green Point Track.
A link between Islam and
Communism
I believe
that the events of 13 August 1961 had great importance in the spiritual realm. The
Islamic Crescent was probably linked to Communism in opposition to the Cross at
that occasion. This would happen again in reverse in 1990 after the demise of
Communism, the result of a seven year prayer effort of Christians across the
Globe. Islam took over the mantle from the atheist ideology as a threat to
world peace when the Iraqi army marched into Kuwait. However, the event dubbed Desert
Storm also became the catalyst for many Christians to start praying for an
end to Islamic bondage. The deception at the base of the ideology as a
destructive spiritual force started to get exposed. Islamist leaders from Iran have been bringing
a world war closer by a rather biased Qur'anic interpretation via the hatred of
Jews, to wipe Israel from the map. They may use their expected nuclear
capability sooner rather than later. Israel has just as clearly stated its
intention to pre-empt that, looking for support from the USA.
Unbiblical
Unity of the World Council of Churches
The
Bible tells us that the Church is the Body
of Christ, and Christ is the Head of
the Church, His Body, of which He is the Saviour (Ephesians 4:15-16; 5:23).
He has the supremacy in everything
(Colossians 1:18), and His followers are obliged to do what He commands (John 15). They are to bring all things under
the authority of the triune God and therefore engage in missions.
The original Greek word ’oikoumene’ means ’all the inhabitants of the earth’, and the word ’ecumenical’ was derived from it. In World Council of Churches (WCC)
parlance the word ecumenical soon
referred not merely to Christians, but to men of all faiths and even to those
with no faith at all. Although the WCC proclaimed formally that it was
promoting Christian unity in faith,
witness and service for a just and peaceful world, ecumenism took on a secular
meaning. Thus the World Council of Churches increasingly freed itself from its
Christian identity, moving into a realm of inter-faith relativity. Jesus Christ
was not perceived any more as being unique. Jesus’ words: I am the way and the truth and
the life. No-one comes to the Father except through Me (John 14:6), became
almost irrelevant in that context. The Biblical claim that salvation is found in no-one else, for there is no other name under
heaven given to men, by which we must be saved (Acts 4:12), virtually lost
its meaning in due course in WCC literature. The aim of the WCC shifted from
seeking the Kingdom of God to promoting the concept of a united Church -
without the unique Christ of the Bible. It moved from uniting Christians to
uniting mankind. The WCC seemed to aim
for the establishment of a world religion in which all faiths are equal - an
unbiblical unity.
Bad Advice from Abroad Bad
advice from abroad transpired when national Anglican sensitivities were
over-ridden by the 10-yearly global Lambeth Conference of bishops. The
conference of 1958 'officially encouraged member churches
to seek union with any other churches willing to discuss the subject' (Thomas, 2002:165). From 1960
various churches started with talks which gained momentum, so that by 1967 a Church
Unity Commission was set up with seven churches involved. The exercise was
not easy but not completely futile. Here at the Cape there were some mergers in
the wake of it like the Camps Bay United Church.
Worldwide there came the correction thereafter that the
trouble and expense of such exercises are not commensurate with the result for
the expansion of the Kingdom. That there is validity and truth in Ephesians
3:10 that the true Church radiates the manifold wisdom of God - which has
little to do with external forms - did however not break through generally.
Call to Prayer for African Cities
Michael
Cassidy, a Southern African spiritual giant, studied at the famous British Cambridge
University in the mid-1950s. While attending a meeting with Dr Billy Graham
there, he was greatly impacted. In Cambridge the conviction developed that only
a spiritual renewal could remove Boer-Brit alienation, as well as the
Black-White rift in South Africa. On
vacation in New York in mid-1957, he attended an evangelistic campaign by Dr
Billy Graham. Cassidy reported about this event: “Suddenly
I heard within my spirit: ‘Why not in Africa?’ ‘Yes, why not Lord?’ I replied.”
(Coomes, 2002:68). God started to prepare him for a special mission.
During a study stint in the USA in
1960 Bill Bright, the founder of Campus Crusade, invited Michael Cassidy
to start work in South Africa on behalf of their agency. During the Week of
Prayer at the Campus Crusade Training Institute, Cassidy participated in
a period of 'Waiting on God'. There he was challenged to pray for the 31 major
cities of Africa.
After
being told by a friend about a ship sailing between Africa and America with the
name Africa Enterprise, the 23-year
old Cassidy decided to start an evangelistic agency, with the goal of reaching
the influential people of the African continent. He wrote in a letter to Eternity,
an American magazine: ‘We desire to have a social
emphasis in our ministry as well … because evangelical Christians have
presented a lob-sided message that has greatly ignored the social implications
of the Lord’s teachings. Consequently ... they have lost the hearing of the
people they are trying to reach; therefore, we feel it important to have a
ministry to the physical needs of these people, as well as their spiritual
needs...’ (Coomes, 2002:81).
During
his study stint at Fuller Seminary in Pasadena (USA), Michael Cassidy
was divinely touched not only to reach Africa's cities, but also to open up
Black Africa to the Gospel. He and his
student friend Ed Gregory visited 31 African cities during the long US college
vacation, meeting many a government leader.
On 18 July 1961 in Liberia he drew a vast
map of Africa in the sand on impulse, writing across it: Claimed for Jesus
Christ'. As he resumed his walk, he '… also
asked God for 50 years of ministry in Africa – a year for every state on the
African continent' (Coomes,
2002:89). Across the 'Black continent' the new agency Africa Enterprise (AE) was destined to have a significant impact in
the years thereafter, starting with an interdenominational campaign in
Pietermaritzburg in August 1962.
Dr Billy Graham
and World Congresses on Evangelism
From the mid-1960s the rift between
so-called ‘evangelical’ and ‘ecumenical’ Protestants became bigger and bigger. It
seemed almost unbridgeable eventually. When divergent and competing ‘faith’
missions and humanist social denominational ‘mainline’ church missionary work
seemed logical and normal, God used Dr Billy Graham to initiate international
conferences on World Evangelization and Missions. The 1966 World Congress on
Evangelism, held in West Berlin, Germany, was an important event in the
history of Christianity. At this meeting Protestant evangelical Christians
(theologians, evangelists, church leaders) from around the world met for the
first time. They began to build
relationships and exchange views that led to much closer co-operation. The
Congress was sponsored by two American organizations - the Billy Graham
Evangelistic Association and Christianity Today magazine - and was
planned and financed largely by Americans. The papers at the conference gave
some indication of the explosive growth of the Church in Africa, Asia and Latin
America and the shifting centre of gravity of the Church universal from the
Western to non-Western cultures. Michael
Cassidy, still a young Southern African who had grown up in Maseru in
Basutoland, (as Lesotho was previously called), attended the 1966 congress in
Berlin. There he got caught in the crossfire through his paper Political
Nationalism as an Obtacle to Evangelism, after he had hammered both White
and Black nationalisms (Coomes, 2002:130). His fledgling agency African
Enterprise was condemned by evangelical Christians for calling for
political change, and for a just dispensation in South Africa.
United Prayer in Spiritual Warfare
Jim Wilson highlighted united prayer in his
booklet Principles of War in 1964 to revive evangelical interest to
attack demonic strongholds. But it hardly seemed to make any dent in the
spiritual realm. Paul Billheimer’s book Destined for the Throne (1975) approached the matter of prayer in a
revolutionary manner. Although this book had a few printings, the content was
probably not distributed globally by way of translation before 1989. Thus it
did not mobilize believers significantly to use either praise or prayer - let
alone both - to tear down demonic strongholds in spiritual warfare. Paul Billheimer had close links to the World School of Prayer, whose
founder and leader, Dick Eastman, was deeply influenced by the writings of Dr Andrew
Murray.
The Kivengere-Cassidy Combination Bishop Festo Kivengere of Uganda, a convert of the Rwandan revival of the 1940s, met Michael
Cassidy the first time in 1961 when he was still studying in Pasadena. When
they met again in Nigeria in July 1968 at a conference there, Cassidy, the Africa
Enterprise (AE) leader challenged Bishop Kivangere to join AE. Displaying
great courage to agree to work closely with a White from the polecat of the
world, the notorious apartheid country, Bishop Festo Kivengere became God's
special channel to open up East Africa for the Gospel. He was deeply influenced
by the East African Revival - one of the great 20th century
movements of the Holy Spirit.
The
Holy Spirit movement flowed via a big national church event with Dr Billy
Graham in Durban in 1973. In the spiritual realm this was a significant
build-up to the International Congress on World Evangelization, in
Lausanne (Switzerland), the following year. In
the Lausanne Covenant of 1974 wise words were penned regarding the unity
of the Church: 'Unity should be marked by
truth, but has room for diversity and flexibility. Joining together local
churches or even denominations has not in the past brought an impetus to
evangelize; we need to guard against naivety that mergers in and of themselves
can take us forward... Mergers can be good, combining strengths as well as
saving on costs... But we must not be starry-eyed about new spiritual energy...
This is not how the Holy Spirit works' (Lausanne Covenant, p.35). This was not
new at all. Count Zinzendorf had already discerned that overt co-operation
could never be a substitute for unity wrought by the Holy Spirit through prayer
and supplication. He knew only too well that men could join in the same ‘outward ceremonies and duties of
religion, but in reality deny the truth of it’ (Lewis,
1962:99). Zinzendorf realized at that
time that we should not strive after an organic union of denominations, but
work towards unity which transcends all church divisions.
Third World Theologians
make a Stand
At
the International conference in Lausanne of
1974, third world theologians were divinely used by God, showing that
two tenets of evangelical faith, social engagement and evangelism, are not
alternatives, but that both are equally needed - the so-called Great
Commandment (Love your neighbour as yourself) and the Great Commission (Make
disciples of all nations ...). Fouad
Assad, the Lebanese executive secretary, bridged the gap between the more
liberal and the common Western evangelical theology during a devotional
session. He pointed out that the apostle Philip broke through the taboo of the
religious people of his time by communicating with an Ethiopian eunuch.[37] (Zinzendorf
did the same in the 18th century when he communicated with the likes
of slaves and Eskimo's.)
At the
congress in Lausanne, the Korean Okhill Kim brought the evangelicals back to
the best of their roots when he reminded participants how the missionary Mary
Scranton started a school for girls in their country in 1886. She intended ‘not to force Koreans to
give up their own ways’ (Let
the Earth hear his Voice, The official report of the 1974 Lausanne
Conference, 1975:657), but to show them new ways of being Koreans. Okhill Kim
brought a new challenge to the West that was reeling under the threat of a
moratorium, a temporary cessation of new Western missionaries to the third
world. (African theologians had been suggesting via the WCC in 1972 that the
West should send them money rather than workers who had no sensitivity for the
African culture.) Okhill Kim highlighted the wrong alternatives, stating that
it was the task of Christian evangelism to rejuvenate the old stale practices.
He encouraged the Church ‘to cultivate the educational forms of our own cultural
heritage in the arts, combining the arts of the West and the East’ (ibid,
p.659). (Even today the 'developed' world would do well to drop their haughty
protectionism and open themselves up to 'third-world' values of human warmth,
hospitality and ubuntu.[38])
The Pan African
Christian Leadership Assembly
During
the 1974 International Congress on World Evangelization a group of
forty-five Christian leaders from Africa met in Lausanne to discuss the possibility of a
Pan African meeting of Church leaders to investigate the needs and
possibilities of the rapidly growing Christian community on the Black
continent. The group asked Bishop Festo Kivengere of Uganda and Michael Cassidy
of Africa Enterprise to explore what could be done. Representatives from
all over Africa were subsequently invited to a larger meeting in Nairobi in
1976 called PACLA (Pan African Christian Leadership
Assembly), chaired by the Ghanaian Gottfried
Osei-Mensah of the Lausanne Committee for World Evangelization.
Two Africans who broke down Church Barriers
Bishop Kivengere also linked up with South
Africa’s ‘Mr. Pentecost’ David du Plessis. The two Africans from different
parts of the continent contributed significantly to the bridging of the gap
between evangelicals and ecumenicals. Bishop Kivengere became a blessing to
Christians around the world with his challenging message of love and
forgiveness. Together with Dr du Plessis, Bishop Kivengere was a divine
instrument in the thawing of the relationship not only between Protestantism
and Roman Catholicism, but also between Pentecostals and other Protestants.
Forced
to flee for his life from Uganda in 1977 at the height of the eight-year reign
of terror of the dictator Idi Amin, Festo and his wife Mera remained abroad
until the liberation of his country in 1979. He thereafter returned immediately
to bring the message of God's reconciling love in Jesus Christ to his battered
country. Festo Kivengere's ministry of reconciliation crossed boundaries of
race, culture and denomination, facilitating the visible unity of the body of
Christ in an unprecedented way in many places. All
over the world Kivengere had been spreading the message of Revolutionary Love, the title of a book he authored (downloadable
from the Internet).
As leader of Africa Enterprise's East Africa teams,
Bishop Festo Kivengere laboured for decades in Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda - but
especially also in the reconstruction of his ravaged country Uganda.
Reconciliation was needed because Milton Obote, the successor of Idi Amini,
turned out to be corrupt as well. Through African
Enterprise he helped organize emergency
relief for those who were suffering, as well as long-term help for the
reconstruction of Uganda.
At a later stage Festo Kivengere
teamed up with Michael Cassidy and his AE in a dynamic partnership, also inside
South Africa. With
evangelical involvement in the Black ghetto of Soweto after 1976, Africa Enterprise was to be God’s choice
instrument for change in Africa over the next decades. Michael
Cassidy and Festo Kivangere visited and preached as equals, also in the
Afrikaner stronghold of Stellenbosch. This was a bold step, building on the
foundation laid by Professor Nico Smith at the Theological Faculty. Michael
Cassidy would become one of the pioneers to usher in the new democratic South
Africa in the 1980s.
Chapter 18 Two Sides of the Racism Debate
Chapter 18 Two Sides of the Racism Debate
The Programme to Combat Racism (PCR) was initiated at the World Council of Churches (WCC) plenary Assembly in
Uppsala (Sweden) in 1968 as part of their Programme Unit on Justice and
Service. Its aim was to develop ecumenical policies and programmes
contributing to the liberation of victims of racism. Much of its attention and
focus was on southern Africa, especially apartheid and the divestment campaign.
It established a special fund from which donations were made to liberation
movements and to solidarity organisations around the world. The fund was fed
from voluntary contributions from churches. The Programme to Combat Racism
was a controversial initiative of the WCC during the 1970s. It funded a
number of humanitarian programmes of liberation movements and groups that were
involved in their struggle against racial or colonial-related oppression.
Early 20th Century Black Church Leaders in costly
Reconciliation
Over
the years the church in South Africa has been a major catalyst for peace and
reconciliation. Strong personalities like Reverend John Dube and Professor
D.D.T. Jabavu had been playing a moderating and conciliatory role in the early
days of the African
National Congress (ANC). Successive White governments failed to
appreciate the gold of human resources, by not listening to Black church
leaders.
Substantial resistance
to the oppressive race policies came as a rule from the ranks of these church
leaders until the 1950s. One of the most prominent of them was South Africa’s
first Nobel Prize laureate, Albert Luthuli. After he had been
dismissed as chief in November 1952, he responded with his famous address which
had at its beginning the momentous words ‘thirty years of my life have
been spent knocking in vain, patiently, moderately and modestly at a closed and
barred door…’He ended with the powerful sentence: ‘The Road to Freedom
is via the CROSS’ (The full address in printed as an appendix in
Luthuli, Let my
People go, 1962 235-238).
Long before Black Theology came into vogue,
Luthuli expressed his conviction that apartheid degrades all who are party to
it. He was optimistic despite all evidence to the contrary that Whites would
sooner or later be compelled to change heart and accept a shared society. Luthuli
was elected ANC president-general by a large majority the next month. Bans
imposed in early 1953 were renewed in the following years, completely silencing
him in 1959. Luthuli was not around anymore to experience the freedom which
Nelson Mandela could walk into, but he paved the way.
Dutch Reformed Church Opposition against Apartheid There is
also another side of the racism debate. For
many it will be surprising to hear that arguably the most effective church
opposition against apartheid ironically came initially from the Dutch
Reformed Church. The Anglican Bishop Trevor Huddleston and others were
making some inroads through their stand against the race policies that became
official after 1948, but the most effective counter came surprisingly from
within the ranks of the Dutch Reformed denomination. I do not refer to
the warnings by people like Ds. Ben Marais and Professor Keet, but specifically
to the stand of a ‘Coloured’ Dutch Reformed
clergyman. He was Eerwaarde
(Reverend) I.D. Morkel, who in turn influenced a dynamic mover, a young
clergyman, Ds. David Botha of the Wynberg
Sendingkerk.
These ministers opposed the apartheid
policy long before the famous Dr Beyers Naudé.
The Sendingkerk Ring (circuit) of Wynberg agreed
unanimously with the motion tabled by Rev. I.D. Morkel, to oppose apartheid on
scriptural grounds. The participants at this meeting included quite a few
Afrikaner dominees because there were
still very few ministers of colour ordained in the 'Coloured' sector of the
denomination around 1950. The Sendingkerk
Ring protested against the
proposed legislation of the new regime, appealing to the government urgently
not to implement apartheid laws.[39]
That the Malan Cabinet ignored their protests was not as
deplorable as the fact that the very same dominees
who voted in October 1948, did not pitch when all Sendingkerk ministers were
invited to a meeting to discuss the legislation. Although 28 congregations were
represented, only two white dominees attended
this meeting. Another meeting on 14 October 1949 resolved to encourage
believers to retreat into a day of prayer on 16 December 1949 ‘to be relieved from the apartheid
affliction.’
A biblical Response
‘A Message to
the people of South Africa’ by the newly-formed South African Council of Churches (SACC) in 1968 was a
comprehensive theological rejection of the rising social ill of apartheid that
was breaking apart the nation with ever increasing intensity. The ‘Message’ did
not receive the anticipated media coverage because it coincided with the
government's banning of the MCC cricket tour. (The touring English team had included
Basil d’Oliveira, a South African born person of colour as a political gesture
in teh eyes of the government.) Notwithstanding, this powerful statement came
to shape much of the Church's response in both word and deed in the years that
followed.
Beyers Naudé, who founded
the Christian Institute (CI), dreamed
of establishing a ‘Confessing Church’ in South Africa along the model of what
happened in Germany when Nazis threatened to absorb the Church in its ideology.
With the help of friends and colleagues Rev Theo Kotze, a Cape Methodist minister,
started the regional office of the Christian
Institute near to the Mowbray train
station. He regularly prepared and sent out memos explaining the implications
of Parliamentary Bills. He also gave ideas for practical involvement. The
demonic apartheid ideology however tilted the Bible-based beginnings of the CI.
The organisation was quite prophetic when it encouraged Black, Indian and
‘Coloured’ Dutch Reformed Church leaders to look at how
apartheid was destroying Church unity in South Africa. But the CI was at the
same time, perhaps unwittingly, politicizing a part of the body of Christ in an
unhealthy activist way. (I was
personally impacted in that way in the early 1970s.)
A Catalyst for unchristian Activism
Unwittingly and
unintentionally the dynamic Rev. Theo Kotze became the harbinger of a
compromise of the Gospel. Thus it was surely compassionate and loving that he
went to the home of Farid Esack, a young Muslim, to explain to the family that
the first police detention of the high school student was not because he was a
bad person. Esack later confessed in Harare years later - in the presence of
Oliver Tambo, Thabo Mbeki and Bishop Trevor Huddleston - about Kotze’s
contribution in his spiritual development: ‘It
was a Christian minister who taught me that Islam is not the sole repository of
truth.’
(Knighton-Fitt, 2003:186).[40] Kotze
and the CI of the 1970s were unwittingly sowing the seed of inter-faith
teaching that compromised the uniqueness of Jesus as the divine Son of God. The
uncompromising stance of CI leaders also influenced Church leaders to oppose
all forms of legalism. However, many of them went overboard in the end in their
actvism. In my view it is no co-incidence that quite a few ministers that were
closely linked to the CI in later years supported an unbiblical view on
homosexuality, sometimes with the excuse that they opposed the unloving and
legalistic practices in the churches.
The CI became a
catalyst for uncharitable activism. This was especially evident in the University
Christian Movement (UCM) that was more or less a spiritual child of the CI.
UCM was formed by English-speaking churches after the SCA changed its
constitution to divide into separate ethnic organizations. Many White students
withdrew from active participation when Black Theology and Black Consciousness
came strongly to the fore. The mood of Black students - under the leadership of
Steve Biko, who broke away with others at a UCM conference to form SASO – was
very much one of polarization. 'Black man, you are on your own!' became a
commonly used slogan. Sometimes their sentiments were all too often expressed
as blatant anti-White racism.[41]
Correction came to
the fore in the 1970s in the course of the expounding of Black Theology. Thus
Manas Buthulezi, a Lutheran Bishop and prominent theologian, spelled this out
with great effect at the South African Congress on Mission and Evangelism
in 1973, noting that Christianity had to be liberated from every form of racial
bondage if it was to speak meaningfully to Blacks: 'The white man will be
liberated from the urge to reject the black man...' (Cited in De Gruchy,
1979:162). In similar vein Desmond Tutu explained what the liberation meant: It
is 'fundamentally
liberation from sin to which we are all (oppressed and oppressors alike) in
bondage, it means a readiness to forgive, and a refusal to be consumed by
hate...'
(Cited in De Gruchy, 1979:163).
Defence of Racism
Atrocities by so-called freedom
fighters called forth reaction that often went overboard. Rev. Arthur Lewis spent
11 years serving at various mission stations in Tanganyika and on the islands
of Zanzibar and Pemba.[42] In 1958 he
moved to Zimbabwe that was called Southern Rhodesia at the time. His book, Christian
Terror, created a sensation as it documented how missionaries, pastors and
other Christians were being brutally murdered by soldiers of Robert Mugabe's
ZANU and Joshua Nkomo's ZAPU. These groups were among the recipients of World
Council of Churches funding. Readers Digest picked up the scandalous
story and the Salvation Army and Baptists withdrew their membership with
the WCC in protest. To help mobilize prayer and action on behalf of Christians
suffering on the frontline of the battle, against the advance of Soviet and
Chinese supported Communism, Rev. Arthur Lewis launched the Rhodesia
Christian Group. In other countries similar reactionary groups started like
the Notgemeinschaft in West Germany.
South African Churches withdrawing
support of the WCC
In due course certain South African
churches followed suit, withdrawing their support of the WCC. At this time Dr
Andries Treurnicht, a former editor of the Dutch Reformed mouthpiece Die
Kerkbode, became Deputy Minister of Education. His instruction in 1976 to implement the
policy that Black students should be taught in Afrikaans triggered the Soweto
uprising. In 1978, Treurnicht
was chosen - over the heads of 12 other Cabinet ministers - as leader of the National
Party in the Transvaal. The impression was reinforced that verkrampte
(ultra-reactionary) right-wingers were gaining control of the ruling party.
When Prime Minister P.W. Botha wanted to introduce limited cosmetic reforms to
apartheid, Treurnicht
and 17 other MPs decided to quit the National Party to form the Conservative
Party on March 20, 1982.
Opposition
to racial Oppression causing Splits
Non-violent opposition to racism became increasingly unpopular among
Church members of colour. More and more the White-dominated regimes were
perceived as oppressors of the peoples of colour that could only be toppled
with military means.
After
the West had refused to help them in the battle against the apartheid regime,
the ANC turned to the Soviet Communists. The military situation on the
country’s borders caused White believers of South Africa to form a group called
Intercessors for South Africa. This was initiated by Dr Francis Grim,
leader of the Healthcare Christian
Fellowship, which had its national headquarters in the picturesque
Capetonian suburb of Pinelands. He was one of few people at the time to discern
the growing moral dangers clearly: ‘Most people seem to be too busy making
money, enjoying themselves ... to notice the dangerous downward trend in the
country’s morals’.
Prayer as a Part of the Process of Change
Prayer was very much part of a process of
change. This is demonstrated by times of prayer and fasting in the St
George’s Cathedral. Rev. Bernard Wrankmore was convinced that the country was misled by
a similar delusion as the Germans under Hitler. He decided to retreat for
prayer and fasting to St George’s Cathedral for the situation in the
country. However, Wrankmore was refused permission to do so by the Archbishop
and the Dean of the Cathedral. He did receive permission to fast and pray in
the Islamic shrine between Lion's Head and Signal Hill. Those responsible for St
George’s Cathedral evidently repented after the negative response to Rev.
Bernard Wrankmore in 1971, allowing other people to pray and fast with
political overtones of protest.
Dr
Francis Grim, the founder-leader of Healthcare
Christian Fellowship, initiated a National Day of Prayer, called for
7 January 1976. However, this was not perceived by
people of colour as something to join.
In fact, few people from those ranks knew about the day of prayer. The
all-White organizers had still not recognized the need to draw in people from
other racial backgrounds. Yet, this move may have stemmed the tide of
Communist-inspired revolution, to which the June 16 upheavals in Soweto in 1976
could easily have led. Dr Grim gave a challenging title to a booklet that was
published by his organisation: Pray or Perish. At any rate, God was
already at work. On that very June 16 (1976), a young policeman, Johan Botha,
was posted in Soweto. Supernaturally God would use him almost 20 years later to
bring many in the nation to their knees in prayer.[43]
Impact of Liberation Theology
Liberation Theology that developed in
Latin America in the 1950s and 1960s has been described as ‘an
interpretation of Christian faith out of the experience of the poor...an
attempt to read the Bible and
key Christian doctrines with the eyes of the poor’.
Some third-world theologians started
focussing on grievances. Many moved away from the biblical centre, some to
political activism. Already in the 1950s the Indian theologian M. M. Thomas had
introduced revolution as a theological concept. In the International Review
of Missions of 1973 a commentator stated that 'his political theology is
through and through a missionary theology' (Cited in Thomas,
2002:28). The Second
Vatican Council of the Roman Catholic
Church produced a theological atmosphere characterized by great freedom and
creativity. This gave Latin American theologians the courage to think for
themselves about pastoral problems affecting their countries. This process
could be seen at work among both Roman Catholic and Protestant thinkers with
the group Church and Society in Latin
America (ISAL) giving prominent input.
Richard Shaull, who worked as a
missionary in Columbia and Brazil, came up at this time with a Theology of
Revolution, supporting the poor to throw off the yoke of oppression - if
need be violently. His critical thinking on social change, prophetic
Christianity, and dialogue with Marxism, as well as Christian use of Marxist
analysis, preceded the emergence of the formal schools of Liberation
Theology.
With some substance Liberation
Theology was soon teaching that the colonially enforced Christianity led to
oppression and injustice. This was definitely the case in Southern Africa.
Marxism would be the answer liberal theologians suggested. A new Jesus emerged
– Jesus, the militant revolutionary![44] James Cone, an Afro-American academic, adapted it and dubbed
it Black Theology. This took South
Africa by storm in 1970 via the University
Christian Movement.
The WCC’s Commission on World Mission and Evangelism (CWME) held a conference
in Bangkok in 1972 under the theme ’Salvation
Today’. It called formally for a ’Moratorium
on Missions’. The evolution of a
negative perception of Church and Missions as analysed by the Jew Karl Marx is
very tragic. The call from Africa for a moratorium of (Western) missionaries[45] in 1972
may have sounded very uncharitable.
Possibly this was inspired by a reaction against the bossy attitude of
Western missionaries who gave the impression that they always know it better.
Why is 2 Corinthians 8 still unknown by and large, namely how the poor
Macedonians begged to be given the opportunity to bless the mother church in
Jerusalem? How often is it taught that poor believers have much to give? Is
this not what Jesus also demonstrated with the gift of the widow’s mite?
However,
it was expcted very rightfully that Black Churches must become truly African. As a result of the moratorium, WCC-linked missionary societies
withdrew their missionaries from Africa and elsewhere. This left many
unprepared young churches with a void of proper oversight.
In a further development, the WCC’s
Commission on World Mission and Evangelism
(CWME) changed its name into Commission for Dialogue with People of other Faiths (CWME), which basically intimated an historical
judgement on the missionary movement. Missionary work which invited people to
become followers of Jesus was hereafter not fashionable any more. This can also
be regarded as the start of Interfaith-Dialogue
Confession as a divine Instrument
Confession is an important
element of prayer as a vital ingredient towards spiritual renewal. The rebirth
of the Jewish nation after the exile was prepared by the intercessory prayers
of Nehemiah (1:6-9), Ezra (9:6-13) and Daniel (9:9-19). All three of them
concentrated on the spiritual condition of the nation, and confession of sins.
In
revivals through the ages, prayer has always been the basis. In these cases
prayer brought about a consciousness of sin, which invariably led to confession
and restitution. Andrew Murray opined: ‘an essential
element in a true missionary revival will be a broken heart and a contrite
spirit in view of past neglect and sin’. In the most widely known revival in
South Africa, in Kwa Siza Bantu (Natal), Erlo Stegen, the founding
leader, had been observing an extended period of prayer. However, the Holy
Spirit only broke through when Stegen confessed his racial pride. He discerned
that he was lacking neighbourly love towards the Zulus.
In recent years a biographical film Faith like Potatoes depicted how Angus Buchan, a Natal farmer, experienced an
amazing personal revival and then began to impact the lives of many others. His
Mighty Men Conferences and other revival events would impact thousands
in subsequent years.
Ministry amongst Youth
and Children During and after
World War II concern was raised for young people whose families had been broken
up by fathers serving overseas on military assignments. The absence of a
positive father figure (male role model) in the home led to other social problems.
The then typical church structures were not catering for these young people.
This compelled some Christian leaders to develop programmes specifically geared
to reach out to these young people. The new initiative brought dynamic young
evangelists into the frame, who started using revolutionary methods, conducting
lively mass rallies in more than a dozen US cities under the name Youth for
Christ (YfC). With the rapid expansion of the work there soon became a need
for leadership and organization and in 1944 Chicago pastor Torrey Johnson was
elected YFC’s first president, with Billy Graham as YfC’s first full-time
worker.
These
initiatives became a movement and the pioneers started to travel to other
countries. Jimmy Ferguson came to South Africa as a missionary, running rallies
alongside local South Africans. Youth for Christ (YfC) became an international Christian organization with
its core mission and vision that of communicating the life-changing message of
Jesus Christ to young people. Jimmy Ferguson
pioneered YFC’s ministry at the Cape where the organization started nationally
already in 1946. YFC South Africa in its early years was born out of a middle
class ministry to White high school learners, also providing a valuable service
to predominantly suburban churches through training, rallies and camping. Bill
Parker and Nico
Bougas[46] were two prominent YFC
members during the 1950s and 1960s at the Cape, who were also very much
involved in ministry at the insurance pioneers Old Mutual, where they worked. The slogan Youth for Christ
would find emulation in different ways like Cops for Christ, Jews for Jesus and
Athletes for Christ.
Scripture Union started amongst
English-speaking White high schools. The Catholic and Anglican schools were the
first to bridge the racial divide, with the Diocesan
College in Rondebosch (Bishops) and St
Cyprian’s in Vredehoek amongst the first countrywide.
At the Cape the Moravian
Church was among the first denominations to organize their youth work
nationally. Out of their Sunday School Union which started at the Cape
already in 1942, a national Youth Union grew that was formally started
in 1958. From the mid-1960s that denomination broke new ground once again with
multi-racial work camps at Langgezocht, Genadendal, with the intention of
building a camp site there.[47]
Recruitment
from the Christian Student Ministry
The Christen-Studentevereniging (CSV), the Afrikaner
sector of the SCA, produced many prominent leaders in church and society. In
the latter part of the 20th century many organisations developed out
of the Christen-Studentevereniging (CSV). Stellenbosch
University played a prominent role with the annual mission week at the Studentekerk. This was emulated at other
tertiary institutions all around the country. Jan Hanekom (at the Hofmeyr Centre and linked to South African Association of World
Evangelisation SAAWE), influenced
scores of students.
Cassie
Carstens came to international prominence as the executive head of the CSV from
1990 to 2000. He was the chaplain of the national rugby team that won the World
Cup in 1995. Here he caught the eye of the international media. This led to
the founding of the International School for Sports Leaders in
Stellenbosch.
The work of the parallel student ministry among ‘Coloureds’
only really came into its own in the second half of the 20th century
where ‘Mammie’ le Fleur pioneered this work with Nic Apollis as the next
itinerant secretary until the early 1960s, followed by Chris Wessels from the Moravian
Church.
At a camp for
theological students, a tokkelok from
the Sendingkerk, Esau Jacobs, was
deeply moved with regard to ecumenical work, notably for the work of Ds. Beyers
Naude and the Christian Institute. He started his pastoral ministry in
the Transkei. Jakes, as he became widely known, also had a definite vision to
reach out to the Muslims. He inspired many a young student, including the
author. At the student evangelistic outreach at Harmony Park in 1964/5, Jakes
exposed the group to ‘spiritual warfare’ when he joined the students and young
teachers on New Year’s Day, 1965.
The student outreach at Harmony Park in the mid-1960s
contributed significantly to the spiritual maturing of leaders such as Rev.
Abel Hendricks. In later years Abel Hendricks became President of the Methodist Church and Chris Wessels
became a respected leader in the Moravian
Church. Allan Boesak, Jattie Bredekamp, Esau Jacobs, Franklin Sonn and
David Savage are but a few young men from these Harmony Park outreaches who
subsequently became influential members in their respective denominations and
in society at large.
Hippies
radiate Revival
Under John Bond and Paul Watney’s ministry, the Harfield
Road Assembly of God, situated halfway between the Cape suburbs of
Claremont and Kenilworth, experienced a mighty revival known as ‘the Hippie
Revival’. In 1971 it was very much of an orthodox lone ranger of the
denomination among the Whites at the Cape. This would change drastically within
a few years because of the Hippie movement, young people who followed an
alternative life-style of sex and drugs. The congregation welcomed drugged
hippies with sandals or bare feet that no other church would have allowed to
enter. Many of them were supernaturally delivered from their addiction.
The Jesus Movement
was the major Christian element within the hippie sub-culture. Members were
called Jesus People, or Jesus
Freaks. It came to Cape Town from Johannesburg in the early 1970s. Brian
O’Donnell and Dave Valentine soon became the prime movers here. Back-slidden to
all intents and purposes, Brian took Dave, a nominal Methodist young man, along
to their church.
Impacts on Society
The bubbling young believers would go to Thibault
Square with a loud hailer. At the altar calls many would kneel there on the
square committing their lives to the Lord. The special move of the Holy Spirit
would ultimately led to an invitation to Nicky Cruz, the former Mau-Mau gang
leader of New York, to share at a meeting at Green Point Stadium. At
this occasion Graham Power was divinely addressed and challenged for the first
time. (Decades later Graham Power would be God's channel to initiate the prayer
event of Newlands on 21 March, 2001.)
Quite a few the hippies of
the revival became leaders in their own right. Former drug addict Marge Ballin started ministering to drug addicts prostitutes
after her conversion. Herschel Raysman, became
the leader of the Beit Ariel Messianic Jewish congregation in Sea Point
at the turn of the millennium.
Charismatic
Renewal erupts at the Cape In 1964 the Cape-born David du Plessis, nicknamed ‘Mr Pentecost’, introduced the charismatic renewal to the Roman
Catholic Church. Before he came to Cape Town, the high profile Archbishop Bill Burnett
had a spiritual conversion experience. This influenced his subsequent thinking.
The charismatic renewal thereafter also started to impact individuals of other
mainline churches.
A
negative element of the movement was that many believers, for example those who
did not practise speaking in tongues, were confused and left outside,
questioning the depth and reality of their own faith. The turmoil in his
bishopric, however, did not affect the clear witness of Archbishop Burnett with
regard to the government. Apartheid was now rightly seen as the worship of a
false god.
The charismatic renewal
played a significant role in breaking down the racial barrier. Thus it would
ultimately become no exception for a few Whites to regularly visit the Roman Catholic Church in the ‘Coloured’
township of Bonteheuwel in the 1990s.
While
apartheid continued to rule the country, the charismatic movement had made
important breakthroughs in opposition to it. Those denominations which blocked
the move of the Holy Spirit on doctrinal grounds suffered greatly as scores of
young people started leaving their ranks.
Surprising Results of 'Group Areas' Legislation Already in 1940 the report of E. Beaudouin, which was
presented to the Cape Town City Council,
envisaged ‘Slum Clearance Projects’, viz.
(a) District Six (b) The Malay Quarter (c) The Docks Area. After the passing of legislation by Parliament in 1950 to
divide residential areas along racial lines, many ‘Coloured’ communities living
around Cape Town were destroyed. In 1961 large areas of the city were declared
‘White’ residential zones. This resulted in many ‘Coloureds’ moving into
District Six, where overcrowding worsened. Many people who did not know
anything about Islam, now came to know Muslims, who somehow spread the
confusing message that ‘we have the same God’.
On May
7, 1961 Muslims gathered in the City Hall of Cape Town to launch the Call of
Islam. This umbrella body of different Muslim organisations – founded by
Imam Abdullah Haron – had the aim of opposing the Group Areas Act. Talk of slum clearance started doing the rounds,
setting the scene for events to follow. On 11 February 1966 District Six was
declared a White residential area. In the insecurity that followed, landlords
allowed buildings to go unrepaired, causing the District to become even more of
a neglected residential area.
The
opposition to the District Six declaration reverberated until well into the
1980s, which was one of the reasons that caused the government to slow down on
the demolition of Bo-Kaap, which was deceptively called the ‘Malay Quarter’.
Some personal Attempts at
Reconciliation
My
personal understanding of getting involved in a ministry of reconciliation as
an exile was also aimed at trying to heal rifts where I discerned them and
where I deemed it feasible. In
correspondence I encouraged Professor Heyns, a prominent Dutch Reformed
theologian, to include colleagues of colour like Dr Allan Boesak in the plans
of their denomination for overhauling a booklet on race relations in the
church.[48]
Indirectly I tried to reconcile these two theologians by correspondence. They
were respectively leading the influential “Broederbond”
and “Broederkring”. (I knew from our student days how Allan had been raving
about Dr Heyns, his lecturer in Biblical Studies at the University College of the Western Cape). Next to the attempt to bring together Professor Johan
Heyns and Dr Allan Boesak, I also tried to reconcile Bishop Desmond Tutu and Dr
Allan Boesak. The latter, along with his Broederkring colleagues, were
angry at the likes of Bishop Tutu - who was still prepared to talk to President
P.W. Botha. My effort to get Boesak and Heyns reconciled was unsuccessful, but
I was happy to hear later that Bishop Desmond Tutu and Allan Boesak, my
evangelism buddy of the 1960s, were again operating in tandem.
Professor Heyns would become one of
the prime instruments of change to lead his denomination away from apartheid
thinking and attitudes. A special trophy to me was when I heard that Dr Beyers Naudé
was unbanned in 1985.
(C)overt Support of Violence Opposition to the apartheid
government had a subtle variation of covert support of violence. Bishop Desmond
Tutu and Dr Allan Boesak were the main proponents of a special variety when
they formally promoted non-violence. His bold stance earned for Tutu the Nobel
Peace Prize of 1984. Emeritus Archbishop Desmond Tutu surely however rues
that he could be quoted in London's Daily Telegraph for saying at the
time, in November 1984: 'One young man with a stone in his hand can achieve far
more than I can with a dozen sermons”. This
was very unfortunate. Yet, this stance was quite risky, because the brutality
of the regime was well known. This was problematic however, because
retaliation is obviously not in the spirit of Christ who taught us to love our
enemy.
The year
1984 could be regarded as the start of a new season of significant spiritual
upheaval. Many Black Christians
supported the call of Dr Allan Boesak at the SACC national conference of 1984
to pray for the ‘abolition of
all apartheid structures’ and for ‘the end to unjust rule’. A year
later, in the run-up to the anniversary of the 16th of June Soweto
tragedy, Christians were summoned to pray via a statement prepared by the Western
Province Council of Churches that was called a ‘Theological Rationale’.
This was in essence a cautious moderate document with an inclusive character,
intended to achieve consensus. It ended with a pledge to work for Lukan
liberation (Luke 4:18,19) - an invitation to pray for a new and just order in
South Africa. The words ‘that God will replace the present
structures of oppression with ones that are just, and remove from power those
who persist in defying his laws...’, were however taken
out of their context in an alarmist fashion by a Witwatersrand university
professor, coupling it with ‘overthrow’ and (violent) ‘revolution’.
After
his unbanning in 1985, Dr Beyers Naudé
succeeded Archbishop Desmond Tutu as secretary general of the South
African Council of Churches. In this role he
called for the release of political prisoners (especially Nelson Mandela) and
negotiation with the African National
Congress. Dr Naudé pressed Christians to continue to publicly pray for
detainees, despite government threats of imprisonment. I asked him at this time
to state publicly – without success however - the opposition of the SACC to all
violence. He felt that he could not do this as a White, and also because he was
only fulfilling the position in the interim until a suitable Black could be
appointed. He was ultimately succeeded by Dr Frank Chikane, the great bridge
builder between Black and White in the years of transition into the new era,
who became Director General in the office of
the president from 1999-2008.
Increase of the Yoke of Repression Racial tension escalated towards a major
climax. Amidst
brutalities and repression which took place nearly every day, a group of
pastors and theologians in Soweto came together to reflect on the Christian
ministry in such a situation. Through
a process of discussion and consultation with an ever widening group of
Christians of all races, a document took shape that was issued on 25 September
1985. It became known as the Kairos Document (KD). Some people interpreted this document as a blanket
endorsement of violence. On the other
hand, the document encouraged many
of those Blacks who had already abandoned the Church, writing it off as an
irrelevant institution that in their view was supporting, justifying and
legitimizing the cruel apartheid system. These Christians began to feel that if
the Church became the Body as expounded in the Kairos Document, then
they could return to the Church. Biblically
much sounder advice came from UCT's Prof. John de Gruchy. He noted about the
impact of the crucifixion of Jesus that the Church is destined ‘to
live beneath the cross not in power but in weakness’ (2002:134).
Unity in Diversity
Tenets which are destructive and unscriptural, which are
not conducive to unity, should not be tolerated.
The unity in the
diversity of believers should
demonstrate ‘the manifold wisdom of God’
Unbiblical
sectarian views and practices must be addressed and rectified, but at the same
time the unity in the diversity must be stressed. The diversity of believers
should demonstrate ‘the manifold wisdom
of God’ to the spiritual powers in the heavenlies. It is no optional, but
part and parcel of being the Church of Jesus Christ to make the unity of His
Body more visible.
The trend
of ‘back to basics’ and ‘back to the Bible’ in the mid-1990s looked promising,
but seems to have fizzled out since then. A radical honesty - to listen in
humility to what the Bible teaches - has often challenged followers of Jesus to
go out to spread the Good News. It probably basically boils down to the
question of how radical we are prepared to be. Are we prepared to take a
critical look at the roots of our denominational divisions in the light of the
Word?[49]
Co-operation on the missionary
front is slowly coming into its own. The coming together for prayer across
denominational boundaries at venues like Rhodes Memorial and at Signal Hill
since 1998 had the potential to unleash a new power. Prayer can create a vision
of what God can do, building mutual trust and sound relationships. Regular
monthly prayer events since 2007 have been occurring at the Civic Centre
of Cape Town on Saturday mornings and later also in the Provincial
Parliament. The believers received significant answers as a result in the
sphere of community and national transformation. Dramatic divinely orchestrated
answers to prayer transpired on 11 December and 28 February 2016 when serious
political blunders by the State President and his cronies could have pushed the
South African economy very definitely to the realms of junk status.
The Danger of a
superficial Type of Unity
But we must be careful not to get excited
too soon. A word of warning is appropriate in
the light of any euphoria because of superficial net-working. Dr Andrew Murray
discerned this when he read the reports of two big international conferences,
in New York and Edinburgh respectively. After the first conference in New York
he wrote the seminal booklet The Key to the Missionary Problem when he
noticed that the importance of prayer was hardly taken into account at the New
York conference.
A
superficial 'New Age' type of unity would in fact dilute the 'New Testament'
message. A theology which endeavours to cut away the sharp edges of the message
of the Cross has throughout been looming on the horizon. The arch enemy knows that one of his biggest opponents is
the unity of Bible-believing Christians. He will do everything in his power to
prevent Christians from co-operating in love and harmony! It must, however, be
a unity at heart. There is a significant difference between superficial
ecumenism and true unity birthed by the Holy Spirit. Just as the Father and the
Son are different persons and yet joined in love, the Body should depict this
image - where the various parts can bring in their different functions. Are we
aware that due to the lack of visible unity of the Body of Christ – and not
mere lip-service to the notion – we are actually obstructing evangelisation? Real
networking and practical support would demonstrate to the world out there that
God has sent his Son. Jesus prayed '… that all of them may be one, Father,
just as you are in me and I am in you. May they also be in us so that the world
may believe that you have sent me' (John 17:21).
Networking with a
Sound Base
In all networking
with a sound base, the Word and prayer must have pre-eminence. It was the
discovery of the Law that brought the teenage King Josiah (2 Kings 20) to
discern how far the nation had strayed from God's ways. The Word is a mirror
which leads to reforms for the common good of the nation. Let us pray that our
nation may take God's word seriously again. And let us get serious about it in
our private lives.
In all networking with a sound
base,
the Word and prayer must have
pre-eminence.
Unity in the Spirit
- built around a bond of peace and accepting each other in love (Ephesians 4:2,
3) - gives a good biblical framework. Bible-based
net-working has its base in Scripture, otherwise it becomes ‘work of the
flesh’. The latter kind of co-operation is doomed to strife, to points scoring
and a competitive spirit. Also personally we must be closely linked to God like
the branches to the vine. That will bring forth luscious fruit. The big catch of fish in Luke 5 was only made possible
after Peter and his fisherman colleagues were prepared to lay aside their
rational thinking and experience. When Peter was prepared to act in obedience,
at the Word of the Master, the foundation for the networking was laid. The big catch could
have been lost, perhaps even with net and all if they had not joined forces!
Likewise, I dare to say that the big catch for Jesus will only be brought in if
individual churches and fellowships put aside their pride and their own
man-made doctrine, which so often has a sectarian side to it.. The danger of glossing over serious differences came to
the fore most starkly in recent years around the ordination of homosexual
practising ministers. The 10-yearly Lambeth Conference of the Anglican
Church of 2008, convened by the Archbishop of Canterbury, got into a deep
crisis when various bishops, notably from the 'third world', preferred to
refrain from attending. Evading discussion and healthy confrontation is however
not a good way to resolve differences over non-peripheral issues.
Positive Responses to Sinful
corporate Practices
Defence
by church leaders as a response to sinful corporate practices has a long
history in our country. Before I highlight a few examples I want to enumerate
and applaud a few on the other side of this spectrum
The shipwreck of the Haarlem in 1647
gave the decisive input when the Dutch intended to create a half-way station
between Europe and the East. Significantly, Leendert Janzoon and Nicolaas
Proot, two from the stranded crew, motivated the beginning of such a station
with the need of bringing the Gospel to the indigenous Khoikhoi. They contradicted
the common prejudice regarding the indigenous people of their day, referring to
‘a popular error’: ‘Others will say that the natives are savages and cannibals, and that no
good is to be expected from them.’ The
Khoikhoi at the Cape impressed the leaders of the ship crew as possible
candidates for ‘the
magnifying of God’s Holy Name and to the propagation of the Gospel.’ Willem Barentsz Wijlant, the zieketrooster (comforter of the sick),
who came with Jan van Riebeeck’s group in 1652, endeavoured to reach out to the
Khoikhoi. Botha (1999:10) describes Wijlant as the first missionary at the
Cape. Missionaries from different countries in the 19th century
definitely contributed to create a spiritual landscape in South Africa that was
rare indeed. Elsewhere we also highlight the role of the French Huguenots at
the Cape when moral degradation was rife with corruption, alcoholism and sexual
immorality aplenty.
The Rift between Rich and Poor
A sad rift of the Church universal is the huge gap between rich
and poor. One of the biggest problems in the churches of the third world is a
dependency syndrome that has been predominantly created by 20th
century Western missionaries. The massive rift between churches in the affluent
West and the poor churches of the third world is a tragic indictment on the
body of Christ.
A
general deficiency was empowerment for leadership. Later generations of
missionaries were content with schools and hospitals as trophies of missionary
endeavour. A system evolved where Whites remained at the top of a hierarchical
echelon. These missionaries would send or take their own children back to their
home countries to be trained sufficiently to take over leadership positions on
the mission fields. It remained a big exception to send a prodigy from the
mission fields overseas to be trained properly for leadership.[50] When this
happened, many of them remained in Europe or America unfortunately, to the
detriment of their home countries.
Spiritually healthy
churches were planted in Africa and Asia when the missionaries themselves had
few resources at their disposal. With regard to loving open-minded dialogue, we need to
highlight that the dependency syndrome killed honest sharing of ideas. Due to
the fear of offending the ‘generous’ givers from the Western nations, own
initiative on the part of the recipients was stifled. It also perpetuated a
beggar mentality among the bulk of the churches of the third world. In recent
decades paternalism strangled Church unity. Refugees who wanted to retain their
East African Swahili or West African culture (or whatever home culture) were
all too often given limited space. Thus many a church building was refused for
use to refugee-type foreigners. In isolated cases church premises were offered
with empire-building conditions. On the other hand, an undignified beggar
mentality was also not helpful either.
Defence by Church Leaders as a
Response to Malpractices
Land grabbing was condoned already when the Cape grain and wine farmers gradually
extended their territory at the expense of the indigenous Khoikhoi people. It
is interesting how Western historians have been writing euphemistically about
this process.
Professor of Theology Johannes Du Plessis’s euphemism of the land grabbing is inexcusable. He has to get much of the blame for the perpetuation of the myth
surrounding the stealing and plundering Khoi when one considers how he actually
quoted from the Remonstrance
of Janssens and Proot (1911:20). He states that the Khoi were ‘unmitigated thieves’ (1911:26), Du Plessis’s repetition of the myth that they
were thieves almost by nature, displays bad taste, referring to the ‘inveterate propensity of the Hottentots to steal and
plunder’ (1911:38). He was aware of the text of the Remonstrance
of Janssens and Proot, who had put the blame of the cycle of thieving and
plundering squarely on their Dutch countrymen. Spilhaus (1949:96f) notes
that the Dutch were inciting Khoi to steal from English ships and also set a
bad example with bribery in bartering. Spilhaus concludes that it must have
been difficult for Khoi to appreciate the enormity of theft as a crime in
European eyes.
If
we make the jump to the middle of the 20th century, the defence of
White theologians of racism and its attempts to white-wash apartheid with the Bible
in hand became quite well-known. The introduction by Dr Allan Boesak of a
motion declaring apartheid a heresy at the conference in Ottawa of the World
Alliance of Reformed Churches in 1982, led to the suspension of the White South
African reformed churches from the world body. A few months later, in January
1983, Boesak's call for a united front resulted in the formation of the United Democratic Front, an umbrella
organisation that swiftly became the main anti-apartheid group in South Africa.
A Spiritual Earthquake in Pretoria
Since 1978, Gerda
Leithgöb, an Afrikaner believer, has been directing spiritual warfare in
Pretoria. She and her prayer team
offered confession at the Voortrekker
Monument. This response was also much more effective than defence of past
sinful corporate practices. Their prayers and confession surely helped to bring
about a change in the spiritual complexion of the country’s capital. That made
true democracy possible. Their prayer ministry for the city of Pretoria was the
prelude to the South African
Christian Leadership Assembly (SACLA) event in the national
capital the following year. This
conference was the equivalent of a spiritual earthquake. Professor David Bosch,
a giant rebel
against apartheid, spear-headed the event.
SACLA influenced the whole country deeply in a positive way. The conference was
evidently part of God’s reply in answer to prayer, transforming the apartheid
stronghold and capital of South Africa. Pastor
Ed Roebert initiated a gathering of like-minded pastors with the purpose of
fellowship and mutual encouragement. Soon he met regularly with other pastors
including Reinhardt Bonnke and Ray McCauley. In due course many new charismatic
churches were established and men with unusually anointed ministries appeared
on the scene.
Praise into the Mix
Praise is used in the ‘OT’ a few times in the
attacks on God’s enemies. Probably the most well-known of them is Joshua and
the seven trumpets. The Israelite congregation marched around Jericho silently
on the seventh day, culminating in the united shout after the seventh time. (We
note the repetition of the number seven, the biblical number for completion and
perfection). Sometimes fasting, prostrating worship and praise occur in close
proximity in Scripture (e.g. Joshua 6, Nehemiah 9:1+4; 2 Chronicles 20:3ff).
A valuable rediscovery in 'Spiritual Warfare' was praise. Paul Billheimer noted in
1975 in his booklet Destined for the Throne how praise caused an
international spiritual turn around once again via the Pentecostal movement.
This was especially mooted by Merlin Carothers, a Methodist minister and
former army officer, who stressed the power becoming available through praise!
Thousands of people accepted Christ after reading Prison to Praise. In his book Power in Praise he teaches how
miracles are wrought by the simple application of biblical truth, viz. by
accepting in faith that all things work together for good, for those called
according to God's purposes (Romans 8:28). Carothers' teaching included how the
spiritual dynamic of praise can revolutionize lives!
The work of the Foundation of
Praise was conducted from the garage of Merlin and Mary’s home in California.
By 1980, requests for free books for prisoners, military personnel and
patients had sky-rocketed. Merlin
Carothers preferred to send millions of free books to different parts of the
world rather than building an impressive organisation.
Praise implemented at the Cape
From 1981Mercia
and Vincent Pregnalato led a dynamic local fellowship in Greenhaven, a Cape
Flats suburb. This couple and their fellowship held the fort of Christianity in
an area that was becoming Islamic at an alarming pace in the late 1980s. They
also ushered in spiritual dancing, using visible artefacts like flags and
processions as part of worship and praise. This spread in due course to
audiences throughout the country. A weak link was the lack of unity of the Body
of Christ locally. Two other churches nearby had prominent pastors, viz Pastor
Barry Isaacs of the Evangelical Bible Church and the Methodist
Rev. Cecil Begby, who was involved with the Haggai Institute. Networking
was non-existent while the area became increasingly Islamic.
A Forerunner of the ‘Boiler Room’ Concept
Paul Billheimer made some profound statements about the role
of the prayerful church that might have influenced world history deeply, had
his book Destined for the Throne been
taken seriously. He suggested for
example that the church wields the balance of power ‘in overcoming disintegration and decay in the cosmic order’. (This has become especially relevant at the beginning of
the new millennium, with increasing moral decay and an almost universal
increase of violence and organized crime.) In the above booklet Billheimer does
not only refer to the Moravians and their 24 hour prayer chain, but he also
included notes from Dick Eastman. These were added as an appendix in Destined for the Throne. There one can
also read about the start of ‘The Gap’, based on Ezekiel 22:30 (I
sought for a man to stand in the gap for me for the land). In this venture
young people committed their lives to the Lord for a year during which they
would intercede for two hours a day in an ‘upper’ room. This was indeed a
harbinger not only of the gap year concept after finishing secondary schooling
but also of the ‘boiler room’ concept at the turn of the 21st
century.[51]
YWAM and OM took short term missionary involvement to a new level. Rosemarie,
my wife, blazed a trail in Germany although she was refused permission to go
and work as a volunteer for two months at the Elim Home in 1974. After this
possibility became known via the Lutheran Church in Germany, the institution on
the mission station where my parents had relocated after their eviction from
Tiervlei, received many volunteers down the years. German young people
hereafter went to different places of the third world in a ‘gap year’.
Bibles and Prayer in a
Coalition
In 1984 Open Doors
invited Christians around the globe to pray for seven years for the Soviet
Union and the collapse of its atheist ideology. The founder of Open Doors, Anne van der Bijl, generally
known as Brother Andrew, was a member of
the official Dutch delegation at a conference on human rights in the 1980s. At
this event in the conference centre De Burcht in the Dutch village of
Heemstede, Brother Andrew offered one million Bibles to the Russian Orthodox
Church on behalf of Open Doors at their millennial celebration.
Along with the seven years of prayer for the Soviet Union, the dismantling of
the ‘iron curtain’ can be attributed to the acceptance of the gift. A parallel
move was the covert operation to smuggle one million Bibles into China in the
same era.
Things changed dramatically when the results of the seven
years of prayer became known, including millions of new followers of Jesus in
China. New opportunities for the
spreading of the Gospel were there to be utilized. The demise of Communism
received its major impetus from the demolition of the Berlin Wall on November
9, 1989. This had been preceded by mass prayer rallies at different churches,
for instance in the East German cities of Leipzig and Dresden. By this time there were already millions of
new followers of Jesus in China, the result of the secret smuggling operation
of a million Bibles. There is nevertheless no cause for triumphalism - this
never behooves a believer any way.
Also in 1989,
Edgardo Silvoso and Tom White presented papers at the Spiritual Warfare Track workshop of the Lausanne II Congress in
Manila. White’s paper on spiritual warfare there set the evangelical world on
course for the biggest missionary decade of the 20th century. The
outcome was the founding of a Spiritual
Warfare Communication and Referral Network. Since then Peter Wagner and
others have developed this further. A spate of books followed on the topic. In
the 1990s, Ed Silvoso would influence many countries with his teaching and example
of bringing churches together in unity and practising restitution as part of
genuine repentance. His additional emphasis on market place outreach resulted
in the city of Resistencia (Population 400,000) in Argentina becoming the first
city to be reached for Christ. From a mere 5,143 believers in 1988, it grew
within a matter of a few years to over 100,000 in the entire city. (Ed
Silvoso, Transformation, 2007:162).
Communism exposed as a spent Force
With the increased awareness of spiritual warfare in
Christian circles, the power of occult strongholds was also recognized more and
more. Things started to change dramatically on a worldwide scale after the
results of such prayer became known. The
effects of seven years of persevering prayer for the Soviet Union were already
quite apparent towards the end of 1989. A lot of spadework had been done
through the use of Patrick Johnstone’s seminal work Operation World.[52] For the first time in the
modern era thousands of prayer warriors were mobilized globally.
Communism
was exposed as a spent force.
Worldwide
prayer brought it down.
It is probably due to the faithful prayers of many over the
years that South Africa did not fall into the communist camp. By the time
Nelson Mandela was freed in February 1990, Communism had been exposed as a
spent force. Worldwide prayer brought it down. The demise of the atheist
ideology was ushered in by mass prayer rallies at different East German
churches, but especially also prepared by the faithful prayers of believers around
the world.
Spiritual Warfare
spirals
Only in the last two and a half decades has it been
duly recognised - but still not generally as yet - that occult forces are at
work, which hamper the spread of the Gospel. ‘Spiritual warfare’ as such had
been either completely neglected or had become fairly unknown up to about 1990.
Of course, the example of Hur and Aaron in the Bible might have been noted.
Their holding Moses’ arms aloft had often been taught as a model for
intercessory prayer. Occasionally, lessons were taken from the battle of Gideon
against the Midianites or Joshua taking Jericho so dramatically. But it was
hardly emphasized that the ‘sword of Gideon’, which brought such awe in the
camp of the Midianites in the end, turned out to be a torch. In biblical
context the Word is the (two-edged) sword (Ephesians 6:17; Hebrews 4:12).
Furthermore, Psalm 119:105 describes the Word as a light and a lamp, the
equivalent of a torch.
At the GCOWE conference in Pretoria in
July 1997 a significant development and correction took place when churches and
mission agencies discerned that they had been working in competition with each
other. But there hardly followed any implementation of the discovery in terms
of action. In fact, there has been a dramatic decrease of Bible School students
and full time Christian workers since then. This will possibly only be reversed
in South Africa by a spiritual renewal and networking of the poor and more
affluent churches, to tap into the dormant goldmine of a vast potential of
missionary recruits from Black communities and refugees who could return to
their countries of origin with expertise that they have acquired in South
Africa and as emissaries of the Gospel.[53]
A Reply to the
Dependency Syndrome
Glen Schwarz, an
American missionary, held seminars in various countries from the 1990s on how
to overcome the dependency syndrome. He highlighted how condescending charity
destroys dignity. An undignified cap-in-hand beggar mentality exists in many a
third world country because of missionaries who never took hold of the
three-self biblically derived principle, which Henry Venn and Rufus Anderson
had been propagating in the mid-19th century as aims of church
planting. New fellowships should strive to become self-supporting, self-propagating
and self-reproducing as soon as possible.
Thankfully there are quite a few positives to report in
this area. The Church Planting movement especially strives to encourage new
fellowships to be completely independent.
Cape
Pioneers of the Church Planting Movement
At the beginning of the new
millennium the City Mission discerned that the emphasis on welfare
projects and the good name they won through the various ministries, had not
been without a cost: their earlier focus on church planting had fallen away and
new leadership was not coming through. Charles, the son of the City Mission
pioneer Fenner Kadalie, left the more traditional confines to start work on
farms in the Philippi area. His wife Val became the directress of a church
planting movement that grew out of their new focus as they searched for men and
women of peace. Defining a church planting movement as a church that has
planted at least 100 new churches through three generations of reproduced new
fellowships in two years, the movement New Generation and their covenant
partners has seen many new fellowships started in various African countries
throughout the continent. But also in South Africa itself, through the
sacrificial ministry of David Broodryk and from here throughout the continent,
new multiplying 'simple churches' mushroomed. The term 'home church' became a
misnomer in the movement, that was ably led by the dynamic David Watson. The
groups met in all sorts of venues in the market place and on different days of
the week. The strategy was to pray for a 'person of peace' who already had
access to some group of unevangelized people in the community that could be
reached, evangelised and later discipled.
Chapter
19 South Africa as a Case in Point
In this chapter
I want to highlight some precedents of efforts of recent decades where the Body
of Christ operated in harmony. Then I will be looking at possible practical
steps that can be done to get out of the present malaise of a narrow parochial
mind-set of local churches in general.
Simultaneously we applaud what has been done here at the Cape in recent
decades as combined Christian endeavours. I am nevertheless very much aware
that ultimately only God in his sovereign will can ultimately let such seed of
unity and revival germinate and grow.
Cape Town
is special. Only very few cities in the world are not only so cosmopolitan, but
only a few of them have such a significant representation of the world's
religions. The Cape sadly however also hosts theological institutions that have
been disseminating unbiblical views such as a complete and overdrawn
identification with the nation of Israel.[54]
It is also still disseminated by some that the Church replaced Israel and that
miracles belong to the times of the apostles. I pray that we may soon witness a
universal corporate expression of regret and remorseful confession because of
this.
We have
noted in Chapter 3 that uncharitable doctrinal bickering in the Church resulted
in confusion, which is also reflected in the Qur’an. This was clearly used by
the arch enemy to mislead Muhammad, the gifted leader of the Arabian Peninsula
and founder of Islam. Through him millions have been led astray up to this day
- millions who now hail Muhammad as their prime prophet.[55]The
call ‘back to basics’ which resounded throughout South Africa during the early
1990s, is still valid. Perhaps we should say ‘Back to the undiluted and unadulterated
Word of God’. With a good representation of all three Abrahamic religions, Cape
Town is in a special position to lead the way in different ways, e.g. through
united confession and prayer.
Community Disruption leads to
Missions
A tragic result of the Group Areas Legislation of the apartheid era was the disruption of communities and the spread of gangsterism. Old townships like Kewtown in Athlone became violent and new ones like Manenberg and Hanover Park became notorious for this very reason. A very special phenomenon evolved where community desperation led to Church involvement BABS (Build a Better Society) was a local community organisation of Kewtown, a gangster-ridden Cape Township at the beginning of the 1980s. In 1982 the gangs of Kew Town killed seven people in 3 months. After approaching other organisations without success, BABS asked the local Docks Mission Church to do something about the situation. A coffee bar was started specially for the gangsters, led by Rodney Thorne and Freddy Kammies. Every Sunday evening between 60 – 80 of them attended. Many of the gang leaders were challenged to put down the weapons and guns. Soon the crime rate came down. As a denomination the local Docks Mission faithfully prayed for the ministry which continued for quite a long time. The ministry sowed seed for missions. Eugene Johnson was the first missionary sent out by the Docks Mission on one of the Operation Mobilisation (OM) ships already in 1978.[56] He was followed by Peter Ward, Freddy Kammies, Theo Dennis and his wife Norma, as well as Peter Tarantal from the same denomination. Divine over-ruling was the result when suddenly missionaries from the ’coloured communities were thrust out.
A tragic result of the Group Areas Legislation of the apartheid era was the disruption of communities and the spread of gangsterism. Old townships like Kewtown in Athlone became violent and new ones like Manenberg and Hanover Park became notorious for this very reason. A very special phenomenon evolved where community desperation led to Church involvement BABS (Build a Better Society) was a local community organisation of Kewtown, a gangster-ridden Cape Township at the beginning of the 1980s. In 1982 the gangs of Kew Town killed seven people in 3 months. After approaching other organisations without success, BABS asked the local Docks Mission Church to do something about the situation. A coffee bar was started specially for the gangsters, led by Rodney Thorne and Freddy Kammies. Every Sunday evening between 60 – 80 of them attended. Many of the gang leaders were challenged to put down the weapons and guns. Soon the crime rate came down. As a denomination the local Docks Mission faithfully prayed for the ministry which continued for quite a long time. The ministry sowed seed for missions. Eugene Johnson was the first missionary sent out by the Docks Mission on one of the Operation Mobilisation (OM) ships already in 1978.[56] He was followed by Peter Ward, Freddy Kammies, Theo Dennis and his wife Norma, as well as Peter Tarantal from the same denomination. Divine over-ruling was the result when suddenly missionaries from the ’coloured communities were thrust out.
United
Opposition to Apartheid The United
Democratic Front (UDF) was an anti-apartheid body that incorporated
many anti-apartheid organisations. Steps towards forming the UDF began in the
late 1970s, and moved forward when Dr Allan Boesak called
for a 'united front' of 'churches, civic associations, trade unions, student
organisations, and sports bodies' to fight oppression on 23 January 1983. It
was decided to join with organisations, on a regional and federal structure, as
long as they were non-racist. The UDF had a Christian heritage, like the ANC,
and in many ways looked like an internal wing of the ANC, but it did not
associate with the armed struggle. The UDF character however changed in the
mid-1980s with the people’s insurrection, and some organisations identifying
with the UDF took a more militant path.
The UDF was formally launched on 20 August 1983 the UDF in a community hall in
Rocklands, Mitchells Plain. Dr Frank
Chikane, was the first major speaker. He spoke of the day as a turning point in
the struggle for freedom. The keynote speaker, Dr Boesak, highlighted the
bringing together of a wide range of groups.
Cape spiritual Warfare Encounter The township of Valhalla Park
witnessed one of the most visible expressions of spiritual warfare encounters
on Sunday, May 6, 1984. Christ for all Nations brought the biggest tent in the
world to the Cape township in May 1984. As big as three football fields and
seating 34,000, the tent had taken four years to construct. In its two months
of use throughout the nations of southern Africa, God used the virtually
unknown German background evangelist Reinhard Bonnke to bring thousands into
the kingdom of Jesus Christ. Hundreds were delivered from demons, healed of
disease and handicaps, and ‘brought into the joy of the Lord’. Valhalla
Park is situated near to the Black townships of Langa, Gugulethu, Nyanga and
the gangster-notorious ‘Coloured’ ones of Manenberg and Bonteheuwel.[57] African
witch doctors would not allow the world's biggest revival tent, a mobile
auditorium to invade the spiritually dark area with divine light unopposed. The
shamans and voodoo practitioners bragged mong the people ‘We are more powerful
than your Jesus!’ - cursing the evangelistic event that proclaimed the ‘white-man's
Jesus’. That their power was not unfounded would become evident very soon.
In the early hours of
Sunday, May 6, 1984, a freak wind suddenly swept across the Cape Peninsula. The
gigantic tent pitched on the Valhalla Park Sports Field was caught in the
unexpected tempest that weathermen were at a loss to explain. The tent's fibre-glass
fabric was shredded into 100 large pieces and uncountable tiny remnants
littering nearby neighbourhoods.
A Gale Catapults an
Evangelist into Prominence
What looked like a defeat
for the Gospel initially, God turned around spectacularly. The destruction by a
gale of a gigantic tent where Reinhard Bonnke would hold an evangelistic
campaign in the Cape township Valhalla Park, created unprecedented interest for
the event. The organisers were forced to conduct the campaign in the open.
Thousands attended who would never have fitted into the gigantic tent. Instead
of the planned 15 nights, four extra nightly services were added amid clear
skies in mid-June, which is known to be part of the Cape rainy season. An
interesting sequel of the Valhalla Park campaign was that Reinhardt Bonnke became
a household name throughout the African continent and beyond. The networking of
township churches in the run-up to this campaign was unprecedented, accompanied
by a massive response at the altar calls.
Lack of Networking of
Cape Township Churches
Many Muslims gave an
indication that they wanted to become followers of Jesus. However, tardy
follow-up by the churches prevented a massive spiritual turn-around. The
indifference of Christians, in combination with the apartheid oppression, saw Cape
Islam grow significantly in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
Demonic Backlashes
The enforcement of apartheid enhanced the spread of
Islam. An unknown number of nominal Christians embraced Islam in protest
because the apartheid laws were perceived as the dealings of a ‘Christian’
government. The arch enemy reaped the
benefits of the political unity forged by church leaders via the United Democratic Front in various ways.
Seeing Christian clergyman sharing the platform with imams spread the
fallacious message unwittingly that the God of the Bible and Allah of Islam are
identical.
At this time the government completely
over-reacted, e.g. to preparations for a funeral in Gugulethu,by deploying the Defence
Force for the first time for such an event. A door-to-door search in the
township Langa and the prohibition of anybody outside the Black townships to
attend the funeral was the sort of measure to let the anger rise all around the
Cape. The arrest of a few religious leaders including Dr Allan Boesak and Imam
Hassan Solomons ahead of the funeral further hightened the tension. Police
brutality, notably the killing of children, became associated with the
clampdown on anti-apartheid activism. Collusion with gangsters followed in
exchange for information about the whereabouts of activists.
Legislation enhancing
Immorality
When the ANC came to power in 1994, all religions were given
equal status. Increasingly occult elements became fashionable, witchcraft was
accepted uncritically and even Satanism was regarded by some as just another
religion. That people had to be ‘sacrificed’ (i.e. murdered) in the process by
Satanists, was uncritically taken on board. The poor argument used was: so many
people are also killed in political and other forms of violence, so what! A
spokesman of the South African Council of
Churches went even so far as to state that Satanism is a matter of personal
conscience. The pervasive negative influence of the TV with the poisoning of
young minds proceeded unchecked; violence, extra-marital relationships and sex
are depicted in many films as ‘normal’, thus encouraging promiscuity. From some
pulpits homosexuality was covertly defended and encouraged.
The legislation and
practices of the new South African government drove people further away from a
living vibrant relationship to Jesus Christ, notably with perceived laxity
regarding sexual immorality. Among the first laws of our secular government was
the legalisation of abortion. The former UDF leader Dullah Omar became the
Minister of Justice in the Cabinet of Nelson Mandela. He introduced legislation
that made easy bail possible. Hardened gangsters took the gap. They had access
to funds to make use of the new bail conditions. Some of them were soon
thereafter back behind bars. The spiral had already caused untold damage before
the bail conditions were tightened.
More Satanic
Deception and a Backlash
Islam staged a major coup when the old Dutch Reformed Church in Taronga Road was bought from the Jubilee Church when it was still known
as the Vineyard Church, to be used as
a madressa. The 1999 loss hit evangelical
Christianity of Cape Town, following the 1997 sale of the Cape Evangelical Bible Institute (CEBI) in Athlone as the Cornerstone Christian College had been
called previously.
The World Parliament of
Religions from 1-8 December 1999 became a spur for churches to get some
idea of the spiritual threat on the country.
It soon became clear that the uniqueness of Jesus was under attack. Dr.
Henry Kirby, a medical doctor who has close links with YWAM, joined Brian
Johnson who had been targeting the New Age movement in the late 1980s. A prayer
event in District Six on 27 November 1999 brought together a broad spectrum of
Christian churches, which in itself was a memorable occasion.
The role of
drugs has still not been acknowledged sufficiently in spiritual warfare. For
centuries the scourge of alcohol as a drug obstructed all church and
evangelistic work at the Cape. The roots of cannabis
(dagga) abuse goes back many centuries. The Khoisan bartered cattle with Arab
traders in Mozambique for the plant which they chewed before they got to learn
to smoke it with a pipe.
Many new
converts to Jesus became backslidden spiritually over the Christmas period when
the increased consumption of alcoholic beverages took its toll. In due course
Muslims took to drugs in a similar way as they saw Cape Christians abuse wine.
Mitchell’s Plain Muslims have strikingly been quoted as saying - in an effort
to excuse their drinking of wine at Lebaran
(Eid-al-Fitr) -’It is mos our Christmas!’
The prayer
initiatives displayed significant strides in terms of church unity. The
distribution of a video by George Otis on the transformations of four cities
was a major catalyst for citywide prayer, after it had been shown in the Lighthouse Christian Centre on 15
October 1999 at a night of prayer. Transformation
of Communities, led by Reverend Trevor Pearce, saved the Cape Peace Initiative (CPI) after it had
come into disrepute. Some clergymen were unhappy that the CPI had been speaking
to PAGAD. At a half night prayer meeting on the Grand Parade, an event which was organised on short notice, the
unity was restored. The same week-end two Dutchmen, Pieter Bos and Cees Vork,
representing the prayer movement of Holland, joined local Christians in
confession for the sins of the forefathers and in praying against satanic
strongholds in the Peninsula.
There were
indications that the Church in South Africa was awakening to its prime
responsibility towards the Muslims, who still form the prime unreached group of
the Cape in terms of the Gospel.
Bliss Brings Blessings
Under the auspices of Africa Enterprise (AE) David Bliss came
to South Africa in 1967 from the USA as a student. The relatively young missions and evangelistic agency AE started by Michael Cassidy in 1962 had a profound
effect on Dave Bliss. He decided to postpone his return to Princeton
University for a year. After his marriage to Deborah (Debby) in 1972, the
couple came to South Africa in 1979 as AE workers on the Witwatersrand
University campus in Johannesburg.
That year the South African Christian Leadership Assembly (SACLA) took place in Pretoria, an event that changed
their lives. The Holy Spirit confronted them with the issue of unreached people
groups and the possibility of seeing South Africans sent out as missionaries.
The
next year Dave and Debby Bliss participated in the students’ conference in
Edinburgh, which ran parallel to the 70th anniversary celebrations
of the founding of the World Council of
Churches. The 1980 event brought the use of non-Westerners as missionaries
into focus. For Dave and Debby Bliss this was a natural follow-up to SACLA in
Pretoria the previous year.
A Wave of Prayer Starts at UWC
Dr Charles Robertson, a lecturer at the University of the Western Cape (UWC) from 1971-76, became part of a Cape prayer emphasis in 1983. After his
father’s death in 1979, Robertson was thrust into a quagmire of spiritual
turmoil. The business he had started was failing. The combination of these
experiences brought him to his knees. Hereafter he broke through into a living
faith in Jesus as his Lord.
Dr
Robertson was approached to help fund the hiring of a bus to take participants
to a prayer service at the historical Sendingsgestig Museum in the
Mother City’s Long Street, which coincided with a Frontiers Missions Conference at UWC. (The venue was the former DRC Gestig church building of the
'Coloured ‘Sendingkerk’, that had been ‘saved’ by Dr Frank R. Barlow, a
Jewish academic with a keen sense of history. The congregation had to move
because of the Group Areas Act, and thereafter the former church was
turned into a museum).
A National Prayer Awakening Erupts
The
Sendingsgestig Museum itself would become the venue for Concerts of Prayer. That event would reverbarate throughout the country,
ushering in the growth of the prayer movement. In 1983 a prayer awakening
started in a few congregations all around South Africa. One of these was a
small group of intercessors led by Gerda Leithgöb in Pretoria that had already
set them on a path previously unexplored in this country. Simultaneously,
Bennie Mostert, a Dutch Reformed Church minister, started a newsletter
to mobilize prayer in Namibia. Mostert dubbed his newsletter Prayer Action Elijah.
In
1987 the Lord led the group in Pretoria to do more intense research into
spiritual matters. In that same year, a similar initiative started
spontaneously all over the world. The Lord also called pastors in South Africa
to start writing on prayer. Books appeared concerning this issue.
The World gets 'smaller'
The 1984 call of Open Doors for
world-wide prayer against the Soviet Communist oppression and the persecution
of Christians set the tone for 'spiritual warfare' on a global scale. The harsh
and brutal suppression and killing of innocent children turned the tables in
South Africa. Some prayer groups started
in different places, also in the City.
Gerda Leithgöb
from Pretoria requested prayer warriors from other countries at a conference in
Singapore in 1988 to pray for South Africa, which had been in constant crisis
since 1985. Ds. Bennie Mostert founded a national prayer network known as NUPSA
(Network for United Prayer in Southern
Africa), which became closely linked to the spiritual transformation of the
continent. In 1993 the first teams started praying also on site, using
information gained from serious research. During 1993 South Africa also
participated in the Pray through the
Window[58]
initiative, that was launched internationally by the AD 2000 Prayer Track.
Intercession
was also done for our country in many places around the world in the run-up to
our first democratic elections in April 1994.
Initiatives
towards Racial Reconciliation
It was surely special in the spiritual realm when the Vredehoek
Pentecostal Protestant Church initiated 24 hour prayer in a few offices of
Boston House in the city. To have Christians from different churches and different
racial backgrounds coming together
for prayer in the New Life Centre, as it was called, ushered in change
like few other moves at that time.
Another mighty move of God in the
mid-1980s was the National Initiative for Reconciliation. In a sense
this was a spin-off of SACLA (1979), but even more it was a result of the
political tension of 1985 - when the country seemed to be speeding towards the
precipice of civil war.
God used Michael Cassidy and his Africa Enterprise at this time in a
special way to heal wounds of racial polarization in the run-up to the National
Initiative for Reconciliation, which was convened in September 1985.
Cassidy wrote about this preparation: ‘I felt while travelling around South
Africa that I was seeing a new thing – the birth of an embryonic national
humility…’ (Cassidy, 1989:295).
A Call for a
National Day of Prayer
The most
significant outcome of the National Initiative for Reconciliation was
the call for a National Day of Prayer, set for Wednesday 9 October,
1985. How politicized the country had become was obvious when it was deemed
necessary to debate the prayer day on television. But God intervened, in answer
to intensive intercession.
How different this National Day of Prayer was to the one in
1976 when only a slice of the population – some Whites - participated. This
time – 1985 - Christians from different denominations and races came together
for prayer services all around the country. In Cape Town over thirteen hundred
people crammed into the St George’s Cathedral for a lunch-hour prayer
service. According to the report of a participant: ‘In Cape Town we broke out of our islands
as never before’ (Cassidy, 1989:302). Significantly, concerned
Christians all over the world across denominational barriers joined in prayer
for South Africa that day. Thus the Pope, speaking to seven thousand Catholics
in St Peter’s Square in Rome, called Catholics everywhere to pray that ‘South Africa
should soon find peace founded on justice and reciprocal love through a sincere
search for a just solution to the problems that torment that dear country’ (Cited in
Cassidy, 1989:303f). The well-known evangelist Luis Palau relayed the prayer
call to hundreds of radio stations across Latin America.
Waves of Astonishment
The elation did not last very long however. Yet, the contacts which Africa Enterprise made to Christians in
other parts of the continent proved invaluable for reconciliation in the
strife-torn beloved country. Waves of astonishment went through the country
when Dr Frederik van Zyl Slabbert, the leader of the Progressive Federal Party (PFP) opposition and former Stellenbosch
professor, announced his resignation from party politics in 1986 to start IDASA
(Institute for Democracy in South Africa). History proved him right.
Subsequently he took a group of Afrikaners to meet ANC leaders in exile in
Dakar (Senegal) in 1987.
A New Age Onslaught
The
mid-1980s coincided with the office of Gordon Oliver as Mayor of Cape Town. He
proved to be a forceful agent of the New Age movement, fighting for the
erection of a Peace Pole apiece on Table Mountain and at Rhodes Memorial. With
its syncretist-universalist elements (the mixture of different religions
whereby people can get saved in any way), the claims of Jesus to be the unique
Saviour of the World (John 4:42) were clearly challenged.
1989 was a year of spiritual clashes.
What was interesting in the response to the New Age onslaught was that
an Afrikaans clergyman, Dominee E. J. Sevenster, linked up with the Pentecostal
Pastor Paul Daniel of the Lighthouse
Christian Centre. It was also significant for the unity of the body of
Christ that a ‘Coloured’ Christian from Mitchell’s Plain, Mr Norman Scheffers,
had prayed at a gathering of 1000 Christians at the St George’s Mall, ‘that this
pole be removed and that the name of Jesus Christ will triumph.’
New Age and
Satanism given a mighty Blow
The efforts of the
mayor of Cape Town to push the New Age
ideology through by using his high office, backfired. It caused prayer
networking in the Cape Peninsula. Stiff resistance was given by Christians,
with Jamie Campbell and Brian Johnson the prominent personalities. The
involvement of evangelicals like Pastor Richard Mitchell, who had been apartheid-relatedly
imprisoned, widened the scope of the united prayer. Both New Age and Satanism
were inflicted major defeats. Evangelicals took the presence of Gordon Oliver
and the inter-faith involvement on board as they joined a massive march on 13
September 1989 through the city. God answered the prayers that the police would
not interfere with brutality as in previous years. For some of the participants
this was also a prayer march for an end to the apartheid oppression. Looking
back, we can say now that this event, along with the prayer day of 9 October
1985, possibly ushered in the new democracy more than anything else before
that.
The overt involvement of clergymen in political matters had interesting
ramifications. Indoctrination of centuries still had a profound effect. Devout Christians thought that they should
not even remotely get involved in politics. This confused some believers,
because apartheid ideologists were abusing the Bible to that end. More and more
Afrikaners, however, saw the need of confession. Gerda Leithgöb and her fellow prayer warriors had
been leading the way in Pretoria since 1978 at the Voortrekker monument
of all places.
Cape Prayer Endeavours of the Early 1990s
In the late 1980s the Concerts
of Prayer - inspired by David Bryant - drew good crowds to the Sendingsgestig Museum, a fitting
commemoration of the inter-denominational work that started there in 1799. On
one occasion, Dr Charles Robertson was asked to
chair a Concert of Prayer meeting as
an Afrikaner. That was not to be the last time for him to do this. He led the Concerts of Prayer
hereafter not only at the monthly meetings at that venue, but also later when
the event relocated to the Presbyterian
Church in Mowbray. (These Concerts of Prayer were held there for
many years.) It was very fitting that Charles Robertson
and his wife Rita would donate the property where the first NUPSA School of
Prayer was to be erected in AD 2000 where 24/7 prayer is practised.
Prayer was the biggest factor in the start of new
ministries at the Cape in the 1990s, undergirding the events that led to the
birth of the new South Africa.
Personal
Precedents[59]
While I was still a teenager, I thought that it would be wonderful
if Christians could display unity in Christ concretely and overtly.
The major change in my own life had happened
at Christmas 1964 when I was spiritually empty, just before participation in a
beach evangelistic effort in Harmony Park near Somerset West in the Cape. A few
of the participating young people went on to play a significant role in the
throwing off of the shackles of racial oppression in South Africa in later
years. Among those, Allan Boesak and Franklin Sonn were the most prominent.
To me the prayer unity in Christ and
the lessons in spiritual warfare I had learned at Harmony Park in 1964, formed
the paradigm for new action. I hoped that united
prayer and evangelization by believers across man-made ecclesiastical and
doctrinal boundaries would make some impact when I joined the Wayside Sunday
School movement and when I attempted to join White folk linked to Youth
for Christ for early morning prayer.
In later years I also endeavoured to apply the lessons learned in
attacks on the walls of Communism and Islam. Harmony Park was also my model as
I tried to get Cape Church leaders working together on behalf of the harassed
Black women of Crossroads and KTC in the first half of 1981, working closely
with Rommel and Celeste Roberts-Santos, a Roman Catholic couple with whom we
shared a house for 3 months. Rev. Douglas Bax, our friend from my seminary days
in District Six, was our connection to other ministers connected to the Western
Province Council of Churches.
Blessed Ripple Effects
We
returned to Europe in June 1981, unaware of the effect, which our involvement
in Crossroads and Nyanga would continue to have. Only many years later did I
read of how the homeless people of Nyanga and Crossroads had scored one moral
victory after the other, encouraging many Blacks to resist the oppressive race
policies. The
plight and determination of the women of KTC, Nyanga and Crossroads played a
role in another sense. Churches now started to take a clearer stand in
opposition to apartheid laws. Rev. Rob Robertson and our friend Rev. Douglas
Bax played a crucial role in the political stand of the Presbyterian Church
of Southern Africa as a denomination (PCSA).[60]
When other Churches also supported the Presbyterian Assembly’s decision
to defy the Prohibition of Mixed Marriages Act, this sparked a political
debate that eventually led in 1985 to the abolition of this keystone of
apartheid legislation. The successful fight of the women of Nyanga and Crossroads
ushered in the scrapping of the hated influx legislation the following year.
In the Dutch town of Zeist, where I
spent the bulk of my enforced exile of close to 20 years, we started a local
evangelistic agency in October 1982, the Goed Nieuws Karavaan. In this
endeavour we succeeded to enlist believers from different denominational
backgrounds, including students from different Bible Schools of the region. The
networking of believers from doctrinally quite diverse backgrounds demonstrated
to all and sundry that it was possible to work together on a sound biblical
basis – over a period of more than ten years - if our unity in the Lord would
be stressed and doctrinal differences not allowed to cause disruption.
The Regiogebed (Regional
Prayer) for Driebergen-Zeist started in August 1988 as the first one of
Holland. Other Goed Nieuws Karavaan co-workers were prominent in this
move of networking across denominational lines.
International
Prayer Involvement
Via
the Regiogebed we had the special joy to become a part of God's mighty
work to achieve spiritual breakthroughs elsewhere. We prayed concertedly not
only for local evangelistic outreach and missionaries that left our region, but
also for certain countries. Very special was the spiritual victories we could
enjoy via big changes, first in Hungary and then in East Germany. This was part
of seven years of prayer against Soviet oppression. The big prize was the
demolition of the Berlin Wall on 9 November, 1989. That signalled the beginning
of the end of Soviet Communist domination of Eastern Europe and of Communism at
large as a global ideological force.
The
Regiogebed of October 4, 1989 was unforgettable when the whole prayer
meeting focused on my beloved South Africa. The event
targeted strife-torn South Africa, when one of the attendees heard of my personal
letter of confession because of my arrogance and activism that was posted that
day to President F.W. de Klerk, i.e. shortly after he had taken office. Unbeknown
to us, the new State President F.W. De Klerk was due to meet Archbishop Tutu
and Dr Allan Boesak a few days later. In the spiritual realm our prayer event
and my letter of confession to the new South African President may have played
some role – along with other prayer events at that time - in preparing the big
changes in the country the following year.
Tackling the Wall of Islam
The run-up to the
Gulf War (in 1991) spawned the call
of the mission agency Open Doors for ten years of prayer for
the Muslim World in 1990. With the increased awareness of spiritual warfare in
Christian circles, the power of occult strongholds was recognised more and
more.
However,
that lies and deception are ideologically basic to Islam, still has to be
clearly exposed. Yet, the Holy Spirit had been revealing to different people
the demonic nature of the Islamic Jibril, the figure that Muslims deem
to be identical to the Angel Gabriel of the Bible. During early morning prayers
- as part of a missionary stint with students from the Cape Town Baptist
Seminary in March 1994 - this was revealed to Rosemarie, my wife, as
she was reading the first verses of Galatians 1. We discerned anew that a
supernatural figure has brought a distorted message, masquerading as an angel
of light (1 Corinthians 11:14). [61]
Rustenburg 1990
and its Impact
The Rustenburg meeting of church leaders in November 1990,
where delegates from 97 denominations had gathered, sent signals of
reconciliation throughout the land that augured well for the future. There,
Professor Willie Jonker[62]
of the University of Stellenbosch started the tide of confession rolling:
'I confess before you and before the Lord, not only my own
sin and guilt, and my personal responsibility for the political, social,
economic and structural wrongs that have been done to many of you and the
results [from] which you and our whole country are still suffering, but
vicariously I dare also to do that in the name of the NGK,[63]
of which I am a member, and for the Afrikaans people as a whole.' Archbishop Desmond Tutu accepted the
confession in a spirit of forgiveness on behalf of the denomination. It was
also very significant that Professor Potgieter of the
University of Stellenbosch, well known to be an arch conservative
theologian, stressed the next day that Professor Jonker had spoken on behalf of
the whole denomination.
The Rustenburg
Declaration, the document issued after the event, contained specific and
concrete confession like the abuse of the Bible by some Church people. It noted
also that many of the delegates had been ‘bold in condemning
apartheid but timid in resisting it’. The confessions
were not one-sided at all. Apartheid victims acknowledged for example their ‘timidity
and fear, failing to challenge our oppression.’ The conference
finally resulted in the signing of the Rustenburg Declaration, which
moved strongly towards complete confession, forgiveness, and restitution.
The government of the day and
Afrikaners in general nevertheless slammed the Rustenburg confessions, claiming
that the theologians at Rustenburg were not representing the bulk of the church
members. Were they forgetting that it had been President F.W. de Klerk himself
who had originally suggested such a national Church conference, or were they
too surprised at the outcome? Be it as it may, a deep impact was definitely
made in the spiritual realm.
Two years later the Dutch
Reformed Church's response to the observations and resolutions of the Reformed
Ecumenical Council (REC) in Athens (May-June 1992) demonstrated that the
DRC was indeed clear in its rejection of apartheid. It helped them to take back
from Athens the message to their Afrikaner compatriots that rejection of
apartheid does not mean to turn your back on the Afrikaans language and the
Afrikaner heritage and culture. The obvious repentance and change in the
denomination was achieved at a great price.
Professor Johan Heyns had played a major role in the transformation in the Dutch
Reformed Church when the synod of 1986 made a major turn-around. It is generally accepted that a right
wing extremist, who could not come to terms with Professor Heyns’ role in the dramatic summersault
of the denomination, was responsible for his assassination on 5 November, 1994.
This highlights the fact that reconciliation is not cheap at all.
Strategic Contacts and Jesus Marches
The
Western Cape Missions Commission, to
which our WEC missionary colleague Shirley Charlton took me soon after our
arrival at the Cape in January 1992, proved very valuable in terms of contacts.
Here I met strategic people from the Cape mission scene. One of the events
organised in 1993 by the Western Cape
Missions Commission was a workshop with John Robb of World Vision. The list of participants at this event was used to
organize the Cape Jesus Marches the
following year. In this way I updated my contacts for further mission endeavour
in the Western Cape.
Prayer used in Evangelism
After we returned to Cape Town in
January 1992, I soon got involved in local attempts of spiritual warfare. When
Rosemarie and I discerned a dark demonic presence over Bo-Kaap during prayer
walks in February 1992, we immediately saw the need to rope in assistance from
other believers. Regular prayer meetings focused on the prime Muslim stronghold
of the Cape. The weekly Friday lunch hour prayer meeting that was started in
September 1992 became the catalyst for many initiatives. The meeting itself was
initially proposed by Achmed Kariem, a convert from Islam. He had been attending
the fortnightly prayer meeting in the home of Cecilia Abrahams, the widow of a
Muslim background believer from Wale Street in
Bo-Kaap from its beginning. (Her husband had been in a back-slidden state, but
he returned to faith in the Lord just prior to his death.) This event was
actually a resumption of the prayer meetings, which had been conducted by Walter Gschwandter, a SIM Life Challenge missionary,
before he and his family left for Kenya.
The venue of the weekly prayer meeting
at the ‘Shepherd’s Watch’ (98 Shortmarket Street) had to be changed to the Koffiekamer
in the basement of the historical St Stephen’s Church in Bree Street
when the ‘Shepherd’s Watch’ building was sold. The Bo-Kaap prayer meeting in
Wale Street was later changed to a monthly occasion, where intercession for the
Middle East was the focus. This monthly meeting
at our home also included prayer for the Jews, those in Israel as well as those
in Cape Town.
Bread thrown on the Water
I still had to
learn the scriptural principle of Cast
your bread upon the waters, for you shall find it after many days
Ecclesiastes 11:1). The parallel one, not
to throw pearls before swine was must easier to comprehend. All too often I
was disappointd when a lot of effort and input, e.g. via weeks of teaching at various
church venues in Muslim Evangelism appeareded to be a waste of time on the
surface.
This was very much the case after we
did ten once a week teaching at the Logos
Baptist Church in Brackenfell in 1997. There appeared to be no immediate success, such as people willing
to join us as co-workers. Yet, a few of the participants were deeply impacted.
Among the participants there were for instance Johan Groenewald and his wife.
The couple took the message to the rural village of Eendekuil where he found a
willing ear in Chris Saayman, the Dutch Reformed minister.
Prayer
walking one a month was another method used to break down strongholds of the
deceiver at the Cape. A few Christians joined from as far afield as
Melkbosstrand and Eendekuil. Results might not have been spectacular, but the
gradual lifting of a spiritual heaviness over the Muslim stronghold Bo-Kaap
could already be discerned after a few months.
Although breakthrough there has still to transpire after almost another
20 years, it was a tremendous encouragement at that time to prod on and hang in
there. Regular
monthly prayer walks from 1998 were attended by individual
believers from as far afield as Melkbosstrand and Eendekuil.
Another case in point
was I attended Beth Ariel, a
fellowship that had been started for Messianic Jewish believers occasionally,
especially in the years prior to 1999 when Bruce Rudnick led the fellowship. (Bruce Rudnick changed his name to Baruch
Maayan during their stay in Israel thereafter). When he returned with his
family from Israel for three years in 2010, that would have significant
ramifications in the spiritual realm when we worked together quite closely.
Sports Uniting the Nation
Church unity in South
Africa is closely linked to nation building in the light of our punctured past
of racial friction. In the sports-loving country God used international events
to forge unity in an unprecedented way.
When President F.W. de Klerk announced a
Whites-only election on 20 February 1992, it was still unclear in which
direction the country would go. The possibility of unprecedented civil war
could definitely not be ruled out. The Whites were asked to say ‘yes’ or ‘no’
to the question: ‘Do you support continuation of the reform process which
the State President began on February 2, 1990 and which is aimed at a new
constitution?’
The success of the national cricket team at the World Cup
tournament in Australia at that time possibly influenced the vote decisively. A
‘no’ vote would most certainly have sent the country back into the sporting
wilderness. The latter possibility was for many in the sports loving country
just 'too ghastly to contemplate'! (This formulation was a dictum coined by Mr
B.J. Vorster, a previous Prime Minister, to portray the civil war option.[64]) With a resounding ‘yes’ - 68% - from all
corners of the country, Mr de Klerk was given a mandate on 17 March, 1992, to
negotiate a new constitution with African
National Congress (ANC) leader Nelson Mandela.
Blessings
of United Prayer at the Cape
The
stimulus for Operation
Hanover Park was given by a police officer, who approached the churches
of the
township in a last-ditch effort to secure peace in the township Hanover Park in
mid-1992. The law enforcement agents could not handle the criminality
and gangster violence in the area any more. The local
City Mission Saturday afternoon prayer meeting, which had become a
monthly missionary event, was soon the precursor to a united prayer occasion as
a part of Operation Hanover Park
towards the end of 1992. Operation
Hanover Park involved believers
of diverse church backgrounds who prayed together on a regular basis.
It looked as if the Hanover Park churches were
finally getting out of their indifference with regard to community involvement.
At the same time, this would also give a good example to the rest of the
country to combat criminality and violence – through united prayer! A
miracle happened: the crime-ridden Hanover Park had experienced its ‘most quiet
Christmas ever’, according to a senior resident!
At least, this was how it seemed outwardly! At the same time,
this would also give great impetus to the rest of the country to combat
criminality and violence – through united prayer and action! Operation Hanover Park was however
very short lived. It was on the verge of achieving an early version of
community transformation at the beginning of 1993 when a leadership tussle
stifled the promising movement.
Efforts to minister to Gangsters and Prisoners
The area of gansterism and ministry in prisons was one where
ministry crossed denominational barriers significantly. Johaar Viljoen, who had
won over many Christians to Islam, came to faith in Jesus in the prison of
Caledon. His conversion in 1992 - which was a demonstration of the power of
prayer - shook many Islamic inmates who regarded him as their imam.
Compassion
paid dividends when AEF (Africa
Evangelical Fellowship) missionary Jenny Adams started corresponding with a
befriended prisoner, Jonathan Clayton. They finally got married while he was
preparing for the Baptist ministry. The mission to prisoners got a major push
by them as a couple from the Strandfontein
Baptist Church. Clayton did sterling
work trying to get more unity into the efforts of a plethora of churches which
minister to the inmates of Pollsmoor prison. In 1999 he became a prison
chaplain. At one of their services at Pollsmoor on a Saturday morning in 1997,
the prisoners were challenged by a visiting missionary to see Rashied Staggie,
the (in)famous Muslim drug lord, as the equivalent of Zacchaeus, the chief tax
collector. Jesus looked up to Zacchaeus in a double sense, giving dignity to
the reviled and hated little man upon whom everybody else looked down.
Shona Ali, a Seventh-day Adventist Christian
and former Muslim, won general appreciation for her work in the gaols
country-wide. After being terribly abused and beaten, Allie caused many Muslim
eyebrows to rise when she honestly mentioned her conviction in a mosque that
Jesus is indeed the Son of God and that he died on the Cross for our sins.
One of the most
prominent from the gangster world from recent years to be used in prisons
extensively was Eric Hofmeyer. He has done stalwart work in Pollsmoor prison
for years since 1998. As a former gang
leader it was not extremely difficult for him to win the trust of both
employers and gangsters. A few of the former inmates of Pollsmoor could be
placed into some form of employment, an important start to their rehabilitation
in normal society. To find employment for people with a criminal record remains
an uphill battle. A recurring problem was that many of them got back-slidden
once they had money in their hands.
The Goodwill of promising Beginnings evaporate
Much of the goodwill of the promising beginnings seemed to
evaporate after 1992 during the transition to democratic government. In
Kwazulu, a simmering condition of civil war had been prevailing for years. The
tension between ANC followers and those of the Inkatha Freedom Party
(IFP) was just waiting for the final ignition of the proverbial powder keg. The apparent - if perhaps not intentional -
simultaneous side-lining of Dr Mangusuthu Buthelezi and his IFP in the Convention
for a Democratic South Africa (Codesa)
talks, spelled danger. At the infamous Boipatong
massacre on 17 June 1992 in the Vaal triangle, 46 township
residents were massacred by
local Zulu hostel-dwellers. The perpetrators were taken to have been Inkatha
followers of Dr Buthelezi, highlighting how volatile the situation still was. A
major Zulu versus Xhosa tribal battle was ominous in the worst sense of the
word.
Over the
Easter weekend of 1993, the country seemed to have been pushed to the precipice
of major racial conflict. On 10 April, 1993, the news reverberated throughout
the country that the outspoken Communist Chris Hani, who had been groomed for a
top position in a possible ANC-led government, had been assassinated. The fact
that a White woman provided information leading to the prompt arrest of the
alleged perpetrators, two right-wing activists, helped to lower the political
temperature momentarily, but the situation remained extremely tense. Nelson
Mandela used this incident cleverly to force President de Klerk’s hand to
announce a date for the democratic elections, but a racial war of great magnitude was a
feared reality, still widely
expected.
But satan overplayed his hand. The massacre at St
James Church (in the Cape suburb Kenilworth) of July 1993 turned out to be
the instrument par excellence to spur prayer and ignite the movement
towards racial reconciliation in the country. Those family members of St
James Church who lost dear ones received divine grace to forgive the brutal
killers. The killing of innocent people during a church service sparked off an
unprecedented urgency for prayer all around the country.
Jesus
Marches
One
of the events organised in 1993 by the Western
Cape Missions Commission was a workshop with John Robb of World Vision. I used the list of
participants at this event to organize the Cape Jesus Marches in June
1994. They were planned for
June 1994 all over the world. In a letter from a friend from Sheffield
(England), he wrote about their preparations for a Jesus March in their
city. Inquiries on this side of the ocean brought the co-ordination of the
whole effort in Cape Town into my lap. I had high expectations when I
co-ordinated about 20 prayer marches in different parts of the Cape Peninsula,
making strategic contacts at this time.
I
had been hoping that this venture would result in a network of prayer for a
breakthrough among Cape Muslims across the Peninsula. However, the initial
interest that our second attempt with an updated audio-visual had ignited in various
areas, soon fizzled out. I deduced that it was not yet God’s timing and that we
should do a lot more to stimulate the unity of the body of believers.
Strategic Contacts
A strategic
contact of this initiative was Trefor Morris, who was closely linked to Radio Fish Hoek, a pioneering Christian
Cape radio station. Trefor had been a regular of our Friday lunch time prayer
meeting, while he was assisting with the work done on the OM missionary ship
the Doulos in the City dockyard. For the first time I shared
publicly at this time what I had researched about the influence of the Kramats,
the shrines on the heights of the Cape
Peninsula.
Another
important contact of this initiative was Freddie van Dyk, a link to the Logos
Baptiste Gemeente in Brackenfell. Freddie's attendance at our Friday lunch
hour prayer meeting led to strategic hospital outreach, notably a Groote Schuur Hospital.
A concrete positive at that time was
the start of a movement towards Christ in many Muslim countries, with Algeria
one of the most prominent ones. YWAM mission leaders had decided at an event in
Egypt to call the Christians worldwide to pray for the Muslim world during
Ramadan. This was a natural follow-up of the call of Open Doors for 10
years of prayer for the Muslim world in 1990. Everybody was still vividly
remembering the spectacular result of the 7 years of prayer for the Soviet
Union. The contacts that I gained during the Jesus Marches were used
extensively to disseminate Ramadan Prayer booklets in different
congregations for quite a number of years.
Ministers’ Fraternal of Mitchells Plain
In the early 1990s various Mitchells Plain pastors met for prayer every
Friday morning. The ministers’ fraternal of Mitchells Plain succeeded in
bringing well-known evangelists to come and minister in the area. That gave
them a lot of credibility among the churches there. After an approach to the
ministers’ fraternal in 1994 to join in the Jesus Marches, they were
immediately eager to do so, organising a separate march in no time.
During
prayer drives believers would
target
strongholds of the arch-enemy
The
Mitchells Plain ministers’ fraternal was also the driving force of the very
special prayer meetings which took place every second Thursday of the month
from the mid-1990s. This prayer meeting for pastors and their wives soon
included other church leaders from all over the Peninsula. Pastor Eddie Edson
of the Shekinah Tabernacle was pivotal in the formation and organisation
of these prayer drives and meetings where believers would target strongholds of
the arch-enemy, going to pray there every last Friday evening of the month.
A massive Prayer Effort gets underway
On 2 January 1994, the first
of three consecutive 40-day fasts started - to coincide with preparations for
the general elections. Before this, the concrete fear of civil war inspired
prayer across the racial divides.
At this time Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Methodist
Bishop Stanley Mogoba convened a meeting between Dr Nelson Mandela and Dr
Mangosuthu Buthelezi,[65] trying
to resolve the deadlock posed by Inkatha Freedom Party’s threat to
boycott the elections. Foreign missionaries were seriously considering leaving
South Africa because of the escalation of violence.
Africa Enterprise enlisted prayer assistance from all over the world.
Rev. Michael Cassidy and his Africa Enterprise enlisted prayer assistance from all over the
world. Few other countries participated in the international prayer effort like
Kenya and Nigeria. In a special move of God’s Spirit, Pastor Willy Oyegun from
Nigeria and a group of prayer warriors from that country were led to come and
intercede in South Africa in February 1994. It was a risky move as they could
have been sent back from Johannesburg International Airport without
entering the country. But God intervened sovereignly. Pastor Oyegun subsequently became God’s
choice instrument for healing and reconciliation at the Cape in the
post-apartheid era.
In East Africa God laid it
on the heart of many Kenyans to pray for our country as we were heading for the
general elections on 27 April, 1994. God
used Rev. Michael Cassidy and his team to get a massive prayer effort underway,
combining it with the negotiating skills of Professor Washington Okumu, a
committed Kenyan Christian. God's sovereign ways became evident, not only
through the way in which the Kenyan negotiator got involved, but also that he
had met Dr Buthelezi, the leader of the IFP, already in 1972.
The
country was very close to a civil war.
God furthermore called a
police officer, Colonel Johan Botha, to recruit prayer warriors. The press took
up his story, reporting how God supernaturally came to him in a vision. An
angel stood before him on 23 March, 1994 with the message: “I want
South Africa on its knees in prayer”. A national prayer day was announced for 6 April, 1994 - a
national holiday at that time called Founder’s
Day. The country was very close to a civil war, which surely could have
sent many foreigners and other Whites fleeing in all haste just before or after
the elections.
The first democratic Elections
Whether the release of Nelson Mandela was
mere political acumen or pragmatic realism of President
F.W. de Klerk might be debatable. Without doubt however, it turned out
as an answer to the prayers of many around the world that Nelson Mandela was leading
the ANC so ably at that time. He was very sensitive to the need of wooing the
right-wing Afrikaner Volksfront party to participate in the first
democratic elections of 27 April 1994. A divinely orchestrated intervention
brought the Zulus and their recalcitrant side-lined leader Dr Mangosuthu
Buthulezi to the ballot box. After he took office in 1994, Mandela attempted to
tackle the country's largest problems - crime and unemployment, among many others
- in a state that was almost bankrupt.
The overall result
was very encouraging - miraculous peaceful elections – when mayhem and civil
war was anticipated.[66]
Spin-offs of the Jesus Marches
As the 1994 Jesus Marches approached, the vision
grew in me to start a prayer network throughout the Cape Peninsula to effect a
spiritual breakthrough among the Cape Muslims. I was very much aware that
concerted prayer was needed. We were able to start a few prayer groups, but the
bulk of them petered out. In the
mid-1990s, Sally Kirkwood faithfully led a small prayer group for the Cape
Muslims at her home in Plumstead. Later
she played a prominent role among Cape intercessors, notably in the PAGAD (People against Gangsterism and Drugs)
era. Another group was formed by Gill
Knaggs in Muizenberg after she had attended our Friday lunch hour prayer
meeting. Soon God used Gill to get the YWAM base in Muizenberg more interested
in reaching Muslims. Concretely, an
Egyptian connection was established, with YWAM starting to network with the Coptic
Church via links through Mike Burnard of Open Doors.
The
Country not unified
When President Mandela attended a game of
the Springboks, the country's Rugby Union team in 1994, he noticed that the
Blacks in the stadium were cheering the opposing team squad. In their view the
Springboks (their history, players, and even their colours) represented
prejudice and apartheid - the oppressor's sport. South Africa was preparing to
host the Rugby World Cup the following year. President Mandela took a
big political risk by convincing a meeting of the newly-formed black-dominated South
African Sports Committee not to change the Springboks' name and emblem.
Mandela understood the message below the surface: if the Springboks can gain
the support of non-White South Africans and succeed in the upcoming Rugby World Cup, the country could be
unified and inspired to exceed its expectations. Mandela dared to swim against
the stream, harvesting disapproval from friends and family. Many more, both
White and Black citizens and politicians, began to express doubts about his
efforts to use sports to unite a nation that was still basically still torn
apart by some 50 years of racial tensions. For many non-Whites, especially the
radicals, the Springboks symbolised White supremacy and decades of oppression.
However, both Mandela and Francois
Pienaar, the Springbok captain, stood firmly behind their theory that the game
can be used to successfully unite the country. The Springboks were not expected
to go very far in the competition; they were expected to lose in the quarter
finals. During the opening games, support for the Springboks began to grow
among the non-White population. By the second game the previously injured
Chester Williams, the only Black player in the team, was fit once again.
Citizens of all races turned out in their numbers to show their support for the
Springboks.
A
Rugby Game that united the Nation
With
the whole nation behind them, the Springboks proceeded to the final. In a
nail-biting match they actually won the World Cup, after beating the highly
fancied world-beating All Blacks from New Zealand - considered an invincible
team before the tournament. Nelson Mandela's attendance caused a stir of
appreciation in the huge and overwhelmingly Afrikaner crowd. In an intensely
emotional moment of joy Mandela sported a Springbok cap and a jersey with the
captain Francois Pienaar's number 6 when he handed the trophy to him. NELSON!
NELSON! was chanted repeatedly by the home crowd during Mandela's entry on to
the field. What a contrast this was to a previous rugby match scene of the Springboks,
in which he was booed by some people in the crowd. Through various other symbolic gestures Nelson Mandela
succeeded hereafter to win over the hearts of Afrikaners.
The whole nation went on to mourn the gigantic statesman,
possibly the greatest of the 20th century in December 2013. The
world still cherishes the memories of the grandfather of this nation, the
towering gift of God at a critical time. His death had a personal sequel. At
that time, I was moved to set the process in motion that ultimately led to the
printing of an autobiographical booklet with the title What God joined together.
Lapses into traditional racial and denominational Divisions
The concrete fear of civil war before the first democratic elections in
1994 was a common goal that spurred prayer meetings which straddled the racial
divide. Although much of the prejudicial mutual distrust was overcome,
Christians thereafter however more or less lapsed back into traditional racial
and denominational divisions. Though for example many prayer meetings were
convened in South Africa for the gateway cities since October 1995, they were
all too often either confined to prayer within the own church or limited to
prayer within the own racial grouping. Therefore Grigg’s recipe is very appropriate:
‘If there is not significant unity, the first step is to bring together
the believers in prayer or in renewal and teaching until there is
reconciliation and brokenness.’
A demonic Response in Disguise
In the spiritual realm the evil
one responded with a bang. In 1995/6 living conditions in the township of
Manenberg were almost unbearable for the local people, and things seemed
completely out of control. Rev. Chris Clohessy, the local Roman Catholic
priest, had earned the trust of many people there, moving fearlessly around, also
in gangster territory. PAGAD (People
against Gangsterism and Drugs) was initiated by a group of Muslims in 1996,
striving to create a gangster-free and drug-free society. The group was joined
by Rev Chris Clohessy. However, in the ensuing inter-faith venture, Muslims
were soon dominating proceedings. He had to withdraw when his companions
in the new organisation were prepared to go to extreme measures like the public
burning of a drug lord.
PAGAD developed anti-government and Western
sentiments. The organisation believed that the new secular South African
government posed a threat to Islamic values. It also aimed to create better
political representation for South African Muslims. They were actually grossly
over-represented in Parliament, compared to their percentage of the population.
Prominent figures like Imam Achmat Cassiem were reported to have
performed a palace coup. As the
leader of the extremist group Qibla, Achmat
Cassiem subtly changed the anti-drug, anti-crime movement into an organization
that sought to bring Islamic rule into the Western Cape by any means. PAGAD
radicals saw this move merely as part of the plan to implement anOctober 1995
decision in the Libyan capital Tripoli - to attempt Islamising the African continent
from the South by the year 2000 AD.
The
PAGAD Threat unites the Church
The intention to make South
Africa Islamic, stating that the Muslims have the money to do it, was
verbalised and publicized. It soon
became clear that this was no empty threat. The assistance of the Libyan State
President Muhammad Khaddafi and other oil states was made practical through the
provision of Islamic literature in African languages and mosques built in the
Black townships. The widely reported visit in February 1996 of Louis Farrakhan,
a high profile Afro-American Muslim, further brought the message home. That it
happened during Ramadan was just the tonic for Cape Christians to pray in an
unprecedented way.
Within a matter of weeks all
Ramadan Prayer Focus booklets were sold.
From Cairo to
the World!
A combined youth service in the Moravian Church of Elsies River in the northern suburbs on Sunday
evening 28 July 1996 would have world-wide ramifications. Egypt-born Mark Gabriel shared his testimony in that church at a
on, 28 July 1996. This event added a new dimension to the Cape Muslim ministry
effort. Gabriel’s printed testimony had just been published in South Africa
under the pseudonym Mustapha with the title Against the Tides in the Middle
East. (Mark Gabriel was previously forced to flee his home country where he
narrowly escaped assassination.) Within a few days, the booklet which contained
his story was in the hands of a Muslim leader. Maulana Sulaiman Petersen
correctly suspected that Mark Gabriel had contact with local missionaries.
Mark Gabriel was forced into hiding
Reminiscent of the situation
when Martin Luther was taken to the Wartburg castle for safety,[67] Mark
Gabriel was forced into hiding. The televised Staggie 'execution' by PAGAD as a
part of the national news on 4 August reminded Mark Gabriel of Muslim radicals
of the Middle East. He now started with
significant research of jihad (holy
war) in Arabic Islamic literature, finishing his manuscript in 2001 in Orlando
(Florida, USA), where he had moved to in the meantime. The September 11 event
of that year made Mark Gabriel's book on the topic a best-seller when it was
published at the beginning of 2002. It came out under the title Islam and Terrorism. That book became a major factor in the exposure of the
violent side of Islam.
Subsequently
the book was translated into many other languages. Arguably it exposed the
intrinsic violent nature of Islam like no other book before it. If there were still any doubt, the violence perpetrated by Al-Queda in Afghanistan and elsewhere -
along with that of Al Shabbab and Boko Haram in East and West Africa in
recent months - brought a crisis in many a Muslim heart. The brutal ISIS
terrorists ushered in a movement in 2014 in North Africa which brought the
religion in greate disrepute.
Egypt-born Mark Gabriel's book Islam and
Terrorism was conceived while hiding from Islamic reprisals in the City
bowl suburbs of Vredehoek and Devil's Peak in the wake of the PAGAD scare in
August 1996. It became a best seller soon after its publication at the
beginning of 2002 – i.e. soon after the September 11 event in New York. Islam
and Terrorism brought a significant correction in unexpected ways. That
book became a major factor in the exposure of the violent side of Islam.
(Subsequently the book has been translated into over 50 languages.)
Suddenly
it appeared that Islamic right-wing folk became ready to move away from the
medieval tendencies in dealing with their critics. They still however had no scruple to bomb
churches, e.g. in Indonesia and Nigeria, or to bury female adherents alive who
had been caught in adultery (while the men involved get away with impunity.)
Female Islamic Critics to the Fore
Who would have thought that Africa would one day
set the pace in the twentieth century in the criticism of Islam? A female
speaker at a liberal mosque in the Cape suburb of Claremont was as big a
surprise as anyone could expect, but this was not followed up. Islamists had
difficulty to handle female critics. It was significant that Noni Darwish, the
daughter of a prominent Egyptian general, became a critic of Islam after she
had become a Christian. In the new millennium outspoken females from their own
ranks made it clear that they were not to be muzzled. Ayaan
Hirsi Ali from Holland, a refugee from
Somalia, ruffled the feathers in no uncertain way. She was named by Time magazine as one of the 100 most
influential people in the world in 2005. In criticizing Islam she was followed
by Irshad Manji, who fled from Uganda as a little girl with her family to
Canada during the mad rage of Idi Amin when he started persecuting Indian
traders. Manji (The Trouble with Islam, a wake-up call for honesty and
Change, 2003:11) dared
to call for ‘an end to Islam’s totalitarianism, particularly the gross
human rights violations against women and religious minorities.’
Christine
Darg, a prominent US television journalist, encountered Jesus supernaturally as
a child. Facing a life-threatening illness, Jesus appeared to her in an open
vision as a Jewish king and healed her. Because of her love of both the Jewish
and Arab peoples and all the spiritual descendents of Abraham in the Church,
Christine Darg received a most unique ministry to share God's love and ministry
of reconciliation. Her Exploits Ministry embraces all the peoples of
the Bible Lands. She gives of her ministry time, resources and efforts to all
the parties involved. Christine's healing tours of the Holy Land, 'Tabernacle
of David' and 'Women on the Walls' intercessory prayer conferences
in Jerusalem are inspired by the ongoing fulfilment of Bible prophecies.
Significant Initiatives related
to the Middle East
Musalaha was founded in 1990, when the need for unity
among Israeli and Palestinian believers was especially lacking due to the First
Intifada,[68] Dr.
Salim J. Munayer, an Israeli-Palestinian from Lod, narrates how this lack of
unity was recognized by leaders from both sides. In response they founded Musalaha
as a vehicle to bring Israeli citizens into the process of Biblical
reconciliation.
An
aged Coptic priest, Zakaria Butros caused bewilderment in many a Muslim country
with candid revelations about Muhammad for months until a massive surge to
achieve democracy started in Egypt on January 25, 2011. Dubbed the Arab
Spring, the winds of change raged through North Africa like a wild fire,
jumping later also to other countries in the Near East. The rise of the
Islamist Muslim Brotherhood, plus the likelihood of a third world war as
Iran threatened Israel with annihilation, has been hanging like a sword of
Democles over the globe ever since. Israeli leadership on the other hand has
made it clear that they are not prepared to wait for that to happen. Divine intervention is needed to prevent what
looks like the inevitable.
Chapter 18 Evolving
International Prayer for Unity
It is sad that the prayer for Christian Unity has not yet functioned completely
unitedly. We need not be surprised however, because the arch enemy loathes and
hates united prayer. Down the centuries this has been a divine ‘tool’ par excellence to usher in spiritual
renewal and revival.
South Africa was possibly the
first country where the tradition of prayer services between Ascencion Day and
Pentecost went nationwide.
Roots of international united Prayer
The Evangelical
Alliance tradition of a Week of
Prayer the first full week of January goes back to the year after its
launch in 1846. It was one of the agreed initiatives that came out of the
founding conference.
The Week of Prayer has been in vogue in many countries in Europe for a
very long time. In countries of the former communist world in Europe it was
only the Evangelical Alliance issue that stayed alive through the
communist era. So, even when people had heard of nothing else about the Evangelical Alliance, they had often
heard of the Week of Prayer.
Pentecostal Prayer Meetings in South Africa
Ds. G.W.A. van der Lingen of
the Dutch Reformed Church in Paarl
was one of very few pastors who stemmed the tide of liberalism that swept over
the Cape in the 1850s. It is no surprise that he became God’s instrument for
introducing the blessed Pinksterbidure,
the tradition of prayer services between Ascencion Day and Pentecost that
became such a blessing to the Dutch
Reformed Church for over one and a half centuries.
It all started on 6 February 1861 as an overflow of the
revival that started in Worcester the previous year. Ds. Van der Lingen of the Strooidak
(Straw Roof) congregation arranged a special meeting of approximately 100
prayer leaders - including women and children - to discuss their concerns.
After experiencing the manifest presence of the Holy Spirit and His quickening
power, the congregation was fearful that the divine presence would decrease
over time and finally stop. They wanted, therefore, to find ways of preserving
and spreading the blessing. They started cell groups.
Gideon Malherbe, a
son-in law of Ds. van der Lingen, suggested that the cells should combine each
evening for communal prayer during the ten days between Ascension Day and Pentecost.
These prayer
events had taken their cue from the Disciples who were unified, with one mind
(Greek homothumadon) in the Upper
Room after Ascencion Day (Acts 1:14). The believers intended to follow the example
of the believers who had been meetting for prayer while waiting in Jerusalem to
be baptized with the Holy Spirit. Just like them, they too would plead down the
promise of the Father.
Malherbe’s cell group published an
invitation in De Kerkbode for all existing prayer groups in Paarl to
participate in corporate prayer between 9 and 19 May, 1861. Ds van der Lingen
was at first reluctant to join meetings. There was a gradual built-up of
expectation during that week, mingled with cries for mercy. He not only finally
relented but he also became God's anointed vessel of blessing on Pentecost
Sunday, 1861.
When this news
began to spread to neighbouring congregations, they too decided to follow
Paarl's example. Over the next few years more and more congregations would join
in. As a direct result, the 1867 Dutch Reformed synod advised all
congregations to conduct 10 days of prayer in the run-up to Pentecost every
year. The tradition became a major blessing to the nation. The Pinksterbidure would impact Afrikanerdom
for many decades. Many Afrikaners look back to some Pentecost prayer
season as the time when they were converted or when they recommitted their lives
to the Lord.
In 1894 Pope Leo XIII also thought of Pentecost as a symbolic date (the traditional
commemoration of the birth of the Church) for
the unity of the Church. Protestant leaders suggested in 1926 via the Faith and Order movement in the
mid-1920s to have an annual octave of prayer for unity amongst Christians, leading
up to Pentecost Sunday.
A Roman Catholic Week of Prayer Initiative
A
somewhat different date for a Week of Prayer began in 1908 as the Octave of Christian Unity. The dates of the week were
proposed by Rev. Paul
Wattson, co-founder of the Graymoor Franciscan
Friars. He
conceived of the week beginning on the Feast of the Confession of Peter,
the Protestant variant
of the ancient Feast of the Chair of Saint Peter, on 18
January, and concluding with the Feast of the Conversion of Saint Paul on 25 January.
Evolution of the Week of Prayer for Unity
Abbé Paul Couturier of Lyons, France, who has been called "the father of spiritual
ecumenism", advocated prayer "for the unity of the Church as Christ
wills it, and in accordance with the means he wills", thereby enabling
other Christians with differing views of the Roman Catholic Church to join in the prayer. In 1935, he proposed
naming the observance Universal Week of
Prayer for Christian Unity. Couturier's message influenced a Sardinian nun, In 1941, the Faith and Order
Conference, at that time a Protestant daughter group that developed out of
the Edinburgh international conference of 2010, changed the date for observing
the week of unity prayer to come in line with that observed by Catholics. In
1948, with the founding of the World
Council of Churches, the Week of
Prayer for Christian Unity became increasingly recognised by different
churches throughout the world. The proposal was finally accepted by the Catholic Church in 1966.
In 1958, the French Catholic group Unité Chrétienne and the Faith and Order Commission of the World Council of Churches (a body which includes, among others, most of the world's Orthodox
churches as well as many Anglican, Baptist, Lutheran, Methodist, Reformed,
United and Independent churches) began co-operative preparation of materials
for the Week of Prayer. The year 1968
saw the first official use of materials prepared jointly by the Faith and Order Commission and the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, representing
the entire Catholic Church. Collaboration and cooperation between these two
organizations has increased steadily since, resulting recently in joint
publications in the same format.
Other Efforts towards Global United Prayer
The
roots of the Women's World Day of Prayer
go back to the USA in 1887, as Mary Ellen Fairchild James, wife of Darwin Rush
James from Brooklyn (New York), called for a day of prayer for home missions, and
Methodist women called for a Week of Prayer
and self-denial for foreign missions. A Baptist Day of Prayer for
foreign missions began in 1891. In 1895, a day of corporate intercessions for
mission was initiated by the Women’s
Auxiliary of the Anglican Church of Canada. By 1897 the women of six
denominations formed a joint committee for a united day of prayer for home
missions. In 1912 the Woman’s Boards of
Foreign Missions called for a united day of prayer for foreign missions.
In 1910-1911 women celebrated the 50th Anniversary
or Jubilee of women’s missionary activity by organizing a series of speaking
engagements across the United States that provided women with a powerful
experience of what they had achieved in ecumenical cooperation, in local and global
linkage, in prayer and information sharing, and in biblical reflection. All of
this had been in the hands of women. Out of this experience many local
interdenominational women’s groups were formed.
After the devastation of World
War I, women incorporated the conviction that world peace was intrinsically
tied to world mission. Therefore, women renewed their efforts for unity. In the
United States, the first Friday of Lent was established as a joint day of
prayer for missions, beginning on February 20, 1920. Due to the enthusiastic
facilitation of local denominational and interdenominational women’s groups,
the day of prayer spread rapidly throughout the USA. Canadian women took up the
same date in 1922.
In the second half of 1926 women
of North America distributed the worship service to many countries and partners
in mission. The response worldwide was enthusiastic. By the beginning of 1927 a
call to prayer that was issued was for a World
Day of Prayer for Missions.
Women’s World Day of Prayer
Since
1927 the first Friday in March is known as Women’s
World Day of Prayer. Catholic women were allowed to join the movement after
the Second Vatican
Council, beginning in 1967. In 1969 The
Organizations linked to the World Union of Catholic Women
decided to change their international day of prayer from March to May in order
to take part in the World Day of Prayer.
Western women learned the great lesson
in due course of ‘praying with, rather
than for our sisters of other races and nations, thus enriching our experience
and releasing the power which must be ours if we are to accomplish tasks
entrusted to us.’
Chapter 21 Transformation
at the Cape in the 21st Century
Having
experienced first-hand how powerfully the principle of united prayer operated
both in the wake of the St James Church massacre of July 1993 and the
threatening PAGAD scourge of August 1996 to November 2000, South Africa could
show the way. Positive examples of treating groups on the fringes of society in
a dignified manner could go a long way to demonstrate the spirit of love,
compassion and care. An expression of regret - or better still, a confession in
respect of the omission and neglect towards Muslims and Jews on a broad level -
is something that still has to be addressed. With regard to the former group, I
take liberty to note that we have repeatedly taught the use of ISLAM as an
acronym that the well-known Brother Andrew has spread far and wide: I
Shall Love All Muslims or better still I Sincerely Love All Muslims .
A
Watershed for World Evangelism
The
1974 Lausanne Conference became the watershed for world evangelism during the
last quarter of the 20th century. Many movements flowed from it,
which aimed at reaching the unreached people groups of the world before the end of the millennium. The DAWN (Discipling a whole Nation) and AD 2000
movements, along with the ‘Concerts of Prayer’ of Dave Bryant, have been a few
of the catalysts towards a resurgence of prayer.
In many quarters denominational
division is still not recognised as a demonic stronghold. The Republic of
South Africa has no excuse any more to be hesitant about engaging in
missions. Opportunities have opened up all over the world. South Africans are
welcome everywhere: in fact, we must pray to be able to remain humble, not to
be carried away by pride. An abundance of untapped language talent still lies
dormant in the Black townships. These South Africans have an almost unparalleled
faculty for language learning. There is hardly a Black in the urban townships
who does not speak three or four languages, and the mastery of six or seven is
not a big exception. I suggest that these people could be ideal missionaries in
pioneer areas where oral communication is required, where the Word should
rather be made available on CD/DVD and SD cards. Some form of over-arching
unity – perhaps using a vehicle like the Consultation of Christian
Churches (CCC) – would go a long way to achieve this goal.
Churches from different Denominations
joining Hands
It was truly significant for the Cape
Town Metropolis in April 1997 when churches across the city and from many
denominations joined hands for a big campaign on the Newlands Cricket
Stadium with the evangelist Franklin Graham, the son of the renowned Billy
Graham. Pastor Walter Ackerman from the Docks
Mission Church in Lentegeur and the late Pastor Elijah Klaassen from a
Pentecostal fellowship in Gugulethu/Crossroads, worked tirelessly to enlist
people from the Cape Flats and Black churches for this event. Transport from
the townships was provided free of charge. This served as a model for the
Transformation stadium events of the new millennium.
Gerda Leithgöb introduced research into spiritual influences
at the Cape at a prayer seminar in Rylands Estate in January 1995. Such
research especially investigates the demonic or anti-Christian nature of these
influences. It has been dubbed 'spiritual mapping'. It seems that the exercise
was only significantly implemented in 1999 at the Cape. Manenberg was a Cape
township where it was practised with visible results. This township depicted a
change in the religious climate more than any other at the Cape within a matter
of months. In
the mid-1990s, Eben Swart became the co-ordinator of Herald Ministries for the Western Cape. He worked
closely with the Network of United Prayer in Southern Africa (NUPSA),
which had appointed Pastor Willy Oyegun, a Nigerian, as their Western Cape
coordinator. Together they did important
work in research and spiritual mapping, along with Amanda Buys (Kanaan
Ministries), who counselled Christians with psychological problems.
Prayer Efforts in the
City Bowl
From 1995 I got fairly close to Rev. Louis Pasques of the Cape Town Baptist Church after the
fellowship had experienced a difficult time. Together with his student
colleague Edgar Davids of the Baptist Seminary, who was the minister of
the struggling sister 'Coloured' congregation in Woodstock, a mere 3 kilometres
away, we came together for weekly prayer. This grew into a ministers' fraternal
with a few other local pastors.
Some churches
in the City participated in a forty-day period of prayer and fasting from
Easter Sunday to Ascension Day 1998.
Louis Pasques spearheaded this endeavour. The weekly meeting with a prayer emphasis
gained ground slowly after the 40-day effort from April to May 1998. Later that
year, combined
evening services were held once a month in the City Bowl in participating
churches, with the venue rotating every time.
A corresponding period of prayer and fasting in 1999 - this
time for 120 days - was concluded in the Western Cape in the traditional Groote Kerk celebration of the Lord’s
Supper when pastors from different denominations officiated. This was a visible
sign of a growing Church unity. At that Ascension Day event, Dr Robbie
Cairncross was divinely brought into the situation. He came to the Mother City with a vision to
see a network of prayer developing in the Peninsula. His prayer for an office for
his Christian Coalition/Family Alliance
near to Parliament was answered in a special way when he moved into the
premises of the Chamber of Commerce (SACB), a stone’s throw from the Houses
of Parliament.
Seeds for 24/7 Prayer
The pastors’ and pastors’ wives monthly
meetings of eh 1990s became the run-up to the city-wide prayer events at the Light
House Christian Centre in Parow, on the Grand Parade in the City and
at sports stadiums from 1998. These occasions, along with prayer events like the one at
Moravian Hill in District Six on 1 November 1997, brought about further correction. This ultimately led to the Global Day of Prayer in
2005.
After
a visit to the USA, Rev. Trevor Pearce, an Anglican minister who
also had some ministry experience on one of the Operation Mobilization (OM) ships, brought back copies of the
Transformation video and an audio copy of the book Informed Intercessions
by George Otis, jr. This documented account of what happened in Cali (Columbia)
also included principles for successful community transformation. At the
city-wide prayer event at the Lighthouse Christian Centre on 15 October
1999, the first Transformation video of George Otis was viewed by the audience.
A special Aftermath of weekly Prayer
Regular weekly prayer at the Central
Police Station in Buitenkant Street had a special aftermath. (In
due course die Losie, a former Freemason lodge at this police station
became the regular prayer venue.) As part of the preparation for the 2006 Global Day of Prayer, a prayer drive
where participants prayed Scripture, converged at the Central Police Station.
God used this event to touch at least one person in a special way. Wim Ferreira
had been a transport engineer working with the City Council. He was
challenged to resign from his employment at the time to concentrate on prayer
for the City. He was hereafter invited to work with the Deputy Mayor of the
Metropolis.
Wim Ferreira was touched at that
occasion to request a room for prayer in the metropolitan Civic Centre,
where he had just started to work. This was another divinely orchestrated
move. A few months further on, a regular
Friday prayer time was functioning in one of the board rooms there. I soon
joined him for prayer in the board room of the ACDP. Pastor Barry Isaacs linked
up with us there in due course.
The Lord challenged Wim Ferreira to
start 24-hour prayer at the Civic Centre premises. On Wednesdays at lunch time
believers from different denominational backgrounds gathered there to pray and
intercede for the city. Hereafter the prayer room near
to the parking area on the ground floor was frequented by various people
throughout the day.
Hereafter Wim Ferreira linked up more intensely with Pastor
Barry Isaacs, who took over from Graham Power as the new co-ordinator of the Transformation
Committee. As a result of their deliberations, prayer meetings started in
October 2007 at the Uni-City Council Chambers on the third Saturday
morning of every month at 5.30 a.m. Wonderful answers to prayer were
subsequently experienced month after month. At one of these occasions, the lack
of the availability of the Civic Centre Banqueting Hall for a combined
prayer event on Ascension Day touched Peter Williams, the secretary of the
Provincial Parliament. He promptly extended a provisional invitation to the
group to come and pray there as well.
Pro’s and Cons of religious Tolerance
We should be
really grateful for the spirit of religious tolerance that had become a
cherished tradition of South African society. We have been spared the violence
stemming from religious fanaticism, with which many other countries are still
battling. In areas like the old District Six and the Malay Quarter of Cape
Town, where Muslims formed an influential part of the population, there was
hardly any religious conflict ‑ in fact, Muslim children attended church
schools on no mean scale and individually the converse also took place.
The solidarity of Muslims and
Christians in the opposition to apartheid legislation played a significant role
in the demise of the resented ideology. The mutual tolerance had a significant
deficiency: we hardly spoke to each other about our faiths. Whereas Muslims
theoretically had ample opportunity to get to know the basics of the Christian
faith, e.g. through the radio, TV and open air services, a general lack of
basic knowledge about Islam even among the Christian clergy is still prevalent.
This led to unnecessary tension and bitterness. Many ‘Coloured’ women, who got
involved in a relationship with Muslim men leading to marriage, became
completely estranged from their families. This is a sore point in the Cape
‘Coloured’ community. However, religious pluralism played some role in
ameliorating the effect.
Philoxenia and Compassion ushered in
After a prayer session at Customs’ House where Home Affairs were serving refugees on Friday
13 April 2007, Friends from Abroad
decided to start feeding the refugees and other foreigners there once a week in
conjunction with Straatwerk and local churches. This looked lilke
another wonderful opportunity to get local churches involved in a combined
effort to demonstrate the unity of the Body of Christ practically. With the
agency Straatwerk we networked wonderfully, but from the churches’ side
only the German Stadtmission came on board with two volunteers.
The influx of Black African refugees into the suburbs
Woodstock and Salt River has been turning around a situation where gangsters
and prostitutes had threatened to make these township-like suburbs hotspots of
crime. Because of other reasons however, these new residents were not valued.
The flood of refugees – many of them came because of economic reasons - caused
xenophobia. South African Blacks saw the
newcomers as a threat and competition to the already tight employment market.
This unfortunately drove some of the expatriates to the lucrative drug trade -
and criminals were soon on hand to take control of mafia-style operations.
In contrast to that, the Cape Town
Baptist Church turned out to become a model for other congregations, not
only by taking care of some foreigners from 1996, but also in being blessed by
them - indeed a 21st century version of the French Huguenots.
On 21 May, 2008 a nationally orchestrated mass xenophobic outburst also
came to the Cape. At a well-attended Transformation/Consultation
of Christian Churches planning
meeting on 31 May 2008 in Parow, it was exciting to hear how various churches
enquired how they could join in compassionate action on behalf of the displaced
foreigners.
Interdenominational
Initiatives The
intensive prayer on many a Friday night into the next morning, plus
intercession on some Saturday mornings, especially by those coming from the
Congo region, augured well for the future. There are unfortunately however still
only few links between fellowships of foreigners and the rest of the Body of
the Messiah at the Cape.
For many years I hoped that a
prayer meeting with local intercessors across denominational barriers would be
started. Over the years a few of them started and dissipated again. Therefore I
got quite excited that such a prayer meeting at a facility of Operation Mobilisation called Chanua, 86
Long Street, has been going strong for a number of months. They start
at 21h every Friday night, going into the early morning hours of Saturday morning. This has been initiated by our
long-time friend and board member of Friends
from Abroad, Pastor Anaclet
Mbayagu from Burundi, who started the initiative in mid-2015. It is
still early days to see if other local believers who also started to join in,
will do so perseveringly.
Other Expressions of Bondage
Other forms of bondage have to be tackled before Black
South African missionaries can stream forth in numbers of any magnitude. All
sorts of magic, horoscope, witchcraft and ancestral worship have brought
millions in bondage through the influence of the occult. Secret curses and
spells have been put on Christians. Many Black pastors have made compromises
with ancestral worship and hereditary occult forms, sometimes under the
pressure of the family or their community. Even though the power of the blood
of Jesus has protected them, it may still be that a ministry in power is
effectively hampered through these occult influences of the past. As a rule,
the people involved must first be liberated and the hereditary effect of their
ancestor worship cut off in the name of Jesus.
On the other hand, an over-emphasis on
healing has also caused bondage. Some Christians have been running from one
faith healing service with a prominent speaker to the next, becoming addicted
to consumerism in the process. Even some gifted speakers have been deceived in
this way, unwittingly encouraging superficiality instead of encouraging
believers to seek holistic liberation. It has often been overlooked that Jesus
denounced the chronic sign-seeking attitude of people. We read that he ‘sighed
deeply’ because of this (Mark 8:10-12). Could it be that his sigh was so deep
because the religious leaders of his day, the Pharisees and Sadducees, were
taking the lead in this sign seeking? We note that Jesus warned his disciples
to watch out for the ‘yeast’ of these people. The ‘yeast’ is still fermenting,
operating unchecked. Churches often radiate a sour or morbid atmosphere, rather
than a sweet fragrance unto the Lord. Thus one often finds serious and sour
faces singing ‘halleluja’, clearly not conveying the content of the hymns.
Matthew 23 contains a stinging attack on the religious establishment of Jesus'
day. Much of this could be applied to present-day conditions in churches, where
the words of men, notably via Prosperity Theology, ferment like yeast. Yes,
they are like cancer that makes the Body of Christ very sickly indeed.
The watering down of the authority of
Scripture at the ecumenical conference in 1910 at Edinburgh ushered in a fermenting
process. Fairly big denominations now have difficulties to define marriage in a
biblical way, viz. as the union between one man and one wife. A return to the undiluted
and unadulterated Word of God is absolutely necessary to stop the rot.
Run-up to a new Season of Spiritual
Warfare
The intention of the ANC to commit the
country to the ancestors of ANC founders and past leaders at its centenary
celebrations from 6-8 January 2012 caused a season of renewed intensive
spiritual warfare. Pastor Light Eze, a Nigerian pastor,
responded obediently to a divine call to rally the Church at the Cape to repentance and prayer.
He initiated '8 Days of prevailing
prophetic prayers ...' I shared with the folk how the believers were
challenged to uplift Jesus at a Bar Mitzwah occasion on 3 December at
Rhodes Memorial. This was the cue to make Jesus we enthrone you our theme song.
Subsequently
it was suggested that we cherish and celebrate the Christ-like legacy of ANC
founders like John Dube and Albert Luthuli, but oppose the abomination of
ancestor worship.
South African Messianic Jews
Various
South African Messianic Jews played a special role in the outreach to Jews in
this country over the years. Two names stand out in recent decades, viz. Manfred Nochomowitz and Baruch
Maayan. The former ministered predominantly in Gauteng. Baruch Maayan hails
from there. Hecame into prominence as pastor of the Beth Ariel Jewish Messianic congregation in Sea Point in the
mid-1990s.
A Continental Prayer Project, with the theme ‘The Spiritual Highway
of Revival from Africa through the Middle-East to Israel’ was formally
started on 15th November 2014 during the All Nations Convocation at the Lighthouse Christian Centre
in Cape Town, South Africa. The “Four Giants Confronting
Africa” were idedntified as the Giant from the North - the Bondwoman Religion Islam; the Giant from the East - the Chinese
Re-colonization Agenda; the Giant from the South - Idolatry; the
Giant from the West - Religion of
Human Rights. Under this theme, intercessors in Africa were
invited to focus on these areas every three months.
The future will reveal the impact of regular
radio programmes among Cape Jews, notably thatof Messiah’s People presented by Edith Sher on Sunday afternoons via
CCFM and Esther Krűger via Radio
Tygerberg. Leigh Telli (Messianic
Testimony) has been spreaking often on the latter programme.
A new Pan-African Lobby Group
Millions of pro-Israeli Christians are on the move
– and linking up in a newly-formed Pan-African lobby group. Well-known Cape
Israel lobbyist-couple Luba and Ncedi Mayekiso have signed up 600,000 followers
of their new Africa for Israel Christian Coalition (AFICC) and many are
joining weekly. Luba
Mayekiso became the South African President
of the International Christian Embassy in
Jerusalem (ICEJ) in 2015(??)
The
International Christian Embassy in
Jerusalem has
its
conference in Cape Town this year that will culminate in the final events in
the International Convention Centre on
Sunday 22 May,
2016.
A possible Catalyst towards spiritual Renewal ` To get the Body of our Lord at
the Cape in action for bringing the Good News to its two main unreached groups,
the Muslims and the Jews, remains a major challenge. I propose that combined
expression of the Body of Christ in remorseful confession and repentance could
be a catalyst towards spiritual renewal. It would be great if local churches
could muster forces in prayer and action towards godly governance. This would
be but a small - and yet significant – step. How wonderful it would be if
church leaders could be the channel, voicing regret which could ignite remorse;
that so many of our forebears claimed that the Church came in the place of the
nation of Israel. Some of our co-religionists like Waraqah bin Naufal have been
misleading Muhammad and because of that, millions are now caught in the web of
religious bondage. Confession for doctrinal bickering that led to centuries of
religious conflict is long overdue.
A nudge -
humanly speaking - could be the acknowledgement that Islam is the result of
heretical Christianity and distorted Judaism.[69]
A precedent
has been set in Rustenburg in 1990 when White participants confessed their ‘racial arrogance toward black
culture’. It is high
time that the Church (not only) in this country should follow this up regarding
Judaism and Islam. It is my firm belief that the
verbalizing of remorseful regret – along with any restitution that might be
appropriate - could go a long way towards ushering in a new future for all of
us on the African continent and beyond, as followers of the King of Kings and
the Lord of Lords! In Luke 4:18-21 our Lord has set out the path of God’s
mission to the world, viz. an evangelizing dimension – Good News to the poor; a
healing and liberating dimension - restoring sight to the blind and freedom to
the oppressed, also to the spiritually blind and those bound with religious
chains!
The Middle East Conflict Divides and
Unites
Anti-Semitism
was for many centuries a blight in European history but it has spread and taken
root in many countries. During the presidency of Nelson Mandela this country
could still play some mediatory role, given the fairly fresh memory of
negotiations that led to the democratic set-up after 1994. Anti-Semitic cancer evolved however at the
turn of the millenium also in this country. Hatred of Israel among Muslims via
false religious doctrine went to the more pervasive realm of politics and human
rights.
One of the most active theatres in this
relentless global campaign against Israel has been crafted around the false
libel that Israel is an apartheid state. This originated primarily from the World Conference Against Racism held in
Durban, South Africa, during September 2001 that was organised by the United Nations. On 9 July 2005 the global campaign started
targeting Israel, attempting to increase economic and political
pressure on Israel to comply with the stated goals of the movement: the end of Israeli
occupation of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
A significant impact on faith among
Jews in Israel started here at the Cape with the formation of the David and Jonathan Foundation. The
founder and leader, Jack Carstens, had been living in Israel with his family from 1976-80 where he was
the Trade Attachė on behalf of the
South African government. The David and
Jonathan Foundation was founded in 1996 to support the small Messianic
congregations in Israel, whose numbers were significantly augmented by
additions from the former Soviet repubics.. This had a huge impact
nevertheless. From a few hundred followers of the Messiah Yeshuah at that time,
there are now quite a few thousands spread all over the country.
Well-known
Cape Israel lobbyist-couple Luba and Ncedi Mayekiso played
a special role in the fight against the negative effect of the Boycott Divestments and
Sanctions (BDS) Campaign which is centred in
South Africa. While working as a banker, Luba also began to
study and preach as a lay minister. Though he considered pursuing ordination,
he felt God clearly leading him into public advocacy. At the same time, he and
his wife began to explore the biblical roots of their faith. Luba Mayekiso,
along with his wife Ncedi, is a rising voice for biblical values and support
for Israel in his native land and across Africa.
Various South African Messianic Jews
played a special role in the outreach ot Jews in this country over the
decaades. Two names stand out in recent decades, viz. Manfred Nochomowitz and Baruch Maayan.
The former ministered predominantly in Gauteng. Baruch Maayan hailed from there
but he only came into prominence as pastor of the Beth Ariel congreation in Sea
Point.
Conclusion
Paul Billheimer made some profound
statements in his book Destined for the
Throne about the role of the prayerful church.[70] He
suggested for example that the church wields the balance of power ‘in overcoming disintegration and decay
in the cosmic order’. Unity of the Body of Christ is unquestionably a top
priority. Will Cape Christians rise to the challenge? Questions like these will
keep us busy in time to come. Sharing of resources – material and spiritual –
and visible demonstration across the board that all walls of partition have
been broken down, would be a signpost indicating that we are en route to
God’s new age, to the reign of the Messiah.
It would be great if local churches could start dropping their narrow
parochial mind-sets, and begin to radiate the image of the rainbow nation,
reflecting a full spectrum of colours of the manifold wisdom of God (Ephesians
3:10). This does not mean that every fellowship would be involved with all
these aspects, but as the Church – with the capital C - joins and networks, the
coming of the Bridegroom could be ushered in. Together we would then be able to
cry out with joy and expectation: Maranatha! Come Lord Jesus, our King of
Kings!
The new
millennium brought significant growth in the house church movement. Sometimes
this caused some stress and/or strife. We must pray that this may be overcome
through co-operation and networking. The emphasis should be to get to those who
would never otherwise be reached with the Gospel.
May I highlight Psalm 133 once again,
‘Behold, how good and how pleasant it is for brothers to
dwell together in unity! It
is like the precious oil upon the head, coming down upon the beard, even
Aaron's beard, coming down upon the edge of his robes’. Would it be too preposterous to suggest Church unity as something which
is so powerful that it would incur God’s special blessing, if we could unite
the disparate but related Abrahamic three religious groups under the banner of
the Lamb locally? I refer to groups such as Muslim background followers of
Jesus and Messianic Jews - along with those who enjoyed a Christian upbringing
and who have been born again by faith in Jesus as their Lord
and Saviour.
Selected Bibliography
Berger, Klaus – Qumran und Jesus – Wahrheit unter
Verschluss?, Quell Verlag Stuttgart, 1993
Beyreuther, Erich
- Der Junge Zinzendorf, Francke Buchhandlung, Marburg/Lahn, 1957,
Beyreuther, Erich
-Studien zur Theologie
Zinzendorfs, (Neukirchener Verlag, 1962)
Brother Andrew - Building
in a broken World, Tyndale House Publishers, Wheaton, 1981
-
Light Force,
the only hope for the Middle East, Open Doors
International, London, 2004
Cassidy, Michael – The Passing
Summer: A South African pilgrimage in the politics of love,
Hodder and
Stoughton, London, 1989
Coomes, Anne - African Harvest, Monarch Books,
London, 2002
De Gruchy,
John - The Church Struggle in South Africa, Eerdmans, Grand Rapids,
1979 Knighton-Fitt, Jean - Beyond
Fear, Pretext Publishers, Cape Town, 2003
Lewis,
Anthony J. The ecumenical pioneer,
(SCM Press, London, 1962
Lütjeharms, Het philadelphisch streven der Herrnhutter
in de Nederlanden in de 18de eeuw, Zeist, 1935
Matthews, Arthur,
Voor de strijd geboren, Evangelische
Lektuur Kruistocht, Apeldoorn, n.d
(Original
title: Born for Battle, 1978)
Murray, Andrew - Key to the missionary Problem, published by James Nisbet, London,
1901; contemporised by Leona F. Choy and published by
Christian Literature Crusade, Fort Washington, 1979.
Nielsen, Sigurd –
Der Toleranzgedanke bei Zinzendorf,
Vol.1, Ludwig Appel Verlag, Hamburg, 1951
Piper, John – Let
the Nations be glad, Baker Book House Company, Grand Rapids, 2003
Praamsma, L - De Kerk van alle Tijden, Volumes
1-IV I, T.Wever, Franeker (NL), 1979-1981
Spangenberg,
August -Das Leben des Herrn Nicolaus
Ludwig Grafen und Herrn Zinzendorf und Pottendorf,
facsimile reproduction
of the edition 1773-1775, Georg Olms Verlag, 1971,
Steinberg H.G., Schütz, H.I.C.,
Lütjeharms, W., Van der Linde, J.M., Zinzendorf, Callenbach, Nijkerk
(NL), 1960
Thomas, David – Christ Divided,
Liberalism, Ecumenism and Race in South Africa, Unisa Press, Pretoria, 2002
Tucker, Ruth – From Jerusalem to
Irian Jaya, Zondervan, Grand Rapids (USA), 2004
Uttendörfer, Otto and Schmidt, Walter
(ed) Die Brüder, aus Vergangenheit und
Gegenwart der Brüdergemeine, Verlag des Vereins für Brüdergeschichte,
Herrnhut, 1914
Van der Linde, J.M., - God’s Wereldhuis, Uitgeverij Ton
Bolland, Amsterdam, 1980
Verkuyl, J. - Breek de Muren af, Bosch en Keuning, Baarn, 1969
Visser ‘t Hooft, W.A. - The
pressure of our common calling, SCM, London, 1959
Wagner, C. Peters and Wilson, (ed) - Praying through the 100 gateway cities of
the 10/40 window, YWAM publishing, Seattle, 1995,
Wagner, C. Peter (ed.) - Breaking strongholds in your City, Regal Books,, Ventura (USA),
1993
Walker, Williston - A History of the Christian Church, T. & T. Clark, Edinburgh, 1976 (1919)
Weinlick, John R. - Count
Zinzendorf, Abington Press, New York, 1956
Zinzendorf, N - Nine
Lectures, Edited and translated by George W. Forell, University of Iowa
Press, Iowa, 1973
Appendix 1: Some Autobiographical Background
Ever since my sister Magdalene returned
excitedly from an ecumenical week-end youth event at Applethwaite in Elgin – in the apple growing district of
Grabouw around 1960 - I recognised that the unity of believers across the
racial and denominational barriers could be quite important in the spiritual
realm. A young White student from Rhodes University had rattled my
sister's inculcated and socially conditioned racial mind-set. (In a country as ours where racial
classification has caused such damage, I am aware that the designation Coloured
has given offence to the racial group into which I have been classified. For this reason, I put ‘Coloured’
consistently between inverted commas and with a capital C when I refer to this
racial group. To the other races I refer as ‘Black’, ‘White’ and 'Indian'
respectively, with a capital B, W and I. The former two races, Black and White,
are written with capitals to note that they do not refer to normal colours and
the latter group refers to persons from Indian descent, but born and bred in
this country.)
I thought as a teenager that the most
effective opposition to the heretical apartheid ideology would be to assemble
Christians from different racial and denominational backgrounds as often as
possible, to demonstrate the unity of followers of Jesus in this way. However,
my conviction was more intuitive because my knowledge of the Bible was still
very limited,
A turning Point in my
Life
A major turning point
in my life occurred when two different teenage friends nudged me to attend the
evangelistic outreach of the Students’ Christian Association (SCA) at
the seaside resort of Harmony Park near Gordon's Bay that was scheduled to
start just after Christmas at the end of 1964. There I was not only spiritually
revived, but there I also received an urge to network with people from
different church backgrounds. Multi-racial work camps at Langgezocht in the
mountains of the Moravian Mission station Genadendal from the mid-1960s - to
help build a youth camp site there - gave me the rare opportunity to meet
students from other racial groups in a natural setting.
A
church-sponsored stint in Germany in 1969 and 1970 included study and practical
experience in youth work as well as studies of the biblical languages. Wherever
I had the opportunity to address groups in Germany, I highlighted the
ecclesiastical disunity, the fragmentation of the Body of Christ in my
diagnosis of the einzigartige (unique) problems of South Africa. (The
other two problems that I mentioned in these talks were racial discrimination -
apartheid was still fairly unknown in Germany - and alcoholism) At this time I
would also read everything that I could get hold of what Martin Luther King
(jr) had written (This was banned material in South Africa).
Quest for visible Expression of the Unity in
Christ
The importance of the visible expression of
the unity of followers of Jesus grew further after my return to my home country
in October 1970. However, in a rather overdrawn and misguided anti-apartheid
activism, I joined the Christian Institute (CI) soon thereafter, hoping
that White members would also be willing to expose themselves to the
possibility of arrest for breaking petty apartheid laws. (The CI was started by
Dr
Beyers Naudé to bring Christians
from the different races together to study God’s Word. The CI policy at that
time was to respect the law, although the apartheid laws were so immoral and
discriminating.)[71]
My activism probably estranged the young White friends.
I met my future wife Rosemarie in May 1970 in an
infatuation-at-first-sight encounter in Stuttgart. After my wife-to-be had been
refused a work permit and thus entry into South Africa in order to get
reclassified as a 'Coloured', the Moravian Church Board assisted me to
return to Germany.[72] Rosemarie and I married in March 1975.
(In)voluntary Exile
In the first few years of my (in)voluntary
exile in Germany there was little opportunity to translate my conviction of a clear
expression of the Unity of the Body of Christ practically.
During
the final part of my theological studies in Bad Boll, near to Stuttgart in
Southern Germany, the legacy of Jan Amos Comenius, the 17th century theologian and
last bishop of the old Czech Unitas Fratrum (Unity of the Brethren) and Count Zinzendorf, the leader of the Renewed Moravian
Church, became very dear to me. I
was ordained as a Moravian minister in September 1975. Thereafter Rosemarie and
I left for West Berlin where I co-pastored a Moravian congregation. Two years
later we moved to Broederplein
in the historical town of Zeist in Holland. There Rosemarie and I served the
predominantly Surinamese Moravian congregation of Utrecht.
I
discerned ever more clearly with the passing of time that racial and
ecclesiastical divisions were hampering a deep work of the Holy Spirit, notably
in South Africa. The need for racial reconciliation and the attempt to help
close gaps between ‘ecumenicals’ and ‘evangelicals’, as well as between the
rich and the poor, became increasingly important to me as I became aware how
much of a micro-cosmos my home country was. In
November 1978 I needed divine healing from my anger towards the apartheid
government and my denomination for their indifference towards the gross injustices
of the day during a six week stint in the country with my wife and our first
born son Danny. God used the banned Dr Beyers Naudé - who was basically under
house arrest to make me determined to labour towards reconciliation between the
estranged population groups and races.
I
hereafter entered into intense correspondence with various agencies in what I perceived
as a calling to achieve reconciliation in my divided home country. I felt an
intense challenge to oppose the demonic tenets of church rivalry and
competition, by stressing the unity of the Body of Christ, as well as fighting
the diabolical economic disparity and structural injustice in a low-key
manner. I hoped and prayed that South
Africa might give an example to the world at large, not only in respect of
racial reconciliation, but also in the voluntary sharing of resources.
Blessing of united Prayer
Linked to this was also the blessing of united prayer, which was
repeatedly confirmed during a six-month stint in South Africa[73] - as we attempted to address the racial barrier
in a low-profiled way. We were very much
encouraged by a multi-racial group of believers from different denominations in
Stellenbosch. The group had been started by Professor Nico Smith and a few
pastors as a sequel to the South African
Church Leaders’ Assembly (SACLA) event in Pretoria in 1979. At that special
occasion church leaders across the board broke ecclesiastic and racial barriers
unprecedentedly.
Another networking initiative with local ministers of other
churches saw me deeply embroiled in the Crossroads saga of May 1981 taking big
risks and linking closely with Rev. Douglas Bax, who had been a friend of our
Moravian theological seminary in District Six. We were very thankful to hear
later that two pivotal apartheid laws were removed from the statute books -
influx control for Blacks, which led to the establishment of Khayalitsha, and
the prohibition of racially mixed marriages. What a special privilege it was
that I could contribute to some extent to the repeal of these two pillars of
apartheid.
In Holland I tried to put the lessons of the unity of the
Body of Christ to good effect that I had been learning. A first big nudge came
in 1982 from Rens Schalkwijk, a teenager who had returned from Jamaica with his
Moravian missionary parents a few years earlier. He suggested that we pray
together - in the footsteps of our Moravian ancestors - early in the morning in
the nearby Zeist forest.
Soon Rosemarie and I were
leading the Goed Nieuws Karavaan
(GNK) initiative of Zeist and surrounds. This we did from 1982 until the end of
1991. Our vision to give visibility to the Body of
Christ locally was partially realized during this ministry when soon we had
about 30 co-workers coming from the full ecclesiastic spectrum, from Roman
Catholic to Pentecostal. We were blessed with holistic practical fellowship, in
which believers from different denominational backgrounds participated.
Concerts of Prayer
Rens Schalkwijk gave us another nudge in early 1988, this time to start
a small prayer group, along with two students of the local Pentecostal Bible
School. The US prayer leader Dave Bryant visited Holland to promote Concerts of
Prayer. A Dutch YWAM leader initiated regional prayer groups as a sequel to
Dave Bryant's visit. In no time our geographic area became the first Regiogebed
of the country, attended by Christians from quite diverse denominational
backgrounds. The monthly events included prayer for local evangelistic work,
praying for missionaries that had been leaving our region to serve in missions
and for individual countries.
At
the prayer meetings of the ‘Regiogebed’, with Christian participants
from different church backgrounds we prayed for local issues, for missionaries
who left from our area, but also for countries. In 1989 we prayed especially
for Communist countries, notably for the German Democratic Republic, Hungary
and Romania.
At our ‘regiogebed’meeting
of 4 October 1989, I mentioned in passing to someone that I had posted a letter
to President De Klerk that day. Spontaneously Mr. van Loon, a teacher from the
nearby town of Doorn, who was no regular at our prayer meetings, who overheard this, suggested that we devote
more time that evening to pray for South Africa. Nobody objected. The whole
prayer meeting was hereafter devoted to praying for my beloved country. That
was the only occasion when we prayed so intensely for a single country.
Nobody present at the prayer
meeting was aware that President De Klerk would meet Archbishop Tutu and Dr
Allan Boesak the next week. That strategic meeting became in a sense a
watershed in the politics of the country, the prelude to the release of Nelson
Mandela and the end of apartheid. Also in other countries - especially in South
Africa itself - people had been praying for a change in the suicidal direction
of the political system.[74]
Back in Cape Town
I was back in Cape Town in January 1992 – this time
with my own family,
including my wife and our five children. We wanted to bring into practice what
we had learned about spiritual warfare during our training as missionaries of Worldwide Evangelization
for Christ (WEC). Thus
we endeavoured to stimulate
non-denominational targeted prayer almost from the outset. Initially we
targeted the residential area Bo-Kaap, an Islamic stronghold because of
apartheid. With a few other believers we started praying for Bo-Kaap fairly
soon. Later we also added Sea Point and the Middle East, praying for Jews and
Muslims.[75]
We prayed during the
lunch hour on Fridays with individual believers for many years. From this
prayer initiative many a blessed ministry evolved such as hospital ministry and
outreach to foreigners.
One of the events organised in 1993 by
the Western Cape Missions Commission
was a workshop with John Robb of World
Vision. The list of participants at this event was used to organize the
Cape Jesus Marches the following
year. In this way I updated my contacts for further mission endeavour in the
Western Cape. I had high expectations when I co-ordinated about 20 prayer
marches in different parts of the Cape Peninsula, making strategic contacts at
this time. I had been hoping
that this venture would result in a network of prayer for a breakthrough among
Cape Muslims across the Peninsula. However, the initial interest that our second
attempt with an updated audio-visual had ignited in various areas, soon fizzled
out. Nevertheless, Sally Kirkwood, a Cape intercessor,
had already been prepared by the Lord when she started a prayer meeting at her
home in Plumstead. Along with other intercessors she became God’s instrument
for increasing prayer awareness in the Mother City.
In the beginning of 1997 I
was able to give the contact details that I still possessed from the Jesus Marches of 1994 to Reverend Cynthia
Richards from Africa Enterprise was another instrument in this regard.
She visited the various ministers’ fraternals of the Peninsula, while
organising prayer meetings in preparation for the Franklin Graham campaign at
the Newlands Cricket Stadium.
It was truly significant
for the Cape Town Metropolis in April 1997 when churches across the city and
from many denominations joined hands for a big campaign on the Newlands
Cricket Stadium with the evangelist Franklin Graham, the son of the
renowned Billy Graham. Pastor Walter
Ackerman from the Docks Mission Church in Lentegeur and Pastor Elijah
Klaassen from a Pentecostal church in Gugulethu/ Crossroads, worked tirelessly
to enlist people from the Cape Flats and Black churches for this event.
Transport from the townships was provided free of charge. This served as a
model for the Transformation stadium events of the new millennium.
Fighting PAGAD
My participation in the Western
Cape Missions Commission became the backdrop of my organizing Jesus
Marches in the Western Cape in 1994. This coincided with an attempt to
start a regional prayer network for Muslim Evangelism. The most visible result in this period was when
I worked alongside various local pastors in the Cape Peace Initiative
(CPI). We succeeded with God's help to nullify the PAGAD (People against Gangsterism and Drugs) attempt from 1996 to islamize the Western Cape. A
big factor in this regard was the networking with the local Christian radio station Cape Community FM (CCFM). At this time I was also very much involved
with city-wide prayer events, led by Pastor Eddie Edson of Mitchell's Plain.
Those city-wide prayer events ultimately became the forerunner of the big Newland Rugby Stadium event on 21 March
2001 and the annual Global Day of Prayer that started in 2005.[76]
Praying at different Venues
With Pastor Louis Pasques and the late Pastor Edgar Davids, , I came
together for prayer on a weekly basis. From this base we attempted to get
pastors and local believers of the Cape Town City Bowl to operate in unity, but
we harvested only limited success.
Pastor
Richard Mitchell had been praying over the city with Christians from the
heights at Rhodes Memorial. We adapted this cue to start monthly early
morning prayer from Signal Hill in 1998, praying for Bo-Kaap, Sea Point and often
also for a greater expression of the unity of the body of Christ in the CBD.
Unity appears on the Horizon
In preparation for the 2006 Global
Day of Prayer, prayer drives were organised. The prayer drives converged at the Central
Police Station in Buitenkant Street. God used this event to touch at least
one person in a special way. Wim Ferreira had been invited to work with the
Deputy Mayor of the metropolis.
When all the groups had arrived at the former freemason lodge,
Daniel Brink, the co-ordinator of the event, asked me to share in a few words
how God had changed things at the police station. I became too emotional.
However, at this moment, Wim Ferreira was deeply moved. He promptly requested a
room for prayer in the metropolitan Civic Centre where he had just
started to work. This was another divinely orchestrated move. After a few
months, a regular Friday prayer time with Wim Barry and me was functioning in a
board room of the Civic Centre.
Before long, a trickle
of workers from all walks of life was coming to faith in Jesus as their Lord as
a result of these prayers. On Wednesdays at lunch time believers from different
denominational backgrounds gathered there to pray and intercede for the city. The Lord also challenged Wim Ferreira to start a 24-hour prayer
facility at the Civic
Centre
premises. Soon a prayer room near to the parking area on the
ground floor was frequented by many people throughout the day. The foundation stone towards 24/7 prayer in
the CBD of the metropolis was laid.
The Lord put the unity of
the
Body of Christ on our
prayer
agenda once again
The Lord had put the unity of the
Body of Christ on our prayer agenda once again. We continued with efforts to
get Capetonian believers to pray together.
This was to us an important step towards the revival we yearned for.
Pastor Barry Isaacs became the new co-ordinator of Transformation
Africa. As a result of their deliberations, prayer meetings started in
October 2007 at the Uni-City Council Chambers on the third Saturday morning
of every month at 5.30 a.m. Wonderful answers to prayer were subsequently
experienced month after month. At one of these occasions, the lack of the
availability of the Civic Centre Banqueting Hall for a combined prayer
event on Ascension Day touched Peter Williams, the secretary of the Provincial
Parliament. He promptly extended a provisional invitation to the group to come
and pray there as well.
On 31 May 2008 more than 100 believers gathered in the
legislative house of the Western Cape for prayer at 6 a.m. Three days later
there was a hush – and no mocking - as two Christians shared their biblical
convictions at the same venue, as part of normal parliamentary procedure. This
was for Peter Williams a direct result of the united prayer at that venue! The implementation of unity on biblical grounds in
the spirit of the person and example of Jesus - without semantics (notably playing with words) and doctrinal bickering around
issues like baptism and women in the pulpit – started appearing on the horizon.
The
2010 Soccer World Cup
After the failure of the Church in our country
to hone in on an opportunity towards effective networking during the xenophobic
mob attacks of May and June 2008, we latched on to the national outreach effort that was
launched in the country with the 2010 Soccer World Cup called The Ultimate
Goal (TUG). This was a very positive experience but it still only resulted
in limited networking. In attempted mediation between two strong missionary
personalities of Muslim evangelism, I had a very traumatic experience.
Both
the Global Day of Prayer and Lausanne III events of 2010 did
not live up to our high expectations to foster unity among the Bride of Christ
in the city. The 2011 initiatives of 'Strengthening the Ties' of followers of
Jesus and 'Fire Trails' straddled man-made
boundaries and barriers, but these events had no significant noticeable impact.
The Church universal still has
to acknowledge collective guilt for the doctrinal squabbling that led to the
establishment and rise of Islam. The maltreatment and side-lining of Jews by
Christians fall in the same category. If
they are not repented of and confessed, these issues will remain hurdles in the
way of a collective turn around by Islam or Judaism in my view.
Study of Revivals
In the course of my love for historical
research I furthermore discerned how revivals followed as a rule from a unity
or fellowship of praying believers. By way of contrast, disunity – accompanied
at the Cape by denominational rivalry, personal ambition, envy and racial
prejudice - seems to have been a major stifling factor for the work of the Holy
Spirit to come to full fruition[?].
Renaming
of 'Devil's Peak'
At the
beginning of 2009 the Lord put the public demonstration of the unity of the
Body of Christ quite strongly on my heart once again. This time I hoped to
assist in uniting believers with the possible renaming of 'Devil's Peak'. I
linked up with Pastor Barry Isaacs and Murray Bridgman, a local advocate, who
had been praying with us at different venues over a number of years. Our
attempt included a meeting on 4 February 2012, I almost became the tragic
victim via a massive heart attack in the night from 30 to 31 January of that
year. A new missionary colleague, Tess Seymore, started out excitedly with me
and another young brother, as we contacted churches all over the City Bowl in
the Dove’s Peak Prayer Network. This petered out quite soon however to
bring me back to Psalm 127:2 ‘If the Lord does not build the house… the
builders toil in vain.’
The mistakes of the arch enemy tend
to be among the best weapons in the arsenal of the Holy Spirit to unify the
body of Christ at the Cape. The brutality of the SA police in the mid-1980s,
fuelled by a callous government when many innocent children were killed, was
the run-up to country-wide prayer and ultimately to an end of apartheid. The St
James Church (Kenilworth) massacre of July 1993 by Azapo guerilla
freedom fighters and the PAGAD threat of 1996-99 to islamise the Western Cape,
as the start of a process to capture the continent by the turn of the century,
were possibly the most significant catalysts the last few decades to get
Christians praying across denominational boundaries.
Divine Nudges towards One-ness of Followers of Christ
At the
beginning of 2010 I was deeply touched when I discerned that Isaac and Ishmael,
the two eldest sons of Abraham, had actually buried their father together (Genesis 25:9). The
evident reconciliation was probably preceded by confession and some remorse. Or
was there some reconciling agent involved?
On 11 October 2010 the Lord ministered to me from Romans 1:16
when we received the Lausanne Consultation for Jewish Evangelism (LCJE)
Quarterly Bulletin. That edition of the LCJE Bulletin highlighted the legacy of
Moishe Rosen, the founder of Jews for Jesus. In the paper that Rosen
delivered as part of the Jewish Evangelism track at Lausanne II in Manila in
1989, he highlighted 'Jews first' from Romans 1:16. The very next day our friend Brett Viviers,
a Messianic Jewish believer and long-time friend, visited me. This led to the beginning of Ishmael Isaac Ministries and another attempt at Muslim/Jewish dialogue and reconciliation,
an effort to link Messianic Jewish believers and Muslim background believers at
the Cape.
I thought to have discerned
another 'missing link' that same month, viz. that revivals were, as a rule,
accompanied by deep remorse over personal and national sins. This would then often
result in the shedding of 'rivers of tears'. I shared this insight on Signal Hill
and at a few other occasions. In the run-up to Lausanne III in October 2010 in our city, I was deeply moved to
'discover' the disobedience and neglect of the Church at large in reaching out
'to the Jews first' (Romans 1:16f). I was especially moved again how the
Jews were side-lined by our Christian ancestors. (In my
research I had been discerning anew how our Christian forbears have haughtily stated
that the Church replaced the nation of Israel and the Jews.)
Soon thereafter I was thoroughly
humbled and embarrassed when I sobbed publicly and uncontrollably. I was
completely overwhelmed by a sense of guilt towards Jews while I felt an urge to
apologise on behalf of Christians for our disobedience and for the fact that we
have been side-lining the Jews. The
trigger at that occasion was the return of Pastor Baruch Maayan and his family
from Israel. He and the family was responding in obedience to a call by the
Holy Spirit to come to the Cape. He shared that he felt like Jonah to have received
a second chance to minister to believers here.
I started to pray more
intensely that a representative body of Christians might express regret and
offer an apology on behalf of Christians for the side-lining and persecution of
Jews by Christians. A meeting on the Saturday afternoon of
23 October at a private address in Milnerton with the Maayan family was a
defining moment. Baruch shared his conviction that he was sent to Cape Town a
second time to challenge believers with the highway message. This would lead to
Highway meetings every last Saturday of the month in Sea Point. A close link developed
between us and the Maayan family, a visit to Israel in 2011 and ultimately to
the building of a north facing prayer facility at our home that we dubbed the
Isaiah 19 prayer room.
The
threat of our country to be put under the rule of ancestors at the centenary
celebrations in Bloemfontein in January 2012 caught the imagination of
intercessors in a big way. Here at the Cape the Lord used Pastor Light Eze, a
Nigerian pastor, to bring believers together unprecedentedly. We linked the
ogre of demonic ancestor spirit rule to the effort to change the name of a
well-known mountain summit to Doves' Peak. The result was a new season of spiritual warfare
including '8 Days of prevailing prophetic prayers...' during which we sang every evening Jesus,
we enthrone you! Fairly
spectacular answers to prayer followed and there were also supernatural
phenomena which gave us great expectations. Events to highlight the five-hold ministry later in the
year kept the prayer for revival alive.
A
significant move in the spiritual realm occurred when Pastor Maditshaba Moloko
was appointed as the co-ordinator for the annual Jerusalem prayer
convocation.in 2014. The gifted intercessor and visionary moved with her
business into office space to the 20th floor of the Thibault Square
Building on the Capetonian Foreshore in mid-2015. Soon thereafter a monthly
prayer meeting for Jerusalem started there. This would become the venue for
many strategic city-wide meetings linked to prayer events, such as meetings
ahead of the big event at the Lighthouse in July 2015 and a prayer event with
Pastor Baruch Maayan at Cape Point on 11 December that was organised on very
short notice.
Appendix 2: Passover – Easter Divergent dates in 2015.
From the time of Yeshua’s death and resurrection until the third
century A.D., believers in Yeshua tied the Lord’s resurrection to the
celebration of Passover. However, as various bishops took the place once
held by the apostles, decisions were made in order to separate the faith
from its Jewish roots. It was from this turn of events that the
Resurrection came to be celebrated apart from the Passover. At the
Council of Nicaea in 325 A.D., the final decree was made that Easter be
observed on the first Sunday after the first full moon of Spring, and not in conjunction with
Passover. After this Council, the emperor Constantine sent out a letter
to all those who were not able to be present informing them of the
decisions made, including the decision to reject Passover and to instead
celebrate Easter:
“It was declared to be particularly unworthy
for this, the holiest of all festivals, to follow the custom[the calculation]
of the Jews, who had soiled their hands with the most fearful of crimes, and
whose minds were blinded. In rejecting their custom, we may transmit to our
descendants the legitimate mode of celebrating Easter… We ought not,
therefore, to have anything in common with the Jews, for the Savior has shown
us another way…. we desire, dearest brethren, to separate ourselves from the
detestable company of the Jews…” (From “Letter of the Emperor to all those not present at the Council:
Eusebius, Vita Const., Lib. iii., 18-20. http://legacy.fordham.edu/halsall/source/const1-easter.asp).
Appendix 3: Precedents with South
African Church Leaders
South Africa had a notable example of the result of
reconciliation of Bishop Tutu and Dr Allan Boesak in 1980. The reason for the
rift was the willingness of Bishop Tutu and other clergymen to speak to Prime
Minister P.W. Botha, while Dr Boesak and his Broederkring[77]
colleagues maintained that this would only give credibility to the evil system.
After getting reconciled the two clergymen teamed up in their opposition to
apartheid.
South
African Church leaders also set a precedent where confession of failure had
major ramifications. The occasion was a big
conference in Rustenburg in November 1990,
which became a major catalyst of change in the country at large, albeit
that the final declaration was perhaps too overtly political as opposed to
prophetic in the biblical sense. Thus one finds slogans like 'church theology'
without giving the biblical link.
The combination
of the above elements was used by God - along with the prayers of God’s people
around the world - to stave off a major bloody conflict in our country. Could
it be that unresolved estrangements or strained relationships and unforgiveness
by certain Church leaders locally, regionally or nationally might still be
blocking the free flow of Holy Spirit revival? A statement in 2010 by the
revered Archbishop Tutu, who had been so instrumental in bringing about
reconciliation in our country, was clearly divisive and unbiblical. Taking
sides in the Middle East conflict is definitely not helpful. It is regrettable
that he did not show any willingness to respond on efforts to revise his
stance, e.g. after a group of Israeli students had visited him, brought no change.
Appendix 4: (Draft)
Declaration on Christian-Muslim-Jewish Relations -
Preamble to the (Draft) Declaration
Deploring the recent outcry against Israel by certain Church
leaders, the following declaration is presented to South Africans by a group of
Cape followers of Jesus. Some of them have been raised as Jews and others as
Muslims - augmented by local Christians.[78] We are
aware that we have no mandate to speak on behalf of Christians in general.
We would like to highlight that the Bible teaches clearly
that Abraham blessed both Isaac and Ishmael. We also invite followers of Jesus
to let the acronym ISLAM stand for I Shall Love All Muslims.
Furthermore, the possible rift between Abraham's two sons –
which would have been natural after all that had transpired with Ishmael and
his slave mother - was evidently amicably resolved in their life-time. It is
recorded that both sons buried their father together (Genesis 25:9), possibly
reconciled to all intents and purposes.
We believe that it is incumbent upon followers of Christ to strive after
reconciliation between the spiritual descendants of Abraham. We do however also
wish to express our regret of the side-lining of Jews from the first century AD
onwards by Gentile Christians and that ultimately the Church was taken to have
replaced Israel.
The location of the Lausanne III Conference, the Cape Town
International Convention Centre, a mere Kilometre respectively from the
prime localities of Judaism and Islam in the Western Cape, has been a renewed
stimulus for some of us to pray more intensely that a representative body of
Christians might express regret for the above and offer an apology on behalf of
Christians for a) the side-lining and persecution of Jews by Christians b) that
Christian theologians misled the founder of Islam at the inception of that
religion.
In the light of
strained Christian-Muslim relationships and violent encounters in the past, we
deem it necessary to write down down some of our convictions that could assist
to "clear the table" for fresh meaningful interaction between the spiritual descendants of
Abraham.
The (Draft) Declaration
is not primarily a confession with regard to past
failures and transgression of Christians Yet it hopes to stimulate thought
among individuals or groups to evaluate it and take appropriate action. Knowing
how powerfully God has used confessions in the past to bring about meaningful
change in our country – notably the confession of Church leaders at Rustenburg
in 1990 – we do ask however that Christians
and Church leaders in particular would consider drafting a confession in
respect of wrongs perpetrated by our forebears to Muslims in general, and more
explicitly to Cape Muslims. Similarly, we believe that a general confession on
behalf of Christians for arrogantly regarding the Church to have replaced
Israel and the Jews is long overdue.
The (Draft) Declaration
however merely suggests steps of an appropriate response which could be
contemplated and prayerfully applied under God's guidance for each local
context. In short, the Declaration should make
us think, pray and act.
The
(Draft) Declaration is written from
the understanding that the Bible spells out clearly that we do have a biblical
mandate to proclaim the truth, to witness and to serve. It suggests also a
reappraisal of the role of the Church at large with regard to the
situation in the Middle East. The notion that the
descendants of Isaac and Ishmael have been eternal enemies (and should remain
that way,[79]) has
hardly any biblical basis. We regret that Church leaders have all too often
compounded the age old problem of Israel and Palestine in an unreconciling way instead
of being an agent of reconciliation, e.g. by bringing together Jews and Muslims
who got reconciled through common faith and working with followers of Jesus
Christ from those backgrounds.
We also regret the disobedience of the Church at large to the
example and precepts of Jesus with regard to Jews, as exemplified and taught by
Paul, the prolific first century letter writer and missionary. Instead of
seeing the preponderance of the apple of God's eye (Deuteronomy 32:10;
Zechariah 2:8) as God's formula for world evangelism – loving
concern for and outreach to Jews first (Romans 1:16f) - the Church in general
neglected the loving and compassionate outreach to them completely. Instead,
our Christian forebears haughtily rejoiced in the perceived rejection of Israel
by the Almighty and arrogantly accepted the erroneous concept by and large that
the Church replaced Israel.
(Draft) DECLARATION[80]
As
followers of Jesus, the Christ, we have an unpaid debt to Jews and Muslims -
the message of hope in Him, our Lord and Saviour. We believe that God calls us
to share His love for the World (John 3:16) with every human being, especially
with Jews and Muslims as co-spiritual (and in some cases natural) descendants
of Abraham.
1. The early Muslim Community.
There
is no historical evidence that the man Muhammad, who is revered by Muslims as
God's final prophet to mankind, ever came to know God through faith in Jesus
personally. On the contrary, we are sad that the founder of Islam apparently
had contact with confused Christians, some of whom even denied Jesus Christ's
divinity. Strikingly, he was evidently deceived by the unbiblical veneration of
Mary, the mother of Jesus, after which he thought that Christians believed her
to be a consort, a partner to God. The founder of the religion was apparently
also devoid of clear and patient guidance by followers of our Lord who could
explain to him that God revealed himself in the person of Jesus. We deem it our
task to introduce Muslims to the God who spoke to us through Jesus the Christ
and through his revealed Word, the Bible.
2. Side-lining of Jews
We
take note that the religious leaders of Jesus' day rejected him as the promised
Messiah (John 1:1-11). In fact, Jesus
described it as the unpardonable sin that the Pharisees asserted that he was
demonically inspired after he had healed and set a demon-possessed man free
from his bondage (Matthew 12:22-37). The move caused that generation of Jews,
to reject him as Messiah - the veil that is still by and large to be removed.
Arrogance of Gentile believers towards Jews because of perceived divine
rejection of Israel and the Jews was apparently already discernible among the
first century churches. (Some Christians later deemed the Church to have
replaced Israel. This is to us tantamount to another veil covering the eyes of
the Church.) In Romans 11 Paul clearly intended to rectify this situation,
stating that the Gentile Christians were merely grafted into the true olive
tree Israel. Our vision is to see the prayer of Jesus in John 17 fulfilled that
it will become one flock and one shepherd – Jew and Gentile believers who
follow and serve him as their Messiah and Lord - and that his followers will be
brought to complete unity (v.23). This is to us congruent with the yearning of
Paul that the branches of the olive that have been broken off from the olive
tree may be grafted back, that the veil from Jews be removed.
We
thankfully note that the respective emperors of the Roman Empire, Constantine
of the West and Licinius of the East proclaimed the Edict of Milan in 313,
which established a policy of religious freedom for all. With regret we
however also take note that Constantine's proclamation of a free day on the day
of the sun, the first day of the week, side-lined Jews. In effect this also
more firmly established the erroneous view of certain Christians that the
Church replaced the nation of Israel as God's elect.
3. The Abuse of Force.
The
secular advantages given to the Church as a result of the Constantine military
victories and the subsequent reforms had a fatal side effect. The example of
Emperor Constantine to subjugate peoples was emulated by Muhammad and his
Islamic successors to bring whole nations under Islamic bondage in this way.
Augustine,
the renowned North African Church Father, set the pattern for Muhammad to react
with force if persuasion would not work. He initially accepted that there would
be godless and nominal Christians in the Church, because wheat and weed should
be able to grow next to each other until the harvest. Church discipline should
not be practised forcefully with the iron rod, but rather like that of an
operating surgeon. The erring and back-sliding believers should be brought back
to the fold with the Gospel of grace. Augustine requested the authorities to
use force to bring back the erring ones to the church. To motivate his
position, Augustine quoted Luke 14:23, ‘Force them to come in.’ With this argumentation he.’ Unwittingly, Augustine
legitimized force to subdue opposition, paving the way for the Inquisition and
the Crusades (The Inquisition became known as a harsh international secular
judiciary, where a travesty of justice became the common practice. Jews were
given the option to become Christians or be killed).
The Crusades
(1096-1270) were not honouring God, but were mostly done by Christians seeking
revenge and who were motivated by earthly gain by way of domination. The
'Crusaders' did not spread the Gospel of salvation to Jews and Muslims. In no
way can these monstrous acts be condoned. We utterly deplore them as a grave
caricature of the Gospel. It is our task to be on our guard not to fall prey to
other agenda's other than that of the Kingdom of God coming through in the
person and ministry of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. When we hereby
attempt to express regret in a small way, we would like to emphasise that we
want to refrain definitely from any"points scoring'.
4. Jews and Muslims in the colonial Era
Government
officials of the Dutch East Indian Company (DEIC), pastors and European
settlers dissuaded slaves to become Christians and thus be freed. This was
contrary to the noble DEIC decrees.
We deplore the religious intolerance of
the colonial era at the Cape when Jews and believes from other denominations
were expected to join the colonial church to participate fully in normal
activities of their society.
The colonial
period at the Cape of Good Hope was a time of little hope for slaves.
This era was marked by a decline in the missionary fervour in the Church. Due
to materialistic greed Christian slave owners encouraged their workers - as
their possessions - to rather become Muslims. Consequently, many slaves were
neglected by the Christian Church at the Cape. Many slaves subsequently
embraced Islam towards the end of the eighteenth and in the beginning of the
nineteenth century. The Christian Church and many Cape Christians have largely neglected
their prophetic task to pass on to Muslims and Jews the Good News of salvation
through faith in the death and resurrection of Jesus.
When so-called
"Christian" Western countries became obsessed with a lust for
territorial power, it resulted in colonial empires that were dominated by
Western nations of the Northern hemisphere. Muslims in Islamic countries sadly
usually came to see a distorted Jesus in the lives of so-called
"Christians", such as traders who invaded, annexed and exploited
their territory, without really intending to build the Kingdom of God. We
cannot ignore what happened or make it go away. We however want to show the
love of Jesus to Muslims through our lives. We believe the Message of Jesus the
Christ needs to be brought to Muslims (and Jews) in the uncompromising servant
attitude of Jesus.
We are however
grateful towards God for the example of individual Christian believers who
displayed compassion for downtrodden people at the Cape of Good Hope,
the slaves, the Khoi and San people. These individual believers did not shy
away from sharing their faith also with Muslims (and Jews).
5. Muslims in the Apartheid Era
It is significant that so many
apartheid laws and practices had their precedence in the attitudes and measures
against the Cape Muslims of the colonial days. We are aware that the
ideologists of apartheid took their cue from a misguided interpretation of
Scripture via the demonic ideology of Germany's Nationalist Socialism. (The
Anti-semitic Nazi leaders not only discriminated against Jews but they were
also responsible for the extermination of 6 million Jews – the Holocaust.) The
enforcement of apartheid enhanced the spread of Islam. An unknown number of
nominal Christians embraced Islam in protest because the apartheid laws were
perceived as the dealings of a ‘Christian’ government. We note sadly that the legislation and
practices of our new South African government have also been driving people
further away from a living vibrant relationship to Jesus Christ, notably with
perceived laxity regarding sexual immorality.
6. Let Your Kingdom Come.
In the light of
what happened, we as followers of Jesus Christ, concede that the Evangelical
witness through the ages, especially during recent decades here in South Africa,
was not always bold and clear. The impression was given that Allah of the
Qur'an and the God who revealed Himself in the Bible and through Jesus as the
Messiah, are identical. Notably, in the Bible, God confirmed Jesus as his Son,
whereas the Qur'an states that God does not have a son.
The impression
that Christians, Jews and Muslims serve the same God, caused many Christians to
be deceived and disillusioned after marrying into a Muslim family and then
required to forsake their faith in Jesus as Saviour and Lord. We admit that the
Church did not stand up to clear the confusion. With the co-operation of
Christian denominations and individual Christians we want to bring fresh hope
to all people.
We accept the
challenge to bring the message of salvation within the reach of all Jews and
Muslims in our vicinity and to invite Christians to become educated regarding
this challenge. Realising that in our own lives, as well as in the generations
before us, there has by and large been sin of omission with regard to Muslims
to a large extent. We now invite all South African Christians to bring this
guilt personally before God and repent of it.
May God in his
Almighty power use us to spread His love to all our neighbours irrespective of
faith, nationality or creed!
Ishmael-Isaac
Christian Ministries,
Cape Town,
February 2011
[1] Van der Linde,
J.M., De Wereld heeft toekomst, Kampen, p.197 Rather ambivalently, Erasmus resented Jews fiercely, but as a priest and
scholar, his greatest wish was to see the Church restored to the simplicity and
holiness of the Gospels.
[2] I gleaned some of the information from the
article Zinzendorf and Judaism, by Craig Attwood of the Moravian Theological
Seminary, Bethlehem (Ps, USA), downloaded on 9 November 2010.
[3]
Only in recent years the pagan roots of Easter have been re-discovered, but
only highlighted in certain circles.
[4]
Lütjeharms, 1935, in the footnote on p.110
[5] His
ministry among slaves had to be aborted in later years. Richter had also
ministered to gypsies in the Ronneburg castle when the Moravians had been
exiled from Herrnhut and he also wanted to go and assist Georg Schmidt at the
Cape, but he could not get any permission in Amsterdam.
[6]The
reference to kombuis was probably not meant as a normal kitchen, but the
one on a ship where the sailors practiced the notorious uncouth language.
[7]Radical is derived from radix, the Latin word for root.
[8]This has especially been highlighted by Karen
Armstrong in her book The Gospel According To Woman, London, 1986). It
may be somewhat overdrawn what she stated, but there definitely is validity of
her statement that 'Christianity has formed Western society and Christianity
has been the only major religion to hate and fear sex. Consequently it is in
the West alone that women have been hated because they are sexual beings
instead of merely being dominated because they are inferior chattels'. Armstrong's
statement has to be disputed because this is not true only for the West. Arab
desert culture permeated Islam so much that slavery of women (and children)
after subjection of any tribe was very normal.
[9]In his booklet The
Destiny of Israel and the Church, 1992, Derek Prince wrote about three P's
as spiritual warfare weapons:
Proclamation (pp. 109-112), Praise (pp. 112-116 ), Prayer (pp. 117-120 ).
(Suffering under) Persecution could be added as another P. Brother Andrew expanded this significantly in
1998, devising ten strategic steps, ten P’s (prophetic, planning, persistence,
preparation, presence, penetration, profiling, permanence, proclamation and
power) to which he linked a prayer apiece.
[10] In Medina Muhammad not only erred through deceit and
untruthfulness himself, but he also taught that lying is only minor sin,
permissible if it can be used for the spreading of the religion.
Muslims
are allowed to lie in four cases: In the Holy War, to reconcile two enemies, a
man to his different wives and a wife to her.
[11]
I showed in my manuscript The Spiritual
Parents of Islam how almost every Islamic doctrine developed either from
Judaism or heretical Christianity
[12] Other
written evidence does not support the deduction of Haasbroek. The good result
among the Muslims in the Boland during Ds. Beck’s tenure there was probably
more the work of the devout French Huguenots and their descendants, who started
to arrive at the Cape from 1688. In the church of Stellenbosch where Beck
laboured, he appears to have baptised only two Muslims.
[13] The Moravians embraced the Arminian doctrine of universal
atonement, which held that in converting to Jesus Christ, the individual
accepted the salvation that had been achieved for everyone by his death on the
Cross. This teaching was condemned by the Reformed Synod of Dort in 1618-19,
flying in the face of the Calvinistic doctrine of predestination.
[14]In this regard Zinzendorf and his role models Luther
and Comenius were obviously guided by the Pauline teaching of 1 Timothy 2:11-12:
A woman should learn in quietness and
full submission. I do not permit a woman to teach or to have authority over a
man; she must be silent. At most a woman was allowed to teach next to her
husband like the house church leaders Aquila and Priscilla. Biblical-era
society was very much male-dominated. It would have been considered scandalous
and an affront to the sanctity of worship for a woman to take a leadership
role. Women were prohibited from taking any role that would appear to be
dominant over men.
[15] The other woman to be baptised received the
name Christina.
[16] In due course the oefenhuis or gesticht
would become the place where separate religious exercises for people of colour
were conducted, where they would receive devotional teaching.
[17] Dr
G.B.A.Gerdener (1951;14) described Ds. Vos as a 'boesemvriend', a close
friend of Van Lier. However, I have not
found any written evidence that the two ever met personally. Van Lier died in
September 1793 and Vos arrived at the Cape on 8 March 1794. They could
have met in the Netherlands before Van Lier came to the Cape but their friendship could of course
have developed through correspondence, with Ds. Vos being born and raised in
the Cape and Dr Van Lier known to have been a keen letter writer.
[18] Nachtigal (1893: foreword). Translation:
The present generation picks the fruit of their prayers and labour, of their
tears and their battle. Those were dark days when they operated... but their
courageous faith conquered.
[19] Translation: for this we do not need
special missionaries... because the church council has appointed persons for
that purpose.
[20] Translation: there was meticulous concern to
remain the ruling church
[21]
Kapp (1985:285) plays down the role of Dr Philip in the emancipation of the
slaves. It might be true that John Philip did not play that big a role, but his
indirect contribution was surely just as important, even as that of Earl of
Caledon was in this way and may not be minimized.
[22] In a sense this also happened. Shaw quotes
in the Appendix to his 1836 booklet A
Defence of the Wesleyan Missionaries in Southern Africa no less than seven
other churches or missionaries from other societies (p. 65-70) who were
supportive of their position.
[23]
Translation: without distinction of colour or descent.
[24]
Translation: a firm rule, based on the infallible word of God
[25] The
unfortunate polarization in South Africa created a situation where (political)
activism was equated with prophetic Christianity. Jesus was a prophet, but hardly anybody would
describe him as an activist. Some publications, for example Prophetic Christianity and the Liberation
Movement by Professor Peter Walshe (1995), do not make this important
distinction.
[26]
Translation: For heathens who attend the public religious services. At the church
in Stellenbosch the ‘Coloured’ members sat separately next to the pulpit
(Schoeman, 1996:80).
[27] Haasbroek (1955:75). Translation:
in no other way and under no other rules than those regarding the
ordination of missionaries.
[28]
Van Niekerk, F.N. Sending onder die
Mohammedane, handwritten report, 1948, n.p.
[29] Faced by hostile climates and populations,
pragmatic comity between mission agencies developed as they discovered that
co-operation was better than competition. As a result a 'home-based missionary
conference was conducted in 1819 in London and an agreement was reached between
Methodists and Anglicans in Tonga in 1830
(Thomas, 2002:13).
[30]A similar role can be attributed
to Muslim background believers like the Egyptian Noni Darwish in the exposure of
some uncomfortable facets of Islam.
[31] Various reasons have been given for the
actual outbreak of the war. The bottom line was undoubtedly British
Imperialism.
[32] This was a rift between two Afrikaner
factions.
[33] He was the father of the renowned Dr Beyers
Naudé.
[34]Subsequent mergers transpired with the International Missionary Council in 1961
and the World Council of Christian
Education - which has its roots in the 18th century Sunday
School movement - in 1971.
[35] The
building is at the same premises at which the SAMS was started in 1799. Later
it was turned into the Missionary Museum.
[36]Some of the
insensitivities are listed in Gerrie Lubbe's article Wit Afrikane en Afrika
se ander godsdienste (page 60.) in Wit Afrikane?, an anthology to
commemorate Professor Nico Smith’s 70th birthday.
[37] For our day and age it is relevant to note
that some eunuchs were known to be 'gay', men who could be entrusted in the
private chambers of highly ranked females like queens.
[38] A person with ubuntu is open and
available to others, affirming of other people, someone who does not feel
threatened when other people are able and good, for he or she has a proper
self-assurance that comes from knowing that he or she belongs in a greater
whole. He or she is diminished when other people are humiliated, when others
are tortured or oppressed.
[39] Ds. D.P. Botha later became the moderator of the Sendingkerk, the ‘Coloured’ sector of
the denomination.
[40]Farid
Esack is recognized in the Islamic world as one of the first ‘liberation
theologians’, who dared to criticize the religion from within its fold.
[41]
I heard it myself, e.g. at the 1972 UCM conference in Roodepoort. I also used the raised clenched
fist uncharitably, walking down Adderley to scare Whites.
[42]Tanganyika and
the islands of Zanzibar later merged to form a new state Tanzania.
[43] The supernatural intervention by God in the
run-up to the miraculous elections in April 1994 is beautifully documented in
Michael Cassidy's A Witness for Ever
(Hodder and Stoughton, London, 1995).
[44] The basic idea was not new at all. Already
during the Reformation 'lesser magistrates' were told to oppose 'higher
authority' with arguments taken - albeit somewhat distorted - from the Bible.
In recent times, James W. Douglass wrote
a book published in 2006 on the same theme but from the opposite angle, The
Non-Violent Cross: A Theology of Revolution and Peace.
[45] At that time there were still very few
missionaries known who did not come from the affluent Western countries.
[46]Nico Bougas later became the pioneer and editor
of the periodical Christian Living Today.
[47]The
camp site was never completed. Participants experienced hassling from the
Special Branch of the police because the young folk came from races other than
‘Coloured’.
[48] In translation the booklet received the
title Human Relations and the South African
Scene in the Light of Scripture.
[49] The
word radical comes from the Latin word radix,
which means root.
[50] South Africa benefited tremendously when
Pixley Seme was sent to the USA, getting the name of the missionary who had
influenced him a lot. After his return to our country, he became one of the
founders of the ANC.
[51] This might also
be the origin of the term ‘gap year’ when teenagers engage in some sort of
ministry after leaving high school. In 1979 Dave
Bryant published the influential book In
the Gap, premiered before 20,000 university students at that year's URBANA
79 (the national, triennial student missions conference staged by Inter Varsity Christian Fellowship).
[52] The very
first booklet, with basic information which covered 30 countries, was printed
by the Dutch missionary Cees Lugthardt at the presses of the Dorothea
Mission in Pretoria, as was the first edition of Operation World. The
updated version has been published in October 2010, edited by Jason Mandryk.
[53] In my manuscript A Goldmine of another
Sort I examined how the Moravians implemented biblical principles, applying
it to the South African context.
[54] A modern-day variation is the rather racist
Ephraim movement. Whites Afrikaners predominantly claim that they are the
descendants of the lost ten tribes of Israel.
In his 2005 booklet on the topic, Jack Carstens, an Afrikaner, refutes
these claims very ably.
[55] We
should nevertheless not be blinded to see who is behind it, viz.a demonic
force. Even the great reformer Martin Luther was misled by the arch enemy. In
his hatred for the Jews, Adolf Hitler quoted Luther more than once. Partly as a
result of this, millions of Jews were killed during the holocaust in
Germany and Eastern Europe.
[56]Along with the Anglican priest Trevor Pearce, Peter
Ward and Eugene Johnson boarded one of two Operation Mobilisation ships,
the Doulos, in 1978 as the first missionaries of colour with an
international mission agency, to be followed by two young people from the Cape,
Caroline Duckitt from Bishop Lavis
Township in 1979 and June Domingo of Steenberg in 1980. The latter two females
became WEC International missionaries.
[57]
Nyanga is one of the world's most dangerous areas, and had the highest
number of murders (262) in South Africa during 2012.
[58]
The so-called 10/40 Window denotes a geographical area between 10 and 40
degrees north latitude, where the main
unreached people groups with respect to the Gospel can be found.
[59] I narrate these events in more detail in the
manuscript Jumping over Walls.
[60] Presbyterian
Church of Southern Africa. Proceedings and Decisions of General Assembly 1981,
p.180ff. The Assembly also recognized ‘the bona
fides of those Christians who in good conscience before God, took up arms
to fight either for “liberation” or for “law and order” in South Africa’— and
paid tribute to conscientious objectors.
[61]
Subsequently
I made an in-depth study of Jibril, including a comparison with the
biblical Angel Gabriel. This can be accessed
on our blog.
[62] It was Dr Jonker who took me aside at
Amsterdam’s Schiphol Airport to explain
that he was not a member of the secretive Afrikaner Broederbond in 1979.
At that occasion I urged the delegation to use their influence to get Dr Beyers
Naudé
unbanned.
[63] The Nederduits
Gereformeerde Kerk (NGK) is the White sector of the Dutch Reformed
Church,
[64]In a speech 23 November, 1974 he said literally: S.A.
is at the crossroads. The alternative to a negotiated settlement is too ghastly
to contemplate.
[65]It was sad to discern that someone of Dr Buthelezi’s
stature - he had been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize because he
also had been regarded as a rebel against the apartheid status quo -
appeared to stall negotiations because of personal ambition. In research that
was published subsequently, Dr Anthea Jeffreys however also revealed how the
ANC pulled out all stops to demonise Dr Buthelezi and the IFP so that they
could rule almost unopposed after the first democratic elections.
[66]A similar scenario transpired on
January 9, 2011 when intercessors were called to pray for the referendum in
South Sudan. More than 98% voted for
secession, a result so clear that the North could not doubt or contest it in
any way.
[67] From May 1521
until March 1522, Martin Luther stayed at the Wartburg castle, after he had
been taken there for his safety at the request of Frederick, the Wise,
following his ex-communication by Pope Leo X and his refusal to recant at the
Diet of Worms. It was during this period that Luther, under the pseudonym
Junker Jörg (the Knight Jörg), translated the ‘New Testament’ into German.
[68]The First Intifada (1987–1993) was a Palestinian
uprising against the Israeli occupation in the Palestinian Territories. The
uprising began in a refugee camp and quickly
spread throughout Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem.
[69] I trust that I have shown conclusively that this is the case in the
manuscript The spiritual Parents of
Islam, which could be accessed on our blog.
[70] A serious flaw of the
booklet is in my view that Billheimer assigned too much authority to satan.
[71]That was to change
later de facto, when Dr Beyers Naudé, our leader, preferred imprisonment
to a monitory fine because he would not testify to the biased government-appointed
Schlebush commission of enquiry into the funding of the CI.
[72]A
fuller version of these experiences our story is called (In)voluntary Exile, accessible on our internet blog.
[73] The government of the day allowed us to live
in the country for six months as a family of four pypersto assist my late
sister's family. She had been suffering from leukaemia, passing away in
December 1980. During this period I taught at Mount View Senior Secondary School in Hanover Park.
[74] I
do not want to minimize the political efforts, e.g. by the moves behind the
scenes sponsored by the Swiss government or by Dr van Zyl Slabbert’s IDASA, but
I nevertheless assert that it was ultimately the concerted prayer that made the
difference.
[75] After substantial
research into missionary work to these groups, I deemed it appropriate to dub
outreach to Jews and Muslims neglected 'Cinderella's' of evangelism and
missionary work.
[76] A fuller version of how this transpired is
recorded in Seeds sown for Revival and in Spiritual Dynamics at the
Cape. Both titles can be accessed on our internet blog
>.
[77] Later
it was called the Belydende Kring.
[78]Some of these Christians have been working alongside
Muslim background followers of Jesus here at the Cape and elsewhere and who who
have been discipling some of them - in certain cases over a lengthy period of
time.
[79]Some enmity did develop over the
centuries though, as the prophet Isaiah attested to seventeen hundred years
later.
[80] The background of the following can be
accessed at www. isaacandishmael.blogspot.com