• Prevalent Theological Postures towards church and state relations - A C

    From Steve Hayes@21:1/5 to All on Sun Oct 13 07:03:31 2024
    XPost: alt.christnet.racism, alt.christnet.theology, alt.religion.christianity XPost: alt.politics.religion, za.politics

    Last Friday I participated in this event via Zoom:

    CHURCH AND STATE What are our options? SIMON LEREFOLO
    Rosebank Doppio Zero, Fri 11 Oct 2024, 6:30am-7:30am

    The relationship between church and state continues to be a subject of
    debate in South Africa and across the globe. It’s not as simple as
    trying to find an optimal point along a one-dimensional spectrum
    between total separation and respecting no boundaries. Many factors
    are at play.

    What are the most popular models – and the most workable ones?

    Simon Lerefolo studied Mechanical Engineering & Economics and has
    worked as an engineer and a consultant. He is the Senior Pastor at
    Every Nation Church in Rosebank. His Master’s Thesis is on “An
    Analysis of Prevalent Theological Postures towards church and state
    relations - A Case Study of South Africa”.

    ---------------

    I'm not going to try to summarise what Simon said, which was in turn a
    summary of his masters dissertation. But here are some thoughts
    prompted by the question.

    "Apartheid" was a political slogan used by the National Party in South
    Africa in the General election of 1948.

    The National Party won the election and came to power in place of the
    United Party, which had governed South Africa since before World War
    2.

    The slogan "apartheid" was used to counter a policy of relaxing racial segregation laws which had been proposed by the Fagan Commission,
    which had been set up by the United Party. For more on that see here:

    <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fagan_Commission>

    The National Party's policy was to increase racial segregation, and so
    used "apartheid" (separateness) as an election slogan.

    In 1948 most of the voters were white, and only a few black and
    coloured South Africans were allowed to vote, and over the next 20
    years the National Party systematically removed the few black and
    coloured voters.

    After coming to power in 1948 the National Party appointed the Sauer Commission, whose recommendations were diametrically opposed to those
    of the Fagan Commission, and, in effect, turned "apartheid" from a
    slogan into a policy.

    This policy was generally supported by the three Afrikaans Dutch
    Reformed Churches, but other Christian groups criticised it, mainly
    from a humanitarian rather than from a theological point of view. If
    the policy was strictly applied, they said, it would increase the
    suffering of black people.

    The Dutch Reformed Churches, to varying degrees, tried to support
    apartheid theologically. The Nederduitsch Hervormde Kerk (NHK), which
    was the most politically conservative though the most theologically
    liberal of the three, already had in its constitution a clause that
    said there should be no equality (between black and white) in church
    or state.

    The National Party increased its majority in the 1953 general
    election, and added a new slogan -- baasskap (bossship). The white man
    must be the boss.

    One of the first public *theological* criticisms of apartheid came
    from an Anglican priest, Trevor Huddleston, who ministered to an urban
    parish in Sophiatown, a largely black community which was being
    subjected to ethnic cleansing in the implementation of apartheid. In
    his book "Naught for your Comfort" Huddleston maintained that
    apartheid was not only cruel and unjust, but also heretical.

    A National Party spin doctor, Alexander Steward, wrote a reply, "You
    are Wrong, Father Huddleston", in which he used purely secular
    arguments to try to show that apartheid was not cruel or unjust, but
    was well-intentioned and perfectly just, but he made no attempt to
    engage with Huddleston's theological criticisms at all.

    The National Party again increased its majority in general elections
    in 1958, 1961 and 1966. Apartheid, which had started as a slogan in
    the 1940s, and became a policy in the 1950s, by the 1960s had become
    an ideology, part of a wider ideology of Christian Nationalism.

    For the ideology to prevail, the youth must be indoctrinated with it,
    and this was done by means of Christian National Education, which
    became the guiding principle of primary and secondary schools
    controlled by the National Party government. Education was a
    provincial affair, and the National Party controlled three of the four provinces, but not Natal.

    The only way to escape Christian National Education (CNE) was to live
    in Natal or attened a private school, most of which were run by
    various Christian denominations.

    In the mid-1950s the National Party passed the Bantu Education Act,
    which effectively nationalised (and Nationalised) all the church
    schools for blacks), and took control of black schools out of the hads
    of the provincial governments and put them under a new central
    government Department of Bantu Education. And new church schools for
    whites, started after 1952, no longer received government subsidies,
    so had to depend on fees -- so children could only escape Christian
    National Education if their parents were rich and white.

    In 1968 Christians of many different denominations examined the
    ideology of apartheid, and produced a theological statement that
    condemned it as not merely heretical, but as a false gospel. This
    theological rejection of apartheid was summarised in "A Message to the
    People of South Africa" which was widely distributed by the
    newly-formed South African Council of Churches, the Christian
    Institute, and other denominational and interdenominational bodies.

    The point that all this is leading to is that apartheid, in its
    various forms -- growing from a slogan, to a policy, and then an
    ideology, became a focus for Christian critique. As years went by the
    critique was elaborated and extended.

    Some Christians supported and defended the apartheid state, but the
    majority rejected it, and in the 1990s apartheid, as an ideology,
    collapsed. Though some still believe it, it is no longer backed by
    state power. Many of its effects are still felt, but the engine which
    drove it has lost its power.

    Now this may have been covered in Simon Lerefolo's dissertation, but
    most of it was not mentioned in his talk, so I've tried to describe it
    here. I've described some aspects of it more fully in a series of blog
    posts here:

    <https://khanya.wordpress.com/about/>

    The thing about that is that apartheid was the official dominant
    ideology, which hardened over the years, and it made it fairly easy to
    focus on and think about theologically.

    But in the last 30 years political issues have been much more
    diffused,and it is harder to focus on any of them, and "the church" --
    divided into more than 10000 distinct denominations -- can't make up
    its collective mind about them because it doesn't have such a thing,
    and most evaluations of political policies by Christians have been
    done on secular criteria -- the salt has lost its savour. The dominant ideology, not only in South Africa, but in much of the world, is
    Neoliberalism, which is plugged, inter alia, by the South African
    Institute of Race Relations (SAIRR), which, back in the day, used to
    publish fairly informative reports critical of apartheid and its implementation.

    Neoliberalism was promoted in the 1980s, most notably by Ronald Reagan
    in the USA and Margaret Thatcher in the UK, and in 1986-1988 the
    National Party began to implement it in South Africa, as its faith in
    apartheid was beginning to waver. The implementation was half-hearted
    and partial. One aspect of it was the transformation of parastatals
    into "State-Owned Enterprises" (SOEs) - South African Railways became
    Transnet. The Electricity Supply Commission (Escom) became Eskom.

    And the "church" uttered not a word. Neoliberalism was far more
    diffused, and difficult to focus on.

    Building societies became commercial banks. Medical Aid became health insurance, mutual insurance societies became profit-making companies,
    and "the church" was "bought" like all the other members who sold
    their birthright for a bowl of neoliberal pottage.

    Some of these things happened as a result of government commissions,
    like the Sauer Commission and the Fagan Commission, though in a
    democratic society the ideological assumptions can be questioned. But
    "the church", which had instituted a Study Project on Christianity in
    Apartheid Society", which produced numerous reports, was far too
    disorganised to instituate a Study Project on Christianity in a
    Neoliberal Society. That might have developed a more focused critique.

    Some speak of chimeras like "Cultural Marxism", and they can't say
    much coherent about it because they are so embedded in cultural
    neoliberalism. And the rest just look away and hope the problems will disappear.





























    --
    Steve Hayes from Tshwane, South Africa
    Web: http://www.khanya.org.za/stevesig.htm
    Blog: http://khanya.wordpress.com
    E-mail - see web page, or parse: shayes at dunelm full stop org full stop uk

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