My dear People of God
It is a little over a month since the Service of Installation and Rededication, and my arrival at Bishopscourt.
My hope and intention is that this will be the first of many
letters ‘ad
In the past two weeks, alongside Ascension Day, many of us also marked Freedom Day, Workers’ Day and Human Rights Day. I was struck by how each of these secular holidays finds a far deeper and fuller meaning in the One who came to bring us ‘life in abundance’ and who is now ascended to the right hand of God where he intercedes for us (Rom 8:34). Jesus is the one who came ‘to let the oppressed go free’ (Lk 4:18); who says ‘we must work the works of him who sent me …’ (Jn 9:4); and who shows us what it is to be fully human, ‘sharing in our humanity’ and ‘becoming like us in every respect’ (Heb 2:14,16). Surely Jesus is praying for us to grow in abundant life in all these areas.
This is the message of Pentecost also – for ‘where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom’ (2 Cor 3:17); and we are ‘equipped for every good work’ (2 Tim 3:16,17); and we can experience our ‘rights’ as God’s children (Gal 4:5,6 – NIV). The Spirit’s delight and desire is that all these should bear fruit in us and through us.
I write about all these things, because it is as we live out these promises of God, that we are enabled to be salt and light. The world needs to learn deeper truths of what freedom, work, and our right – our calling – to full humanity are all about. Though the church must speak publicly on these issues – as we do about other great themes such as forgiveness and reconciliation and restoration – we must also live them out at the human level, within Dioceses, parishes, congregations, communities, families, and homes, and between individuals. Jesus became Emmanuel, God with us, and the Spirit dwells within us, so that the great truths and promises of God should become living realities for each and every one of us, and for the people around us, in very personal ways.
This is a great challenge for how the church lives. We can all speak together of the promises of freedom – but freedom may mean many different things in the very different circumstances of our geographically vast and hugely diverse Province.
This is why communication is so important – that we really do learn how to ‘encourage and build one another up’ as we explore and share the different ways in which we are called to be salt and light, bringers of freedom and full humanity, in this new chapter in the life of the Anglican Church of Southern Africa.
Dear people of God, as we seek afresh to discover what it is
to be the body of Christ in our time, and who God is in Jesus Christ, for us
here and now, be partners with me in this seeking and discovering – and
pray for me and my part in this, as I pray always for you. Pray for the people
of
Let me end with a few words about
The people of
Yours in the service of Christ
+Thabo Cape Town
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