There are some, albeit it a minority, who look at him in a
less favourable light and see him as a terrorist rather than a freedom fighter.
It is very hard for us to judge that at this distance and indeed the time that
has passed since his active involvement in the armed struggle before his
imprisonment makes it even more difficult. However it is undeniable that since
his release from prison he confounded all those who doubted his character by
seeking not revenge but reconciliation. He sought to unite the people of South Africa
of all colours and creeds under one flag and do away with the remnants of
Apartheid. He was not about settling scores and indeed had to campaign hard
within the ANC and elsewhere to stop others going down this road.
A few of his
own words after his release demonstrate this commitment to peace and love as
the way forward for South
Africa :
“For to be free is not merely to cast off
one’s chains, but to live in a way that respects and enhances the freedom of
others.”
“No one is born hating another person because
of the color of his skin, or his background, or his religion. People must learn
to hate, and if they can learn to hate, they can be taught to love, for love
comes more naturally to the human heart than its opposite.”
There is no doubting that South Africa is
a better place for having had Nelson Mandela make his mark on it but it is a
work in progress. There is still a huge amount to do. It is still a very
dangerous and crime ridden society. I had occasion to drive from Johannesburg airport to the border with Swaziland a few years ago on a trip to Swaziland and the poverty that was visible on the roadside was very disturbing. Mile after mile after mile of corrugated tin shacks almost on top of one another (each about 100 feet sq) stretched out of the eastern suburbs. My companions and I were warned under no circumstances to even consider stopping on that road as hijacking was not uncommon. The contrast with the modern city we had just left was dramatic to say the least.
Apartheid may have gone but there is still a significant division between
the haves and the have-nots. There is still a large amount of tribal
tension and violence and the scourge of AIDS has left its mark disproportionately
on the poor and disadvantaged. So Nelson Mandela did not live to see the total
fulfilment of his dreams for a new, just and prosperous
There are remarkable
parallels between the story of Nelson Mandela and John the Baptist. Where Mandela
took the first steps toward the complete freedom of South Africa and all its peoples
John the Baptist prepared the way for Jesus to bring God's Kingdom closer to
Earth. He (John the Baptist) saw many wonderful things in his life and ministry
and had the extraordinary privilege of baptising Jesus but like Mandela he did
not see the end of the journey, for that work is ongoing and you and I are also
charged with working towards its realisation.
In this light perhaps the most significant passage in the Gospel today is
where John the Baptist addresses the Pharisees and Sadducees:
‘You brood of vipers! Who warned you
to flee from the wrath to come? Bear
fruit worthy of repentance. Do
not presume to say to yourselves, “We have Abraham as our ancestor”; for I tell
you, God is able from these stones to raise up children to Abraham. Even now the axe is lying at
the root of the trees; every tree therefore that does not bear good fruit is
cut down and thrown into the fire.
This is not just advice to the Pharisees and Sadducees but
also to us - we cannot rest on our laurels or the legacy of others - We have
personal responsibility for our faith and for our relationship with God. And the implication of that is that we are
called to participate in the work of building God's Kingdom on Earth - bringing
God's justice and peace and love to all peoples.
Part of that work is in South Africa where there is still a
need for God's love and justice and peace among a people who have begun the
journey but who like us have not reached its end. As long as there are those who
hunger or thirst, who are sick and suffering, lonely and lost and have nowhere
to lay their heads at night, whether that is on the streets of Dublin or
Johannesburg there is work to be done and we are the only ones who can do that
work. We are Gods eyes and ears, his hands and feet and it is through us that he
can and will bring justice, love and
peace to all his people. So today we pray for South Africa as it mourns Mandela
but we pray especially that all of us who are created in his image will respond to our personal calling to
be workers for the increase of the Kingdom on Earth.
Amen.