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South African culture featured in BWA congress opening

NewsRobert Dilday  |  July 23, 2015

By Robert Dilday

A celebration of South African culture — and the country’s remarkable transformation into “the rainbow nation” — highlighted the opening session of the Baptist World Congress July 22 in a colorful display of music and dance.

The five-day Congress in Durban, the first time the meeting has been held in Africa, has drawn more than 2,500 people from about 80 countries to this city on the Indian Ocean.

African dancers“We welcome you to the rainbow nation,” said Michael Mabuyakhulu, an official of KwaZulu-Natal province, referring to the country’s adopted nickname that reflects its diversity of ethnicities and languages.

African dancers, a Korean children’s choir and contemporary Christian praise bands joined keynote speaker Peter Chin, a South Korean pastor, to interpret the Congress theme, “Jesus Christ, the Door.”

Earlier, BWA leaders said South African’s recent history — its transformation from an oppressive apartheid regime to a multicultural democracy, with forgiveness and reconciliation as key drivers of the largely peaceful change – set an appropriate context for the Congress.

Especially meaningful, they said, was the southern African concept of Ubuntu, often translated as “human-ness” or “humanity toward others” and described as a belief in a “universal bond of sharing which connects humanity.”

Korean pastorThe congress theme is “being received in the perspective of Ubuntu,” BWA General Secretary Neville Callam said. “We have come to see this spirit manifested in Ubuntu. In seeking to probe the depths of the riches of Jesus, we are going beyond our own narrow ecclesiological confines and thinking of the world in which God placed us, a world of many different religions and ideologies.”

Meeting in South Africa is “so absolutely enthralling and inspiring,” Callam said. “It will fill our conference with … a feeling that we should concern ourselves with the welfare of others, seek ways we can be for others what we want others to be for us, that the welfare of one is a concern of all, that the destiny of one is bound up in the destiny of all.”

Outgoing BWA president John Upton noted that “humans are experts at building walls,” but added: “Jesus Christ knocks down the dividing walls and he does it with the cross. “

“As we [the BWA] live into the next five years, what does it mean that Jesus knocks down dividing walls?” he said. “I look forward to seeing what that could possibly mean. It’s going to be an exciting five years. And that conversation could only begin here in South Africa.”

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