Another anniversary! This time the 30st Anniversary of the South
African Kairos document. As far as I know, the first document of this sort.
Kairos (καιρός) is a Greek word which means the opportune
time. Greek has another word for time, kronos (κρόνος), which is the ordinary
clock time.
One of my colleagues in the Church of Sweden, Rev.
Anna-Karin Hammar, takes part in the celebrations.
Anna-Karin to the left (and I think I recognise Sarojini Nadar, a colleague from UKZN, to the right. |
Two other persons I know are
Chali Kasonde and Nonhlanhla Mnisi. They are students at the University of
KwaZulu-Natal and I know them as dedicated and bright students.
It would have been wonderful to be part of this occasion.
But my place is right now in Sweden. That is my Kairos.
Still I want to quote one of the persons who are present at
the Kairos Anniversary in South Africa, Prof John de Gruchy. He writes on a
blog called kairossouthernafrica:
As we take note of what is happening around the world as well as in our own country, we would be foolishly blind if we did not recognise the global and national crises facing us. The world has become a much more dangerous place than we ever imagined when we entered this new millennium. So we should listen to the prophets. They are not prophets of doom but prophets of justice and hope. This is God’s time, they declare, a time to grasp the opportunity to change. So let us not be among those who, as Isaiah said, “look but do not see, or listen but do not hear.” Rather let us following the counsel of the prophet Micah and the Kairos Document “ do justice, love mercy, and walk humbly with God.”
Since the 1985 Kairos Document in South Africa similar
documents have been published in Palestine and Swaziland, just to mention two.
A network for academics working with the Kairos concept is called Grasping Kairos. I am one of them.
The most important thing, however, is to listen to God and
find the Kairos document in one’s own context.
What is your Kairos?
Chali Kasonde with the Mayor of Johannesburg, Mpho Parks Tau, at Regina Mundi Catholic Church in Soweto. |
1 comment:
nice post
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