SMMS NEWS. December DEAN CHALLENGES EXITING STUDENTS TO BE PROPHETIC IN THIS ISSUE KHOZA MGOJO CENTRE BECOMING A REALITY

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SMMS NEWS December 016 DEAN CHALLENGES EXITING STUDENTS TO BE PROPHETIC Thabiso Mcinga receives the Effort Award from Rev Raphahlela. IN THIS ISSUE KHOZA MGOJO CENTRE BECOMING A REALITY NOKUTHELA S STORY HIGHLIGHTS PLIGHT OF WOMEN IN SOCIETY SEE HUMANITY AS JESUS DOES REV SANDERS PRESIDENT ON FRUITFUL US TOUR CHAPLAINCY A MINISTRY OF PRESENCE AND AVAILABILITY DR MOYO GOSPEL OF JESUS SHOULD DISTURB YOU, SEMINARIANS TOLD METHODISTS IGNITING MISSION 4 The Dean of Chapel, Rev Norman Raphahlela, has challenged the exiting seminarians to go out and preach the gospel in season and out of season, when time allows and when it does not. Rev Raphahlela was delivering a message to the third year seminarians on their final day in the seminary, during the valedictory service, on November. Paul preached the gospel in Rome, without hindrance, as Luke says. He preached at the heart of the empire. You must also be prepared to preach the gospel of Christ right at the heart of the empire, because even the emperor in his kingdom cannot overpower Christ. He cannot prevent Christ from bringing people into a new land, to serve a new king, Rev Raphahlela said. The Dean also lamented the fact that the prophetic gospel of Christ has been overtaken by the prosperity gospel, and challenged the exiting seminarians to find new ways of showing the kingdom of God. He said, If you want to preach the Jesus of history, you must deny yourselves and become a new people. You must die to certain things of this world because you have left all that for the sake of Christ. CONFERENCE EXPLORES RELIGION, GOVERNANCE AND HUMANITARIANISM The recently held nd Annual Critical Investigations into Humanitarianism in Africa (CIHA) Blog Conference lived to its expectations as a marketplace of ideas. The conference, which brought together experts from a wide variety of disciplines and from all over the world, ran under the theme Religion, Governance and Humanitarianism in Africa. It explored issues ranging from religion, migration, HIV and AIDS, Pentecostalism, governance, Ubuntu, among many other issues that are relevant to the African continent. The titles of presentations were catchy, wetting delegates appetites before the conference started: Religion as site of struggle, The politics of prayer, Men of God, Seek the economic kingdom first, Engaging the Jihad against poverty, The pastor s wife, among others. Delegates hailed the conference as a great success and appreciated SMMS for hosting it. Delegates pose for a photo at the end of the conference. 11 Golf Road, Epworth, Pietermaritzburg. Tel: +7 846 8600 http://www.smms.ac.za

KHOZA MGOJO CENTRE BECOMING A REALITY The Khoza Mgojo Centre, an initiative of the Seth Mokitimi Methodist Seminary, is taking shape. This follows a number of activities, initiatives and meetings that have been held with various organisations. The vision of the centre is to become a locus for knowledge production and dissemination as a means to produce tangible social change in communities. Named after the late educator, anti-apartheid activist and clergyman, Rev Dr Khoza Mgojo, the Centre comprises the Ubunye Programme for Reconciliation and Humanitarianism, Zwiliwa Programme for Food Security and Mission and the Chaplaincy Programme. The Ubunye Programme for Reconciliation and Humanitarianism has four focus areas, namely, Gender and Human sexuality; Xenophobia and Migration; Ethnicity and Tribalism; and Racism and Race Relations. Additionally, the Centre houses the seminary s Work-Integrated Learning Programme. The seminary programmes will involve the writing of academic papers by students. The papers will be published through blogs, on the SMMS website and in the form of a periodical which will be sent to the entire Methodist community and beyond. Prof Kumalo hands his book on John Dube to Thandi Ngcobo, Director of the John Dube Institute, after partnership talks on the Khoza Mgojo Centre. It will also involve students being placed in circuits, social justice and ecumenical organisations, as well as community based organisations that are working on a variety of issues. That way the seminarians will acquire skills and practical experience of facilitating change processes in communities and churches. It is envisaged that the Centre will be a vehicle through which students acquire and disseminate knowledge on a vast array of social justice issues which knowledge will produce tangible social change in communities. NOKUTHELA S STORY HIGHLIGHTS PLIGHT OF WOMEN IN SOCIETY Behind every successful man, there is a strong, wise and hardworking woman. Yet in most cases that woman is rarely acknowledged. That was the story of Nokuthela Mdima Dube, wife of Dr John Langalibalele Dube, the first President of the South African Native National Congress, which later became the African National Congress (ANC). Delivering a Lecture on Nokuthela Dube to SMMS students and staff on the sidelines of the CIHA Blog Conference, Prof Cherif Keita of Carleton College in the US, who has done a lot of research on the Dubes and was instrumental in finding Nokuthela s grave, described how Nokuthela was instrumental to the success of her husband, yet did not get the recognition that she deserved. Married to Dube for twenty years and without her own biological children, Nokuthela left her husband after he had betrayed her by fathering a child with a school learner. In happier times, the multi-talented dynamic heroine and her husband worked tirelessly, Prof Keita recounted, including travelling several times to the United States and Europe, to raise funds for their work to uplift the African people. During the tours, John would speak about their plans, followed by Nokuthela who would dazzle audiences with her superb voice, her click songs and her piano playing. Prof Keita noted how Nokuthela and her husband built Ohlange Institute in Inanda, established a mission station and a school at Incwadi, west of Pietermaritzburg, among many other ground breaking institutions that furthered the cause of a multiracial democracy for South Africa. She is known to have greatly inspired many young black women to pursue their educational dreams in the United States. He said, Along with her husband, Nokuthela authored a book titled Amagama Abantu (A Zulu Song Book), a book that stands as a landmark in the development of Zulu Choral music. Part of their efforts led to the popularisation of Nkosi Sikelel iafrika (composed by Enoch Sontonga) which later became the national anthem of the Republic of South Africa after being performed for years by the Ohlange Choir as A Prayer for the Children at Ohlange. In spite of all her contributions to the success of her husband, she was buried in Brixton Cemetery in an unmarked grave, upon her death in 1917, in a way silenced for ninety years and erased from history until in 009 when Johannesburg City Parks located her grave, Prof Keita said. Still standing: SMMS and John Dube Institute staff stand in front of the classroom block at Incwadi School that Nokuthela built.

SEE HUMANITY AS JESUS DOES REV SANDERS If you see humanity from the perspective of Jesus, you should be able to call them blessed, no matter their gender, race, sexual orientation or circumstance. This is according to Rev Dr Edwin C Sanders II, founder and pastor of the Metropolitan Interdenominational Church in Nashville, Tennessee in the US. Rev Sanders was delivering a homily on the Sermon on the Mount to students and staff on a recent visit to SMMS for the CIHA Blog Conference. He said, If you have Jesus perspective and if you see as Jesus does, you can go anywhere, in any situation and you will be able to know that when you look at a human being, you are looking at the creation of the hand of God, you are looking at someone who has the fingerprint of God, someone who is special and unique in a way that only God can make. No matter what they are dealing with, if you have the perspective of Jesus you will be able to say Blessed! Blessed if you are the one who has been dismissed because of the colour of your skin. Blessed is the woman who has been dismissed because society has decided that she is a nobody on account of her sexuality or her gender. Blessed if you end up being the one who is set aside and treated as though you are nobody and nothing because society has labelled you like that. Rev Sanders added that when Jesus looks at us from that elevated position, he sees us individually, in terms of our particularities and our peculiarities and in ways that do not make us a part of some statistical assessment of who we might be. Rev Sanders participates in a panel discussion during the CIHA Blog Conference. PRESIDENT ON FRUITFUL US TOUR SMMS President, Prof RS Kumalo, while in San Antonio, Texas in the US recently, held meetings with key scholars and representatives of US seminaries and universities to explore possible partnerships with SMMS. Prof Kumalo was attending the 016 American Academy of Religion (AAR) Annual Meeting. The prestigious AAR Annual Meetings are the largest events of the year in the fields of religious studies and theology, bringing together thousands of professors and students, authors and publishers, religious leaders and interested laypersons each year. Prof Kumalo poses for a photo with Profs Parker and Campbell after the discussions.

Prof Kumalo met with Prof Ted Campbell, a highly respected scholar of Methodist History and Prof Evelyn Parker, a leading Practical Theologian and specialist in Youth Ministry from the Southern Methodist University's Perkins School of Theology in Dallas, Texas. The discussion centred around a possible partnership between the two institutions and in particular on an exchange programme for staff and students of the two institutions. A Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) was prepared for signing. Prof Kumalo also met with the Dean of the School, Prof Grain Hill who gave his blessings to the discussions on the partnership between Perkins and SMMS. Meanwhile, Chief Editor of New Room Books, Dr Kathryn Armistead, informed Prof Kumalo on the sidelines of the AAR Annual Meeting in San Antonio, that he has been appointed member of the Editorial Board of the publishing house. The board consists of the most respected scholars of the Wesleyan tradition. It is an honour for Prof Kumalo to be on this board, but most importantly, it also adds value to SMMS profile for having its leader on this prestigious and respected board. The President also met with the Dean of Duke Divinity School, Prof Elaine Heather and former Dean, Prof Richard Bishop Hayes. The discussion centred around the partnership between the two institutions. Duke is sending its Director of International Relations to SMMS in January 017 to finalise the MOU. Prof Kumalo also met with Prof Cherif Keita from Carlton College in Minnesota and Dr Rosinah Gabaitse from the University of Botswana, who are both doing research on Nokuthela Dube, the wife of Rev John Langalibalele Dube. The discussion was around collaborating on the Incwadi food security project through the Khoza Mgojo Centre for Social Justice and Transformation. At the meeting, SMMS was tasked with organising a commemoration of Nokuthela s death in June to highlight the plight of women in our church and nation. The President also met with Dr Matthew Charlton of the Campus Ministry, who visited SMMS in October and Prof Traci West, a respected scholar of Gender Studies, from Drew University. She is also United Methodist and is hoping to visit SMMS in the new year. Prof Kumalo with Prof Heather after the brief meeting. CHAPLAINCY A MINISTRY OF PRESENCE AND AVAILABILITY DR MOYO Dr Moyo was addressing students at a Chaplaincy expo organised to give students an appreciation of the ministry of chaplaincy. Chaplaincy is ministering where there is no church. It is when the church goes to the people, not the other way round, Dr Moyo said. He emphasised that ministers need training to be chaplains. He said, The assumption is that if you are an ordained minister you automatically become a chaplain. It is more than responding to a job advert in the newspaper. That is not the case. It s all smiles after an informative expo. The main purpose of a chaplain is to listen, care and respond appropriately to a client s needs. This is according to Dr Hebert Moyo, Lecturer in Practical Theology at the University of KwaZulu-Natal. Dr Moyo urged future chaplains to be ecumenical if they are to be effective chaplains. Chaplains are champions of ecumenical theology. They respond to the religious and moral needs of people from a variety of denominations and religions. Do not be a slave of your denomination. Be an interfaith specialist, Dr Moyo advised the students. 4

GOSPEL OF JESUS SHOULD DISTURB YOU, SEMINARIANS TOLD At a recent visit to SMMS, Rev Dr Mathew Charlton, Assistant General Secretary of the General Board of Higher Education and Ministry (GBHEM) responsible for Collegiate Ministry, cautioned students against making the gospel of Jesus something casual and warned that it should actually fill them with dread. He said, It should fill you with dread that God has called you to preach the gospel. Your heart should be troubled that God has called you to proclaim the gospel of Jesus because there are still many people lying in ditches everywhere and most people are willing to pass by on the other side. Dr Charlton challenged the seminarians to go out and bandage the wounds of the world. He said, The gospel of Jesus Christ requires us to go and show mercy where mercy is needed, to go and proclaim justice where justice is needed, to go and heal the wounds of God s people where healing is needed. Go and bandage the wounds of the world. Go and lift those who have been beaten down by those who might steal their life and their livelihood. Go and put them on your own donkey, put them in your own house if necessary. Bind their wounds and bring them to a place of healing so that they might live, he said. The gospel of Jesus should disturb you even as it comforts you. The love of God and the requirements of discipleship should disturb you even as they fill you with joy, peace hope and love. All smiles: Dr Charlton shares a light moment with Prof Kumalo and Prof Traci West. Dr Charlton expresses a point. METHODISTS IGNITING MISSION Members of the Methodist Church of Southern Africa (MCSA) gathered at SMMS for the second Mission Congress running under the theme Methodists Igniting Mission, from 4 to 7 November. The Congress ended with delegates celebrating a missional God and committing to uphold unity in their diversity: We celebrate a missional God who has blessed us with a brand plucked from the fire, a warmed heart, and a passion for the world as our parish. We celebrate a missional God who has blessed us with a rich diverse heritage of those who have gone before us, and who are now a deep well from which we draw encouragement and inspiration for mission in the present context. From left to right: Revs Sifiso Luvuyo, Simphiwe Mthembu, Frans Mabuza and Luxolo Mantini pose for a photo during the Mision Congress. As members of the MCSA, we commit ourselves intentionally to living out our Connexionality in practical, meaningful and respectful ways. This should be our culture, our way of being. We believe that Christ calls us to intentional ecumenical and inter-faith relationships, as well as partnering with other life-giving organisations. The Seth Mokitimi Village wishes you a merry Christmas and a blessed 017