Black Christ and Cross-Roads Jesus for white South African Christians

A significant factor undermining real racial reconciliation in post-1994 South Africa is widespread resistance to shared historical responsibility amongst South Africans racialised as white. In response to the need for localised ‘white work’ (raising self-critical, intragroup historical awareness fo...

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Main Author: Wilhelm J. Verwoerd
Format: Article
Language:Afrikaans
Published: AOSIS 2020-07-01
Series:HTS Teologiese Studies/Theological Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hts.org.za/index.php/hts/article/view/5836
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spelling doaj-20c2637cb17d49c7b8f70660090a62e02020-11-25T03:35:14ZafrAOSISHTS Teologiese Studies/Theological Studies 0259-94222072-80502020-07-01763e1e1010.4102/hts.v76i3.58364743Black Christ and Cross-Roads Jesus for white South African ChristiansWilhelm J. Verwoerd0Studies in Historical Trauma, Stellenbosch University, StellenboschA significant factor undermining real racial reconciliation in post-1994 South Africa is widespread resistance to shared historical responsibility amongst South Africans racialised as white. In response to the need for localised ‘white work’ (raising self-critical, intragroup historical awareness for the sake of deepened racial reconciliation), this article aims to contribute to the uprooting of white denialism, specifically amongst Afrikaans-speaking Christians from (Dutch) Reformed backgrounds. The point of entry is two underexplored, challenging, contextualised crucifixion paintings, namely, Black Christ and Cross-Roads Jesus. Drawing on critical whiteness studies, extensive local and international experience as a ‘participatory’ facilitator of conflict transformation and his particular embodiment, the author explores the creative unsettling potential of these two prophetic ‘icons’. Through this incarnational, phenomenological, diagnostic engagement with Black Christ, attention is drawn to the dynamics of family betrayal, ‘moral injury’ and idolisation underlying ‘white fragility’. ‘White fatigue’ is challenged by stressing the Biblical nature of Cross-Roads Jesus’ confrontational, ‘ugly’ portrayal of the systemic violence of apartheid and colonialism. It is also argued that a combination of Louw’s shocking portrayal of an enraged, emaciated township Jesus with the explicit depiction of white historical responsibility in Black Christ increases the counter-cultural potential of these icons to disrupt denial amongst white South African Christians. However, the realisation of this potential will require the cultivation of more capacity to work creatively with the intense emotional, moral, spiritual discomfort brought to the surface by this type of religious icon. Contribution: The article argues for a contextualised, South African engagement with the crucifixion of Christ, through an embodied interpretation of two anti-apartheid religious paintings. It makes a contribution to critical whiteness studies and practical theology and thus fits into the interdisciplinary, hermeneutical scope of HTS.https://hts.org.za/index.php/hts/article/view/5836racial reconciliationwhite denialwhite fragilitywhite fatiguefamily betrayalmoral injuryshared responsibilitysystemic violencereligious iconsblack christology
collection DOAJ
language Afrikaans
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wilhelm J. Verwoerd
spellingShingle Wilhelm J. Verwoerd
Black Christ and Cross-Roads Jesus for white South African Christians
HTS Teologiese Studies/Theological Studies
racial reconciliation
white denial
white fragility
white fatigue
family betrayal
moral injury
shared responsibility
systemic violence
religious icons
black christology
author_facet Wilhelm J. Verwoerd
author_sort Wilhelm J. Verwoerd
title Black Christ and Cross-Roads Jesus for white South African Christians
title_short Black Christ and Cross-Roads Jesus for white South African Christians
title_full Black Christ and Cross-Roads Jesus for white South African Christians
title_fullStr Black Christ and Cross-Roads Jesus for white South African Christians
title_full_unstemmed Black Christ and Cross-Roads Jesus for white South African Christians
title_sort black christ and cross-roads jesus for white south african christians
publisher AOSIS
series HTS Teologiese Studies/Theological Studies
issn 0259-9422
2072-8050
publishDate 2020-07-01
description A significant factor undermining real racial reconciliation in post-1994 South Africa is widespread resistance to shared historical responsibility amongst South Africans racialised as white. In response to the need for localised ‘white work’ (raising self-critical, intragroup historical awareness for the sake of deepened racial reconciliation), this article aims to contribute to the uprooting of white denialism, specifically amongst Afrikaans-speaking Christians from (Dutch) Reformed backgrounds. The point of entry is two underexplored, challenging, contextualised crucifixion paintings, namely, Black Christ and Cross-Roads Jesus. Drawing on critical whiteness studies, extensive local and international experience as a ‘participatory’ facilitator of conflict transformation and his particular embodiment, the author explores the creative unsettling potential of these two prophetic ‘icons’. Through this incarnational, phenomenological, diagnostic engagement with Black Christ, attention is drawn to the dynamics of family betrayal, ‘moral injury’ and idolisation underlying ‘white fragility’. ‘White fatigue’ is challenged by stressing the Biblical nature of Cross-Roads Jesus’ confrontational, ‘ugly’ portrayal of the systemic violence of apartheid and colonialism. It is also argued that a combination of Louw’s shocking portrayal of an enraged, emaciated township Jesus with the explicit depiction of white historical responsibility in Black Christ increases the counter-cultural potential of these icons to disrupt denial amongst white South African Christians. However, the realisation of this potential will require the cultivation of more capacity to work creatively with the intense emotional, moral, spiritual discomfort brought to the surface by this type of religious icon. Contribution: The article argues for a contextualised, South African engagement with the crucifixion of Christ, through an embodied interpretation of two anti-apartheid religious paintings. It makes a contribution to critical whiteness studies and practical theology and thus fits into the interdisciplinary, hermeneutical scope of HTS.
topic racial reconciliation
white denial
white fragility
white fatigue
family betrayal
moral injury
shared responsibility
systemic violence
religious icons
black christology
url https://hts.org.za/index.php/hts/article/view/5836
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