De Gruchy, John W.: I Have Come a Long Way.
Clements, Keith
De Gruchy, John W. I Have Come a Long Way. Cape Town: Lux Yerbi
2015.
John W. de Gruchy is a white South African theologian who has made
an immense contribution to ecumenical life and thought both within and
well beyond his own country. This autobiography really tells two life
stories: his own personal journey and that of South Africa from the
mid-20th century as seen from the inside. To many people, de Gruchy
first became well-known as one who interpreted to the wider world the
South African church situation under Apartheid in his seminal book The
Church Struggle in South Africa (1979), a title that indicates the
resonances he and others saw with the German Confessing Church's
witness in Nazi Germany, and also his lifelong interest in Dietrich
Bonhoeffer of whose theology he is a major interpreter.
De Gruchy tells his own story vividly and honestly. He was born in
Cape Town in 1939 in a liberal white environment. After a somewhat
narrow youthful evangelicalism, his mind was opened through university
studies at Cape Town and Grahamstown and he was ordained to the
Congregational, his first pastorate being in Durban. His interest in
Bonhoeffer was ignited during a year of postgraduate study in Chicago,
when he perceived the relevance of Bonhoeffer's witness to the
South African scene. Back in South Africa, he became a close associate
of Byers Naude, who founded the Christian Institute (Cl) in 1963 as a
form of Confessing Church. De Gruchy's account makes clear how,
with the Cottesloe consultation that followed the Sharpeville massacre
of 1960, the involvement of the WCC was vital in encouraging an
ecumenical response to Apartheid in South Africa. Although closely
identified with Naude and his work, de Gruchy's own full-time
ecumenical role was with the South African Council of Churches (SACC),
in which he worked as director of communication and studies from 1968 to
1973. The SACC, along with the Cl, was by now thrust into the forefront
of the churches' response to the growing crisis, and de Gruchy was
directly responsible for the SACC-CI report The Church and Apartheid. At
the same time he wrote his doctoral thesis on the ecclesiologies of
Barth and Bonhoeffer as a frame of reference for the South African
church struggle. It was while thus engaged that a close friendship grew
with Bonhoeffer's friend and biographer Eberhard Bethge and his
wife Renate, and it was de Gruchy who invited them to South Africa in
1973. Eberhard Bethge's South African lectures were published as
Bonhoeffer. Exile and Martyr (Ax. one of the lectures, someone in the
audience, so impressed with how Bonhoeffer seemed to speak directly to
the Apartheid scene, asked when it was that Bonhoeffer had visited South
Africa!).
In 1973 de Gruchy left the SACC to teach at the University of Cape
Town, where he remained until retirement in 2003, first of all teaching
Indian religions and then becoming professor of Christian Studies. Far
from this move being a retreat from public involvement into academia, de
Gruchy remained as committed as ever to the churches' engagement
with apartheid and interpreting that engagement theologically. His
founding of the Journal of Theology for Southern Africa provided a
much-needed tool for the kind of committed reflection that was needed.
In the face of ecclesiastical timidity, his own writings uninhibitedly
flaunted the argument that Apartheid was a heresy, just as Bonhoeffer
had declared the racism of the Nazis and so-called "German
Christians" to be a perversion of Christianity. He was a signatory
to the courageous Kairos document of 1985. During the uncertain yet
crucial years of transition from 1990, he sought to answer how, after so
many years of saying "No!" to Apartheid, a "Yes" had
to be uttered to democracy and if so on what theological basis--an
interest that took him to see first-hand the countries of eastern Europe
in their emergence from communist totalitarianism. Not surprisingly, he
acted as a consultant to the process setting up the Truth and
Reconciliation Commission.
Many readers will be struck--perhaps even somewhat exhausted--by
the chronicle not only of writings on subjects embracing reconciliation,
a theology of ministry, Calvin, a Reformed theology of liberation,
restorative justice, as well as more Bonhoeffer, but also of the
seemingly endless travels and visits to lecture on every continent and
in just about every major university in the world. But de Gruchy is more
than a global conference-trotter. As his account makes clear, so many of
his travels and meetings have given him new experiences and perspectives
that he has absorbed into his fertile mind, and out of which he has
forged new insights and themes of his own. Thus in his later years he
has ventured into a theology of aesthetics and an exploration of
Christian humanism. On this way he has been accompanied by his wife
Isobel, whose own theology has found expression in poetry and painting,
with a lot of inspiration from Julian of Norwich. The latter stage of
the journey however has been meant an encounter with tragedy in the loss
of their son Steve, himself a notable theologian, in a drowning accident
in 2010. Even that unspeakably dark experience has been taken up into a
new theological exploration in de Gruchy's moving book Led into
Mystery (2013). As Archbishop Desmond Tutu says in his foreword,
"Many of us ... give thanks for John's intellectual brilliance
and outstanding scholarship. But most of all I give thanks for the
humility of revealing his vulnerability."
As a theologian, he is rooted in his own Reformed tradition yet
open to the whole reach of Christianity--in his placing of himself in
the struggle for justice, in his deep empathy with the worlds of other
religions, and in his quest for the wholly human and all that makes
human life enriching. If "ecumenical" refers to the whole
inhabited earth, then John de Gruchy is a truly ecumenical theologian.
He has indeed come a long way, and his journey is not finished yet.
DOI: 10.1111/erev.12209
Keith Clements, retired general secretary of the Conference of
European Churches, is the author of Dietrich Bonhoejfer's
Ecumenical Quest.