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Mary-Anne Plaatjies-van Huffel
Keywords:
Apartheid, Belhar Confession, Belydende Kring (BK), Holy
Communion, Status confessionis
Abstract
In this article I work with the presupposition that the time
has arrived that the Belhar Confession should be detached from being a document
utilized for advocacy perusal only. The Belhar Confession should rather be
interrogated as a historical document in the true sense of the word. This will be
helpful in construing the Belhar Confession as a discursive instrument in the
discourse on social justice issues both local and global. The article is divided
into four parts. In the first part the focus is largely on the socio political
context of SA during 1960-1990. In the second part the influence of the ecumenical
movement on the discourse on social justice is being attended to. Thirdly I attend
to the drafting of the Belhar Confession and lastly attention will be given to the
reception of the Belhar Confession (1982-1990).