Today the Church remembers Bernard
Mizeki who was born in Portuguese East Africa (Mozambique) in about 1861. James
Kiefer writes:
When he
was 12, he left his home and went to Capetown, South Africa, where for the next
10 years he worked as a laborer, living in the slums of Capetown, but
(perceiving the disastrous effects of drunkenness on many workers in the slums)
firmly refusing to drink alcohol, and remaining largely uncorrupted by his
surroundings. After his day's work, he attended night classes at an Anglican
school. Under the influence of his teachers, from the Society of Saint John the
Evangelist (SSJE, an Anglican religious order for men, popularly called the
Cowley Fathers), he became a Christian and was baptized on 9 March 1886.
Besides the fundamentals of European schooling, he mastered English, French,
high Dutch, and at least 8 local African languages. In time he would be an
invaluable assistant when the Anglican Church began translating its sacred
texts into African languages.
After
graduating from the school, he accompanied Bishop Knight-Bruce to Mashonaland,
a tribal area in Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), to work there as a lay catechist.
In 1891 the bishop assigned him to Nhowe, the village of paramount-chief
Mangwende, and there he built a mission-complex. He prayed the Anglican hours
each day, tended his subsistence garden, studied the local language (which he
mastered better than any other foreigner in his day), and cultivated
friendships with the villagers. He eventually opened a school, and won the
hearts of many of the Mashona through his love for their children.
He
moved his mission complex up onto a nearby plateau, next to a grove of trees
sacred to the ancestral spirits of the Mashona. Although he had the chief's
permission, he angered the local religious leaders when he cut some of the
trees down and carved crosses into others. Although he opposed some local
traditional religious customs, Bernard was very attentive to the nuances of the
Shona Spirit religion. He developed an approach that built on people's already
monotheistic faith in one God, Mwari, and on their sensitivity to spirit life,
while at the same time he forthrightly proclaimed the Christ. Over the next 5
years (1891-1896), the mission at Nhowe produced an abundance of converts.
Many
black African nationalists regarded all missionaries as working for the
European colonial governments. During an uprising in 1896, Bernard was warned
to flee. He refused, since he did not regard himself as working for anyone but
Christ, and he would not desert his converts or his post. On 18 June 1896, he
was fatally speared outside his hut. His wife and a helper went to get food and
blankets for him. They later reported that, from a distance, they saw a
blinding light on the hillside where he had been lying, and heard a rushing
sound, as though of many wings. When they returned to the spot his body had
disappeared. The place of his death has become a focus of great devotion for
Anglicans and other Christians, and one of the greatest of all Christian
festivals in Africa takes place there every year around the feast day that
marks the anniversary of his death, 18 June.
Let us pray: Almighty and everlasting God, who kindled the
flame of your love in the heart of your holy martyr Bernard Mizeki: Grant to
us, your humble servants, a like faith and power of love, that we who rejoice
in his triumph may profit by his example; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who
lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
CALENDAR REMINDERS
SAFEGUARDING GOD’S CHILDREN,
Saturday, 23 June at 10:00 a.m. in Sutton Hall at St. Augustine’s.
SUMMER ART PROGRAM IN JULY at
St. Augustine’s. Please pick up a
registration form in the narthex of the Church.
PLEASE REMEMBER EVERYONE ON OUR
PRAYER LIST, and especially all of those who are traveling this summer, those
who are seeking work, the ill and all of those who have no one to pray for
them.
Your servant in Christ,
Fr. Chester J. Makowski+
St. Augustine of Hippo
Episcopal ChurchGalveston, Texas 77550
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