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Bishop slams unholy Sunday shopping BY ERIN CARELSE
W The Durban Passion Play brought two couples together, and now their children are involved, too. At left are Chantal and Cuan Saunders, with children Liam (front with flowers) and Shaylee and (right) Malcolm and Angela with children Alexander (centre back) and Catherine. The Passion Play will be performed from March 25 to April 12. (Photo: Illa Thompson)
Passion Play a family affair BY ILLA THOMPSON
T
HE Passion Play, performed by the Durban Catholic Players’ Guild, embodies love—both spiritual and secular! Cast members claim their involvement in the Durban Passion Play to be life-changing in myriad ways. For one family this is certainly the case. Cuan Saunders and his sister Angela Stewart are Passion Play diehards. And through the Passion Play both siblings met the loves of their lives. Cuan met his wife Chantal, and Angela met husband Malcolm while in the cast of the Passion Play. Performed only every five years, the Durban Passion Play comes to the Playhouse Drama Theatre from March 25 to April 12— starting with the date of the Annunciation and closing on Easter, the Resurrection of the Lord. The Passion Play is very much part of the family’s five-yearly ritual, and their children are now members of the cast too. This is Cuan’s seventh, Chantal’s fourth, Angela’s seventh and Malcolm’s sixth production. “I have been involved in the Passion Play
since I was 11,” said Cuan. “I met my wife here in 2005 and it is part of my life.” This stay-at-home Dad is the production’s graphic designer and plays the role of John. He is probably the only non-Christian in the production. A ballet dancer for 25 years, wife Chantal is the production’s choreographer and dances in the show. Their children Liam, 4, and Shaylee, 8, are in the production too. It is Liam’s first and Shaylee’s second production. Angela, a pre-school teacher and Malcolm, an advocate, have been in six productions together. They met in the 1992 production. Malcolm plays Nathaniel and Angela is a crowd member. Their children, both accomplished piano players, are on stage too: Alexander, 15, has been in four productions, and his sister Catherine, 10, is in her third. The Passion Play is performed by a large cast who volunteer their time and skills as part of their Lenten preparations. The play involves seven months of commitment from a 150-plus cast who receive no remuneration. n Book through Webtickets. Block bookings and entire performances can be arranged through Dominic Sandiah on 082 460 7677.
ORSHIP of God today is weak because it has to compete with the “the worship of selling and buying”, according to the president of the bishops’ conference. “People are not satisfied to buy and sell from Monday to Saturday morning; they also want to do the buying and selling on Sundays as well—so Sundays in terms of business are just like any [other] day,” said Bishop Sithembele Sipuka of Mthatha. That commercialism is reflected not only in weakening Sunday worship, but also in people’s general attitudes. “Many people, even though they would deny it, are gradually believing that their worth lies in what they eat and in things that they have,” Bishop Sipuka said. “The more we have of [these things], the more we want of them—and they leave us empty,” he said. Paraphrasing the famous quote by the French philosopher Descartes, Bishop Sipuka said: “’I buy, therefore I am’ seems to be the defining principle of our identity. And so the command to keep the Sabbath day holy has been largely ignored,” he said. “You will find, in fact, that sport has dethroned God. People are more in stadiums on Sundays and spending many hours in front of DStv’s SuperSport flipping channels for the latest game than being with God,” the bishop noted. Bishop Sipuka was speaking at the episcopal ordination of Bishop Joseph Kizito in Aliwal North in the town’s Sauer Park stadium. He emphasised that both Bishop Kizito and the Catholics whom he will be leading in the diocese have to find ways of remaining true to the commandment of keeping the Sabbath holy for the worship of God. “May worship in this diocese be genuine and lead to an encounter with the true God, and not an encounter with God in our own image,” Bishop Sipuka said.
Church Chuckles
Bishop Joseph Kizito of Aliwal North, at whose ordination Bishop Sithembele Sipuka was the homilist. (Photo: Fr Paul Tatu CSS) Ugandan-born Bishop Joe Kizito’s ordination was well-attended. Archbishop Stephen Brislin of Cape Town presided over the ordination, which was attended by 23 bishops, including three from Uganda and two from Lesotho. The new bishop’s mother, Christine Babirye Nsubuga, was present as well. The 52-year-old prelate is the sixth and first black bishop of the diocese. “I am so thankful to everyone who came and supported me on this day, especially Archbishop Stephen Brislin of Cape Town who presided over my ordination, and the bishops and diocesan clergy and priests. I felt very loved,” Bishop Kizito told The Southern Cross. He especially appreciated Bishop Sipuka’s homily by which he felt both urged and encouraged to lead his people in proper worship and liturgy. In his homily, Bishop Sipuka warned Bishop Kizito that he will find existing erroneous ways of worship, which as a bishop he will have to correct. This is something Bishop Kizito plans to Continued on page 3
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