Abstract:
South Africa in which we are living is characterised by unparalleled social and political change
and apparently enormous differences of option. However, there is one aspect of our society that
most of us would probably agree about and that is the decline of morality in our cities. Apart
from the economic and political crisis, and the erosion of the core competence to actually get
things done in the municipalities, South Africa is an ailing society with disturbing pathologies
in terms of indiscipline, violence, rape, assault, fraud and a failure to accept personal
accountability for the high levels of crime, corruption, xenophobic attacks, gender-based
violence and disintegration of families. The main aim of this study is to outline the profile of
moral decay in the South African urban community and to define the calling of the Church
towards moral regeneration. The conclusion arrived at is that there are definite signs of moral
degeneration over a wide sphere of human endeavour in South African urban community, and
that the church has a particular role to play as a driving agent for moral renewal.
CONTRIBUTION : Whilst there are many postive things brought by urbanisation in our cities,
however, moral decay in our South African cities is one of the biggest threats to South Africa’s
hard earned, freedom and democracy and merits closer attention. This study in ethics joins the
voices of those people who are propagating moral regeneration in our times.
Description:
Dr Sekhaulelo is participating
in the research project,
‘Social ethics for regions in
flux’, directed by Dr Willem
Fourie, Department of
Systematic and Historical
Theology, Faculty of Theology
and Religion, University of
Pretoria.
This study is the result of a postgraduate thesis titled ‘The Calling of the Reformed Churches in South Africa in the Moral Renewal of the Urban Community in South Africa’ submitted to the Department of Christian and Dogmatics, Faculty of Theology, University of Pretoria by Motshine A. Sekhaulelo under the supervision of Prof De Villiers D.E. for the partial fulfilment of his post-graduate degree. (http://hdl.handle.net/2263/40196)