Abstract:
From the viral social media feeds showing Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng in fervent prayer
for the nation, to professed Christian Thuli Madonsela’s careful expression of the separation
between religion and state, faith identity in the public sphere emerges as anything but a
straightforward matter. By placing ‘Christian’ in parenthesis, the 2019 theme of the Theological
Society of South Africa conference acknowledged that leaders operate in negotiated spaces
and confirmed the complexity of the context in which we attempt to conceptualise leadership
from a theological perspective. This raises the question of the role that personal faith convictions
play and may be allowed to play in public life. While conceptualising leadership from a faith
perspective in a context that is at once secular(ising) and post-secular(ising) may be complex,
evidence emerging from leadership studies of the importance of spirituality in leadership
necessitates such a reflection. This article considers the problem from a theological point of
view, drawing on Schleiermacher and Bonhoeffer’s later letters from prison to provide a
theological foundation for a public spirituality of leadership.