Ubuntu in the worship service as heterotopia : a liturgical-ecclesiological exploration
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Date
Authors
Scott, Hilton Robert
Wepener, Cas
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
AOSIS
Abstract
Through taking an interdisciplinary approach to studying liturgy, a connection has been made
in this article between three theological concepts: koinonia, liturgical inculturation and the
utopian ideal of inclusivity in the form of ‘heterotopias’. These concepts are all, to some degree,
comparable to the African concept of ubuntu, an ideal or utopia in itself. This article aims to
draw comparisons between the collection of normative ideals above and a current multicultural
church context empirically researched in postcolonial and pluralistic church societies – in
postapartheid South Africa. These comparisons are made as a process of critical interference by
doing an empirical probe by asking ‘what is happening’, and a normative probe, which asks
‘what should be happening’. This involves investigating the actual liturgical praxis of
worshipping communities in order to navigate toward and better understanding of an inclusive
society as depicted by the concepts of the Rainbow Nation or Ubuntu. The conclusion shows
that which ‘ought to be happening’ in worship that serves our current South African realities is
– to an extent – already happening in some worshipping communities. Insights gained from the
liturgical praxis of these communities can serve as best practices for other communities.
Description
Keywords
Inclusivity, Exclusivity, Prayer, Ubuntu, Heterotopia, Liturgical inculturation, Liturgical interculturation, Liturgical rituals, Practical theology
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Scott, H.R. & Wepener, C.,
2020, ‘Ubuntu in the worship
service as heterotopia: A
liturgical-ecclesiological
exploration’, In die Skriflig
54(1), a2514. https://doi.org/10.4102/ids.v54i1.2514.