Abstract

One of the challenges for Practical Theology in Africa is to engage with the continent’s concerns and challenges in such a way that the kingdom of God is realised in society and is seen to be relevant to these issues by people who are outside of academia. In our article, which was first presented at the Practical Theology congress in Pretoria in January 2014, the authors seek to demonstrate how this may be accomplished by applying insights to one concern, namely ‘fracking’. The objective is to mobilise the influential Christian faith community in South Africa to begin to exercise prophetic discernment concerning fracking in the Karoo. The fracking debate is a product of the tension between the environmental degradation that its waste products may cause, on the one hand, and, on the other, the greater energy demands of a rapidly increasing world population along with its expectations of an ever-increasing standard of living. Shale gas fracking in the Karoo region of South Africa promises to make vast reserves of oil and gas available to help meet a significant percentage of the country’s energy needs for many years to come, and so thus aid development and contribute to raising the standard of living of many people. Yet the management of the waste products associated with the process is an area of serious environmental concern. The article aims to apprise the South African Christian faith community of the technology and risks involved. Theological guidelines are presented by which fracking’s benefits and dangers can be interrogated so that the community may come to an informed decision as to whether or not to support fracking.

Highlights

  • At the recent Annual Meeting of the Society for Practical Theology in South Africa (2014), the title of one of the keynote sessions was ‘Are we wasting our theology in our continent?’ The authors of the present article believe that this will be the case unless practical theologians in Africa engage with the continent’s concerns and challenges in such a way that the kingdom of God is seen to be relevant by those who do not move in academic theological circles

  • Shale gas is an important segment of energy production in the United States of America (USA) and could have the same impact in South Africa

  • One journal article cannot deal with the extensive eco-theological hermeneutics or with all the empirical environmental problems

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Summary

Introduction

Communicating Practical Theology discourseAt the recent Annual Meeting of the Society for Practical Theology in South Africa (2014), the title of one of the keynote sessions was ‘Are we wasting our theology in our continent?’ The authors of the present article believe that this will be the case unless practical theologians in Africa engage with the continent’s concerns and challenges in such a way that the kingdom of God is seen to be relevant by those who do not move in academic theological circles. A gas and water mixture emerges that is known as produced fluid (Department of Mineral Resources 2012:20ff., Dobb 2013:37).

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