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South African pastor and author From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mpho Andrea Tutu van Furth (born 1963) is a South African Anglican priest, author and activist. She is the daughter of Archbishop Desmond and Leah Tutu. She co-wrote two books with her father, and a biography about him with the journalist Allister Sparks. She was ordained in 2003, but the Anglican Church of South Africa will not permit her to work as a priest in the church because she is married to a woman, Marceline van Furth. In 2022, she began preaching in Amsterdam.
Mpho Tutu van Furth | |
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Born | Mpho Andrea Tutu 1963 (age 60–61) London, United Kingdom |
Nationality | English |
Occupation(s) | Anglican priest, public speaker, author |
Notable work |
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Spouses | |
Parents |
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Mpho Andrea Tutu was born in London to Nomalizo Tutu, a South African activist, and Desmond Tutu, an Anglican bishop.[2] Both her parents are known for their work as anti-apartheid and human rights activists. Tutu has three siblings: Trevor Thamsanqa, Theresa Thandeka and Naomi Nontombi.[3] She was 31 years old when apartheid ended in 1994.[4]
As a child, Tutu had no desire to follow in her father's footprints as a priest and later described her path to the ministry as taking the "scenic route" and said she felt God calling her into the profession.[5]
Tutu van Furth was ordained as a priest in the Episcopal Church in Springfield, Massachusetts, in 2003.[4] Before her ordination, she was the director of the Discovery Program at All Saints Church in Worcester, Massachusetts.[6] She received her master's degree from Episcopal Divinity School in Cambridge, Massachusetts,[6] and after her ordination she began preaching at the historic Christ Church in Alexandria, Virginia.[7]
Tutu van Furth has co-authored a number of books including Made for Goodness: And Why This Makes All the Difference, The Book of Forgiving: The Fourfold Path for Healing Ourselves and Our World and Tutu: The Authorised Portrait; The former two books were written with her father and the latter with journalist Allister Sparks.[7] She has been an outspoken advocate for the importance of forgiveness.[8][9] She made news for forgiving the murderer of her housekeeper in 2012.[10][11] She and her father have advocated for forgiveness in the wake of racial tensions and police shootings in the United States.[12] As a public speaker, she has shared the stage with The 14th Dalai Lama, Eckhart Tolle, Ken Robinson and others.[13][14]
Tutu van Furth was the founding director of the Desmond and Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation and served as executive director from 2011 to 2016.[2][15]
On 30 January 2022, Mpho Tutu van Furth was confirmed as pastor of Vrijburg, a church in Amsterdam, by the reverend Joost Röselaers.[16]
In 2015, Tutu married Marceline van Furth , a Dutch professor of medicine, and moved to Amstelveen in the Netherlands.[4][lower-alpha 1] Shortly after the marriage, the Diocese of Saldanha Bay withdrew her license as a priest.[18][19][20] Both of her parents were supportive of her marriage.[21] In 2016 the BBC reported that the Anglican Church of South Africa is looking at new guidelines for members who enter same-sex unions, but it is "not clear whether there will be any change when it comes to same-sex marriages of church clerics".[18] As of 2023, the Church Synod still will not bless same-sex unions.[22]
In regards to her marriage, Tutu van Furth said, "I had the extreme good fortune of growing up in a household with parents who were very clear about their faith and very clear about full inclusion of all people ... regardless of gender and gender identity and regardless of sexual orientation." Her father said in 2013 that he would never "worship a God who is homophobic" and both of them have been active in calls for LGBT equality. Desmond Tutu stated that he was "as passionate about [the campaign against homophobia] as I ever was about apartheid".[4]
In September 2022, the Church of England's Diocese of Hereford refused a request to allow her to conduct a funeral in the diocese, that of her godfather and her father's friend the anti-apartheid campaigner Martin Kenyon,[23] because she is married to a woman (the Church of England does not allow its clergy to marry the same sex).[24][25] Former Bishop of Liverpool Paul Bayes criticised the decision and said: "We urgently need to make space for conscience, space for pastoral care, and space for love".[25]
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