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After the Bell: If hope is not a strategy, is prayer?

The subject of prayer is particularly apposite because, over the weekend, the ANC sent some of its senior members to church to encourage prayers, particularly on the topic of its former leader Jacob Zuma.
After the Bell: If hope is not a strategy, is prayer?

One long-lasting and recurring slogan in business is that hope is not a strategy. There have been books titled along these lines and the slogan has several iterations aimed at encouraging businesspeople to be active rather than passive. Does the same apply to prayer?

The answer might surprise you. Stellenbosch University economist Johan Fourie pointed out in his Substack post on Monday that when it comes to praying for rain, the research suggests that prayer does seem to help.

The question has also intrigued three economists, José-Antonio Espín-Sánchez Salvador, Gil-Guirado, and Nicholas Ryan, who have published a working paper on the subject for the National Bureau of Economic Research in the US. The question they asked was, broadly speaking: Since we know that praying for rain doesn’t help, why do people still do it? 

They began by examining the prayers for rain at a Catholic church in Murcia, Spain, starting — get this — in the 14th century. These prayers are known as pro-pluvia rogations and, unsurprisingly, tend to happen most during droughts and continue until rain falls.

And, would you believe, it turns out that after the prayers, more often than not it does in fact rain. How is that possible? Simple. After a long period of no rain the chance that rain will fall increases significantly. To people offering prayers, it might seem that their prayers have been answered, causing the rainfall, which is probably why they endure.

The subject of prayer is particularly apposite because, over the weekend, the ANC sent some of its senior members to church to encourage prayers, particularly on the topic of its former leader Jacob Zuma. I am not making this up. 

The ANC faces a dilemma concerning its previous leader; a problem so large that seemingly only divine intervention can solve it. The conundrum is that Zuma has endorsed an alternative party, uMkhonto Wesizwe, and is campaigning for the party, while he has yet to resign from the ANC. 

The ANC is in a pretty pickle: either Zuma has in effect resigned, in which case, the party need do nothing — seemingly the preferred action. Or, Zuma has not resigned, in which case the party should haul its former leader in front of its disciplinary body.

To help decide this issue, several senior members of the party went off to, yes, pray. Deputy President Paul Mashatile attended a church service at Church on The Hill in Friedenheim, Nelspruit. He told parishioners that some members of the ANC family were attacking the party from within. 

“When you are a family, sometimes family members ruin the family. They start breaking windows, some become drunks and they kick doors when they come home drunk. The ANC has got such people as well; they are inside, trying to break the windows, trying to kick the doors,” Mashatile was reported as saying. But they would not succeed, because the ANC was built on a rock.

Well, you know, amen to that. I hate to say it, but in this case, I just don’t think prayer is a strategy. The person I would pray for, however, is ANC Secretary-General Fikile Mbalula, who complained on Monday that Zuma’s actions were intolerable, particularly since the party had told lies to Parliament in defence of the then President during the “fire pool” incident following the upgrades at his Nkandla homestead in KwaZulu-Natal.

“We went to Parliament and opened an ad hoc committee and said a swimming pool is a fire pool. The [then] police minister [Nathi Nhleko] was sweating, seeing that this was a lie because it is difficult to explain lies,” he was reported as saying.

Mbalula is obviously deeply hurt by Zuma’s lack of loyalty; gee, aren’t we all? But in how many ways is this not an argument? Confessing to lying, in Parliament no less, is surely more damaging to the party than it is likely to either encourage Zuma to return to the flock, or, alternatively, invoke sympathy from wavering members about his departure. 

What it does demonstrate is that Mbalula’s loquaciousness is its own drunken door-kicking danger: he only stops talking to change feet. This is not just an amusing side issue; there is a constitutionally invoked code of conduct that applies to parliamentarians which strongly suggests they should really try not to lie.

I think in Mbalula’s case, it should extend further. He might consider trying very hard to stop being a cartoon. There is a prayer for you. DM

Comments

David Pennington Jan 9, 2024, 07:01 AM

Clowns and thieves ? ? ? ? ? ?

Margi Jensen Jan 9, 2024, 07:06 AM

Oh Tim, that is a brilliant piece. It had me chuckling. However, it is very sad that so many people at the time, believed that it was ok to present the lies to put a 'different' take on what was clearly fabrication.

Carol Green Jan 9, 2024, 04:26 PM

100% agree!

Wilhelm Boshoff Jan 9, 2024, 07:08 AM

Good one!

Dennis Bailey Jan 9, 2024, 07:08 AM

There seems to be a culture of lying amongst SA politicians and all you are saying is ANC lot are least convincing. Ethical behaviour is not the culture of the ANC , almost any promise they make is a lie before it leaves their mouths : better life for all, what rot!

Sliver Fox Jan 9, 2024, 08:22 AM

So now they admitted to having lied to parliament. The opposition is going to have a field day with this!

Thinker and Doer Jan 9, 2024, 07:23 AM

An excellent article, thank you! Although in respect of the last paragraph, it will in fact be great if the ANC messes up its handling of the matter and is further destabilized, and that it has significant impact on election results in KZN. The opposition need to present a very positive platform to show how they will address the critical issues of the country, which will be in stark contrast to the imploding, corrupt, incompetent ANC.

Bruce Q Jan 9, 2024, 08:55 AM

Hear, hear!! Wouldn't it be wonderful if the DA stopped winging about how bad the ANC is (we all know that), and started telling us how they plan to fix our beautiful country! C'mon the DA, present a clear, concise and practical way forward. Something all South Africans can understand and relate to. Enough with the moans and groans. You have a wonderful opportunity. USE IT!

Alan Watkins Jan 9, 2024, 10:29 AM

Jeez they do that ALL the time. But they dont always get the press. Dig a little deeper and read a little.

Paddy Ross Jan 9, 2024, 10:30 AM

Have you read their policies which are available online? You would find "a clear, concise and practical way forward" there.

Michael Shepstone Jan 9, 2024, 12:01 PM

The problem is not so much having good policies, but getting them through to voters on the ground! The average rural voter is not going to waste his time and precious data looking up the DA policy on line! There needs to be mobilisation on the ground to educate illiterate voters and others away from a simple ANC vote.

John P Jan 9, 2024, 12:16 PM

Exactly

Kenneth Arundel Jan 9, 2024, 01:39 PM

I'm inclined to agree with you on this one. At least one party should try move away from confrontational politics and just plough ahead with their policies as much as they can within the space they find themselves in. Our politics is like a big baby sandpit with the noisy kids constantly throwing things at each other and then saying " it wasn't me"

D'Esprit Dan Jan 9, 2024, 07:29 AM

I'm not sure Mbalula has told the truth about anything since the day he became Youth League leader (what is about the dire quality of 'leaders' elected by that mob in the last 20 years?). As a Minister, he routinely lied about his performance (as do almost all ministers in our government, when they can even be bothered to defend their track records); he admits lying about Zuma's four-bar swimming pool, which was the tip of the iceberg in defending the BIG LIE about Nkandla in general and the quarter-billion price tag; he lies daily about ANC renewal and unity; he lies about the ANC creating a better country - he literally is unable to tell the truth about anything (until inadvertently admitting to lying about the swimming pool).

eddyvandiermen Jan 9, 2024, 08:08 AM

Of course Prayer is a strategy ! Cynical use of the Pulpit as political Soap - Box .

Johan Buys Jan 9, 2024, 08:11 AM

Hope can be a verb, just like prayer. Our government does not like anything that requires effort.

Sliver Fox Jan 9, 2024, 08:19 AM

If you have a basket of fruit and the rotten apple gets up and leaves on its own accord, consider it a blessing and hope that all the other affected fruit joins it in its exodus. Perhaps what remains can then be salvaged. What makes this tricky for the ANC is that if this were to happen, only 10% of the party will remain, but then it may actually be a party that could do the job SA needs. One can only dream.

Hilary Morris Jan 9, 2024, 09:19 AM

In competition for the most inappropriate appointment of all times, the appointment of Mbalula as Secretary General has to be the clear winner. His comments on any and everything are guaranteed not only to be inappropriate, but serve to make matters worse. What in God's name was Ramaphosa thinking? Oh, that's right, he wasn't - he was appointing a committee to advise on whether a commission of inquiry should investigate which situation should be ignored and for how long. The level of frustration with this government rises daily and even the cannon fodder who will continue voting ANC, know that it is nothing more than a corrupt circus. Zuma has the dubious honour of being the ultimate face of crookedness.

Alan Watkins Jan 9, 2024, 10:32 AM

Not just inappropriate, absolutely effing stupid. Did he really think he could tell this in Xhosa to rural constituents and the rest of the country would not find out about it?

Colin K Jan 9, 2024, 09:56 AM

I suppose they're praying Jesus doesn't return this year. If memory serves, the ANC was supposed to be in power until that fictional event.

Ian Gwilt Jan 9, 2024, 10:13 AM

You could not invent this clown if you tried. However maybe Zuma is not so stupid, his picture on the Ballot paper. People will vote for him, possibly by mistake or because he has a genuine following. Hey presto, he can join a coalition including the ANC Not sure where this leaves the commander in thief as he has been very quiet, with his motely crew of wannabes. Maybe it is a part of the Grand Alliance plan Maybe I need to go and lie down

Matthew Quinton Jan 10, 2024, 08:59 PM

Exactly what he is doing. He's a dodgy mofo but one hell of a strategic old warrior.

Con Tester Jan 9, 2024, 10:59 AM

Fortunately, the ANC bigwigs seem unaware of Madalyn Murray O’Hair’s adage that “Two hands working can do more than a thousand clasped in prayer.” I say “fortunately” because the ANC’s “work” is ever sorely deficient for its ineptitude or fraudulence—or both. Regardless, the fracturing of the ANC is a good thing for SA in the long run, notwithstanding Mashatile’s and Ramaposeur’s faux confidence of upcoming electoral victory. For the same reason, having an unfettered, bombastic, and blusterous buffoon like Mr Fix Fokkol as ANC SG can only work in the country’s favour in the long run—especially when he wears that ridiculous D&G bumblebee outfit.

chrisf.vz Jan 9, 2024, 12:29 PM

I once thought that Jacob Zuma was the DA's best weapon when it came to elections but Fikile Mbalula has far exceeded him and has become the new WMD for the DA. And what is more surprising is that Cyril and the rest of the ANC NEC are doing nothing to reign in this idiot. Maybe because they are as clueless as he is?

makhudugregory1 Jan 10, 2024, 08:32 AM

Telling it like it is, Mbalula!! I take my hat off to you!! Now you are being strung up high for telling the Truth, by ANC opposition parties et Al, a real shame

megapode Jan 10, 2024, 02:16 PM

Mbalula’s comments won't help the opposition, or at least the Alliance, one bit. People who would vote for them already have a low opinion of Mbalula and of his party. So nothing to lose. What it might do is head off some threat from the ANC splinter parties, or rouse some of the folks who regard Zuma well but haven't been voting or were thinking of changing their vote.