Friday, June 18, 2027
Proper 6
Liturgical Color: Red
The Third Sunday after Trinity
O Lord, from whom all good proceeds: Grant us the inspiration of your Holy Spirit, that we may always think those things that are good, and by your merciful guidance may accomplish the same; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
The Fourth Sunday after Trinity
Catechist and Martyr in Mashonaland
Anglican Commemoration
Bernard Mizeki was an African catechist, born in Mozambique, who carried the Christian faith to the Shona people of Mashonaland and put their language into Christian words, translating much of the Bible and the Prayer Book into Chishona. When the land rose in revolt in 1896 and Christians were marked as enemies, he refused to abandon the people he had been sent to serve, and was killed for it. He is honored as the first Black African martyr of the Anglican church.
Bernard Mizeki was born around 1861, likely in Mozambique, and came into contact with Anglican missionaries and Christian teaching in his youth. Unlike many missionary enterprise leaders from Europe and America, Mizeki was himself African and understood intuitively the cultural, linguistic, and religious contexts in which the Gospel was being proclaimed. He became a catechist under the Anglican mission in the Diocese of Mashonaland, which was then establishing itself in Southern Rhodesia (modern Zimbabwe).
As a catechist, Mizeki's work was foundational: he taught Christian doctrine, prepared converts for baptism and confirmation, led prayer and worship in local languages, and embodied the Christian faith in the daily life of the Shona communities where he worked. Catechists in African missions functioned as the primary interface between missionary leadership (which remained largely expatriate and European) and African congregations. Mizeki's role made him both a trusted spiritual guide and, inevitably, a figure threatening to indigenous religious and political authorities.
In 1896, the Mashona people rose in rebellion against British colonial authority and the missionary presence that was perceived as allied with colonial expansion. The rebellion, known as the First Chimurenga (or Matabele Rebellion), was also a religious uprising: traditional indigenous religions were reasserted, and those associated with Christianity—especially African catechists and missionaries—became targets. Mizeki was killed, becoming the most prominent African victim of the rebellion and, in Anglican memory, the first widely commemorated African Anglican martyr.
After his death, a shrine was established at the site of his martyrdom, and annual pilgrimages have been made there by Christians throughout the region for more than a century. Though contemporary written records are sparse—Mizeki himself left minimal personal writings, and mission records from the turbulent 1890s are incomplete—oral tradition, missionary testimony, and the living shrine tradition preserve his memory as a faithful witness and martyr.
Bernard Mizeki is honored in African Anglican tradition, particularly in the Church of Zimbabwe, as the first widely commemorated African Anglican martyr. Unlike earlier Uganda Martyrs (primarily 1880s, mostly Catholic), Mizeki represents the Anglican mission in Southern Africa and the indigenization of Christianity through catechetical work. Annual pilgrimages to his shrine site in Zimbabwe constitute a living tradition of veneration and intercession. In contemporary ACNA and global Anglican discourse, Mizeki exemplifies authentic African Anglican witness and the reality that African leaders—not only European missionaries—shed their blood for the faith. His memory bridges missionary history and post-colonial African Christianity.