The
Presiding Bishop's Forum on Global Reconciliation
Anglican
Communion News Service
ACNS 3530 – July 31, 2003
by
Matthew Davies
The
Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church USA (ECUSA) held a forum on
Global Reconciliation on Thursday 31 July at St Mark's Episcopal Cathedral
in Minneapolis as part of the 74th General Convention of ECUSA. The
turnout was staggering with nearly 1,000 people in attendance.
The
speakers at the forum were: the Most Revd Njongonkulu Ndungane, the
Archbishop of Cape Town; Professor Jeffrey D Sachs, Director of the Earth
Institute and a Professor at Columbia University; Abagail Nelson, Director
of Latin American Programs at Episcopal Relief and Development (ERD);
Ranjit Mathews, an Intern at the Office of the Anglican Observer at the
United Nations; and the Revd Dr Sabina Alkire, a priest in the Church of
England and Former Researcher for the Commission on Human Security at the
United Nations.
Bishop
Griswold, speaking about God's Mission in a Global perspective, explained
how the House of Bishops in ECUSA were scheduled to come together a week
after the events of September 11 to discuss global citizenship and what it
meant to be a part of the worldwide Anglican Communion. "9/11 occurred and
the first thought was should the meeting be cancelled," he said. "My
feeling, however, was that [the meeting] was all the more important
because at this point, fear, anxiety and anger were disconnecting us...and
any further point of this would be cutting us off from the sense of being
a global community." He added that there was a strong desire to encourage
a strengthening across the cultural lines.
"As one
of 38 primates, I have not only had the privilege of visiting many of the
provinces, but also to visit fellow Anglican Christians and realise our
incredible resources and the limited vision of people in this country as
being a global community," he said. "We need to take much more seriously
our international role. Reconciliation has to do with the world and so our
speakers this evening will broaden our horizon and give us a perspective
of Christ's reconciling love in a way that is articulate and real."
Bishop
Griswold introduced the first speaker at the forum, Archbishop Njongonkulu
Ndungane, as one of the major forces in the 1998 Lambeth Conference on
global debt and HIV/AIDS.
Archbishop Ndungane opened his speech by explaining that the people of
South Africa are accustomed to the theme of reconciliation between black
and white people but must also deal with the wider issue between the poor
and rich. "This is continuing to widen," he said. "There are 4.5 million
people who are unemployed. Sixty per cent live a life of poverty. The gap
between the rich and poor has risen substantially between 1995 and 2001."
The Archbishop of Cape Town also informed the audience about the
staggering number of people who die from HIV/AIDS each year in Southern
Africa; and the decline in public health, public transport and education.
"People
lose the sense of value and community," he said. "If children are not
lovingly cared for, and men and women are deprived of the opportunity to
work, they will fall prey to drugs, to crime and other means to ease the
pain." He added, "They lose the vision that God has set before us. We need
to affirm the deep and urgent longing that people feel for the poor to
hear the good news at last."
At the
end of his speech, the Archbishop called upon everyone to account to each
other for the way that we use our stewardship. "Nothing is more important
than human life," he said. "And the poor have the same dignity as the rich
and the same means for survival."
Professor
Jeffrey Sachs, who has spent over twenty years at Harvard University and
most recently as Director for the Center for International Development,
delivered a very dynamic and moving speech entitled "We Can Make a
Difference".
"What can
we say about the day that's just passed in Africa ," he said. "We know
that 7,000 African children died today of malaria, we also know that 7,000
died of AIDS. When we talk about the wealth we have in this country, and
the poverty that there is in the world, and the 15,000 people that died
today meaninglessly we talk about the coexistence of wealth that is
unimaginable and kills many people each year."
Professor
Sachs, who is also a special advisor to United Nations Secretary General,
Kofi Annan, revealed that there are one billion people throughout the
world whose daily struggle means that their expectancy of life may be 40
years, and the shocking reality of how 200 out of every 1000 children will
not see their fifth birthday. "A million children each year die of measles
in these poor countries because they don't have the nutrition to give them
the strength of the immune system that they need," he said.
The
largest pandemic in modern society is AIDS, with 13 million Africans
currently dying from the disease, and yet the vast majority don't have
access to the drugs that they need. "These people are trapped because the
world has looked the other way," said Professor Sachs. "There are very
practical solutions. If they can be empowered with first the relief and
then the base of development then their struggle would become less
painful."
The third
speaker, Abagail Nelson, has for the past four years helped the Episcopal
Church to design and implement programs that respond to natural and
manmade disasters, and reduce communities' exposure to future risk. "In
globalisation and reconciliation none of us exists alone," she said. "No
part of this body can say of any other part, 'I have no need of you.'"
She
explained how her belief is that God calls each of us to stretch ourselves
to really identify other people's reality. "Walk in someone else's shoes
sometimes and see what it feels like to live in their perspective," she
said. "It's about investing our own gifts and talents so that there are no
more victims. It's about building the kingdom of heaven."
The next
person to address the audience was Ranjit Mathews, a second generation
Indian-American who has served as an assistant to the HIV/AIDS Office of
the Church of the Province of Southern Africa. "When I went to South
Africa as a missionary I felt I was the one being evangelised," he said.
"The Church must be a witness and raise its prophetic mantel. Once we are
fed spiritually then we are better prepared to service the needs of
others.... Life must be an instrument of love wherever we go."
The final
speaker of the evening, the Revd Sabina Alkire, has worked around the
world helping to alleviate global suffering. One of her concerns was that
out of the twenty poorest countries in the world, sixteen are in conflict
or war. "If four days of military expenditure every year was dedicated to
education we would be able to meet our millennium goal by 2015," she said.
"And if Christians lived out their faith fully there would not be so much
poverty today."
All of
the evening's speeches were extremely moving and revealing, and Presiding
Bishop Frank Griswold's hope and prayer for the forum was that "we will go
forth from this gathering, and from this General Convention, filled with
the Holy Spirit and a deepened commitment to engaging in God's project of
restoring all people to unity with God and each other in Christ.
"Let this
be the beginning of a new and united effort of our church to serve and
advance God's mission of reconciliation globally."