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WCC general secretary, Rev. Dr Konrad Raiser, sent a pastoral
letter to WCC member churches in the USA on Thursday, 20 September,
to express continued ecumenical support and sympathy in the wake
of the attacks on New York and Washington, DC, and to urge discernment
and encourage faithfulness in local, national and international
responses.
The letter also shares the WCC Executive Committee's recommendation
to send a delegation of church leaders from around the world to
the U.S. as "'living letters' of compassion, and to engage
with you in a common reflection about how we can shape a shared
witness to the world in a time of such great need."
The text of the letter follows:
Dear Sisters and Brothers in Christ,
Grace and peace to you in our One Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ.
In the brief message I sent you on behalf of the Executive Committee
of the World Council of Churches on that tragic morning of Sept.
11, I assured you of the prayers of your sister churches around
the world. That was an affirmation of faith. Now you have had
the evidence of those prayers in an almost unprecedented flood
of messages of compassion, love and solidarity from churches in
East, West, North and South.
This expression of unity in such a time of trial gives flesh
to the words Paul wrote to the Church in Corinth: Blessed
be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of
mercies and God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our affliction,
so that we may be able to comfort those who are in any affliction,
with the comfort with which we ourselves are comforted by God.
For as we share abundantly in Christs sufferings, so through
Christ we share abundantly in comfort too. Our hope for you is
unshaken, for we know that as you share in our sufferings, you
will also share in our comfort ( II Cor. 1:3-7).
As I write to you now, ten days after the tragedy, the words
in the Revelation to John addressed to the angel of the church
in Ephesus also come to mind. I know your works, your toil
and your patient endurance. I know you are enduring patiently
and bearing up for my name's sake, and you have not grown weary
(Rev. 2:2-7).
In these days, you have sought to respond in faith to many contradictory
voices. Some plead for a form of justice that would name the evil
and identify those responsible and bring them to trial in appropriate
courts of law. Others, however, want decisive military action
to show the will of the nation to avenge its losses and deny victory
to its enemies. Very many share the deep apprehension you have
heard from churches abroad about the prospect of the United States
striking out again with its uncontested military might. They fear
that this would result in an ever-rising spiral of retributive
violence and the loss of ever more lives.
Words of condemnation and the language of war come
so quickly to the fore. Blame is easily assigned to the
enemy. These are reinforced by the images and messages streaming
across all our television screens, wherever we live. It is far
more difficult to regard ourselves in the mirror of such hatred,
and to have the courage to recognize how deeply violence is rooted
within ourselves, our communities and even our churches. These
are lessons we are all trying to learn in the Decade to Overcome
Violence.
Among those who have contributed to the remarkable outpouring
of sympathy with the U.S.A. have been other communities of faith.
They share both your sufferings and your fears. Partly in response
to this, but also out of your own sense of justice, you have reached
out to those communities in your own nation and with them have
spoken out clearly against threats or open acts of violence against
Muslims and Arab Americans. This powerful witness must be heard
both at home and abroad. No one should be allowed to forget that
in the places often mentioned as primary targets of military retaliation,
Muslims, Christians, and people of other faiths live side by side.
Minority Christian communities and those majority communities
with whom their lives are shared stand to suffer severely at the
hands of religious extremists if the Christian West
strikes out yet again.
People in your country and around the world have gathered together
during this past week in sanctuaries of the churches for silent
reflection, and to invoke the presence of the Holy Spirit, who
stands beside us in our time of need and journeys with us through
the valley of the shadow of death. In these safe spaces, Christians
and others have sought to discern the deeper meaning of such thoughtless
acts and the suffering they have inflicted. This is indeed a time
for quiet discernment of the signs of the times, for
courage and wisdom, and to pray for Gods guidance. As the
prophet Isaiah says: In quietness and trust shall be your
strength (Is. 30:15).
The message to the church in Ephesus goes on, however: But
I have this against you, that you have abandoned the love you
had at first. Remember then from what you have fallen, repent
and do the works you did at first.
The United States was one of the early architects of the United
Nations and was once among the strongest advocates for the international
rule of law. In recent times, however, it has repeatedly ignored
its international obligations and declared its intention to ignore
the rest of the world in pursuit of its own perceived self-interests.
This it does to its own and the worlds peril.
The events of Sept. 11 have again reminded all nations that all
are vulnerable and that the only true security is common security.
The United States, so often accused, has now been the beneficiary
of the sympathy and solidarity of the whole world. It could respond
in kind and with humility by reversing its course now and rejoining
the global community in a common pursuit of justice for all. It
could set aside its reliance on military might at whatever cost
and invest in efforts to find non-violent solutions to conflicts
generated by poverty, mistrust, greed and intolerance.
As the writer of the Book of Revelation says, He who has
an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches.
It is one of the chief marks of the ecumenical movement that
the churches understand Jesus prayer that they all might
be one, as he is one with the Father. They are being called to
practice mutual love and to extend this love even to the enemy,
to become, as our familiar hymn puts it, one great fellowship
of love in all the whole wide earth. No one can live alone,
separated from the wider fellowship, for we share one humanity.
When one hurts, all suffer together.
As an expression of that fellowship, the WCC Executive Committee
has expressed its desire to send to you a delegation of church
leaders from around the world as living letters of
compassion, and to engage with you in a common reflection about
how we can shape a shared witness to the world in a time of such
great need. I hope that you will welcome and open your hearts
to them as they will to you.
I reassure you again of our constant prayers, our love and our
appreciation for your ministries of consolation and of prophetic
vision. May God bless, guide, and continue to strengthen you.
For further information
Karin Achtelstetter
Media Relations Officer
Tel: (+41.22) 791.61.53
Mobile: (+41) 79.284.52.12
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