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International Visitors Bring World Concerns to Convention

Episcopal News Service. August 6, 1997 [97-1913]

(ENS) Describing a world where "violence has come of age," guests brought a host of international concerns to the 72nd General Convention and called the Episcopal Church to respond to needs beyond the United States.

Deputies and bishops agreed that sectarian violence, crushing third-world debt and a very fragile peace in the Middle East should continue to be of concern to Episcopalians.

The convention opened with strong words from Archbishop of Armagh Robin Eames, primate of the Anglican Church in Ireland for 12 years.

Eames knows firsthand about terror and violence. He used his experience as a leading international peacemaker to challenge the 3,600 General Convention deputies, bishops and visitors to be instruments of the "peace of Christ."

"We must search for a new strategy of peace," Eames said. "There are many peace lovers but too few peacemakers."

"Perception can become reality overnight," he said, adding there is a need for the Anglican family to develop a "language and a new and deeper theology of peace."

Eames spoke of divisions in his own land and around the world.

"We've had a period of intense trouble and difficulties in Northern Ireland," he said. "Our hopes are often dashed by the lack of political progress." Eames said both "communities" -- Irish Nationalists and the Unionists -- fear for their futures.

Eames said he has always welcomed support from the bishops and clergy of the United States and noted that several U.S. dioceses have links with dioceses in the Church of Ireland.

Liberia rebuilding

Eames was not the only speaker to bring reports of war, efforts for peace, and support through the church. Bishop Edward W. Neufville of Liberia said that after eight years of civil war, his country has lost more than 200,000 people to violent death, and more than 1 million people have been forced from their homes, most of them becoming refugees to other countries.

But the Anglican Church of Liberia has remained strong, Neufville told the House of Bishops.

Neufville thanked Presiding Bishop Edmond Browning and the Episcopal Church for its support, both prayerful and material, as Liberia has "been plagued" by the civil war. Schools were closed and children have not been educated in the country for more than seven years.

"They are now crying out for education," Neufville said. "This is the time for the church to respond."

Bishop Barnabas Dwijen Mondal of Bangladesh spoke of the isolation of Christians in Bangladesh, where only one-half of 1 percent of the population is Christian.

We are cut off from our community, and one feels very lonely and alone" in a country with so few Christians, Mondal said. "But we rejoice in the Lord and in the fellowship of Christians."

Middle East remains a concern

The continuing witness of the Episcopal Church in the Middle East was praised by Bishop Samir Kafity, president-bishop of Jerusalem and the Middle East.

Kafity offered words of thanks and encouragement for support and witness to Palestinian people since 1848.

This support, particularly by Presiding Bishop Edmond Browning and his wife, Patti, has been especially important during the intifada when the Israeli government suspended Palestinian rights, Kafity said. Kafity presented a medal to Browning on behalf of Yassir Arafat, president of the Palestinian National Authority. Browning will be the third person to receive the medal, the highest award given by the Palestinian government. Both previous recipients also were Anglicans, Kafity said.

The convention responded by approving a resolution calling for Jerusalem to serve as the capital of two independent states, Israel and Palestine.

The future status of the city is of crucial importance to lasting peace and has long been a matter of contention. According to the Rev. Canon John Peterson, secretary general of the Anglican Communion and former dean of St. George's College in Jerusalem, the process to determine Jerusalem's status is widely perceived as having broken down while at the same time Israel's government has strengthened its control of the city and surrounding territory.

The resolution recognizes Jerusalem as the seat of the Abrahamic peoples -- Jews, Christians and Muslims, affirms that Jerusalem should serve as the capital for both Israel and Palestine, and calls on the U.S. government to "demonstrate a firm commitment to justice for the Palestinians as it does for the security of the state of Israel."

Other actions

In other international actions, the bishops and deputies concurred on:

[thumbnail: Guests Add International...]