ACNS 4275 | LAMBETH | 08 APRIL 2007
The Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams says that the whole weight
human failure cannot extinguish the creative love of God. In his Easter
sermon, to be preached at Canterbury Cathedral this morning [Sunday 8th
April, Easter Day], Dr Williams says that conflict and failure are part of
the human condition, but that Jesus' death and Resurrection turns that on
its head:
"We share one human story in which we are all caught up in one sad tangle of
selfishness and fear and so on. But God has entered that human story; he has
lived a life of divine and unconditional life in a human life of flesh and
blood."
He recalls a visit to the Solomon Islands in 2004 when one of the leaders
caught up in the islands' recent civil war took public responsibility for
failure:
"He said 'I want you to bless us; I need to say in public that we were
responsible as well as the people on the islands.' Here was a politician
representing a community that had suffered greatly and inflicted great
suffering as well saying 'We were all wrong. We needed healing and
forgiveness.' And it was as if for the first time you could see the bare
bones of what reconciliation means."
The lesson, he says, can be learnt in other conflicts when people learn to
listen to stories other than their own:
".going forward requires us all to learn a measure of openness to
discovering things about ourselves we did not know, seeing ourselves through
the eyes of another. What they see may be fair or unfair, but it is a
reality that has been driving someone's reactions and decisions. We'd better
listen, hateful and humiliating though it may be for some of us."
In Northern Ireland, he said, progress towards reconciliation had made it
possible for people to start to hear each other's histories; this meant that
they needn't be bound by the past:
"Everyone in this history made decisions, some shockingly evil, some tragic,
some foolish [but] those decisions and the sufferings that came from them
don't have the power to tell you what decisions you have to make today."
The Easter story, he says, provides comfort and encouragement:
"If we can accept the unwelcome picture of us and our world that Good Friday
offers, we are in the strangest way, set free to hear what Easter says. Give
up the struggle to be innocent and the hope that God will proclaim that you
were right and everyone else wrong. Simply ask for whatever healing it is
that you need, whatever grace and hope you need to be free, then step
towards your neighbour; Easter reveals a God who is ready to give you that
grace and to walk with you."
"When in our world we are faced with the terrible deadlocks of mutual hatred
and suspicion, with rival stories of suffering and atrocity, we have to pray
for this resurrection message to be heard."
Ends
The Archbishop's sermon for Easter Day will be delivered at the main
Eucharist in Canterbrury Cathedral tomorrow, 8th April. The service starts
at 11am
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