Video: Anglicans have reconciliation 'in our DNA'

13/10/2015

Archbishop Justin Welby speaks to Thomas Gjelten at the Council on Foreign Relations, Washington, 13 October 2015.

 

Anglican churches are 鈥渄eeply involved鈥 in reconciliation work in conflict zones around the world, the 糖心logo has said.

Speaking at the Council on Foreign Relations in Washington today, Archbishop Justin Welby said more than half of Anglican provinces are facing persecution or are in post-conflict or actual conflict.

The Archbishop also said the mainstreams of all faiths must 鈥渃hallenge and subvert鈥 radicalisation and religiously-motived violence within their traditions.

Later the same day the Archbishop preached at Virginia Theological Seminary where he spoke of the need for a united church focused on Jesus that serves the weakest and poorest amid their suffering.

'The DNA of Anglicanism'

Reflecting on his during his first 18 months in office, the Archbishop said a 鈥渟triking鈥 common feature was Anglican involvement in reconciliation and meditation work.

鈥淚t seems to somehow be in the DNA of Anglicanism,鈥 he said. 鈥淒espite our own differences, we seem to find ourselves doing this stuff.鈥

The Archbishop gave the example of a which has been ravaged by civil war. 鈥淲hat we found [there] was the Archbishop leading the reconciliation work. We see that all over the place.鈥

On taking office in 2013 the Archbishop announced that reconciliation 鈥 within and beyond the church 鈥 would be a .

鈥淭he more you see of [war] 鈥 and I spent quite a lot of time doing this, over quite a many years now, long before I was Archbishop 鈥 the agony that you see is beyond all description. And as many people here know, it sears the soul.鈥

The Archbishop said his role in supporting Anglicans to be reconcilers and meditators was 鈥渢o bless that work of reconciliation and to strengthen it, and for us from Lambeth [Palace] to encourage and develop local skills in reconciliation where they are facing conflict.鈥

鈥淲hat does that look like? I think it involves building skills and capacity in the way that you would expect, but it also involves a willingness to re-examine ourselves and our own role in conflict.鈥

The Archbishop said that over the last 10 years there has been 鈥渁 development in all the major global faith traditions of a stream within them of radicalised violence. I don鈥檛 know why this is happening but I think it bears significant research. Why is that so many faith traditions are seeing a radicalisation of small but significant proportion of their adherents?

"What is behind that, and how is the mainstream within each faith tradition strengthened to give a narrative that challenges and subverts sufficiently the narrative of the radicalised people?鈥

Reflecting on the geographical make-up of the Anglican Communion, the Archbishop explained that the average Anglican today is 鈥渁n African woman in her thirties, living in sub-Saharan Africa on less than four dollars a day.鈥

By comparison Anglicans in the global north have become 鈥渢he exception鈥, he said, adding: 鈥淥n the whole we are, to use Pope Francis鈥 phrase, a poor church with the poor.鈥

Asked about the challenges facing such a diverse Communion in the 21st century, the Archbishop highlighted the way that technology has intensified global awareness of diversity.

鈥淚f you have a modern mobile phone, you have the entire world in your hand鈥 through [social media], through news feeds, through blogs鈥 it鈥檚 all there. But there鈥檚 no personal relationship. So you have diversity coming at you [at an] unprecedented rate.

鈥淚n the 19th century, when the divisions in the Anglican Communion were certainly as complicated as they are now, but they took several months to get to you by ship 鈥 now they come at you in microseconds, and yet you don鈥檛 have the personal face-to-face contact which enables you, in the way that diplomacy, through prayer, through interaction at a human level, through facing... to deal with that diversity.

The Archbishop said this challenge was not unique to the Anglican Communion but was typical of business, diplomacy and many other areas.

He said there are two ways to tackle this problem. 鈥淔irst of all we have to build structures that enable us to trust each other, and not to be drawn into conflict by our structures within any global institutions 鈥 and that鈥檚 a massive challenge.

鈥淪econdly, you do have to spend time going to see people and sitting down with them and listening with them.鈥

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