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Bishop Russell's message on the war in Europe

As the news unfolds of the war in Ukraine, we all grasp for understanding as we witness travesties against human life and the fear that war brings - we search for words that will buoy us to hold on to the hope of God's transformative power. I can do no better than share the poignant words of fellow bishop, the Rt. Rev. Mark Edington, who serves the Convocation of Episcopal Churches in Europe. Please take a minute to read his reflection and prayer shared below. I encourage all our churches to include in their Prayers of the People this Sunday an intercession that lifts up peace and safety. For a few ideas from our Book of Common Prayer

  • Supplication [it follows the Great Litany], p.154

  • For Peace, p. 815

  • For Human Family, p. 815

  • For those who influence public opinion, p. 827


+Russell

 

Watch Bishop Edington's video message The Episcopal Church has been in Europe for more than two hundred years. Our churches have seen Europe’s wars unfold. They’ve lived and endured in the midst of the destruction and depravity that war brings. Our parish here in Paris set up a field hospital during France’s war with Prussia in 1870 that treated wounded soldiers. Our parish in Munich created a clinic during World War I that treated wounded German soldiers and fed families who had no income. And our churches here have been casualties of war. A church of the Convocation worshipped in Dresden, Germany, until it was destroyed by bombing. Our parish in Munich was closed by the Gestapo in 1942, and its library of eight thousand books was burned. Most of our churches here were closed during the Second World War. And our cathedral in Paris was used as a military chapel by the occupying German forces. Perhaps more than any other part of the Episcopal Church, our churches in Europe have lived through the horrors of war—and the pointlessness of war, too. The cathedral's cloister, a memorial to the dead of the twentieth century’s wars in Europe, is our silent testimony to that truth. And for a long time—almost eighty years—we have believed that the futility of war was enough to deter it. Today, with war unleashed in Ukraine, we have been proven wrong. Our faith teaches us that we must stand with the vulnerable and the oppressed. And at the same time, our faith teaches us that we are meant to be followers of the prince of peace, of the one who taught us that violence is always a compromise with evil. It is hard for us to reconcile those two teachings today, when innocent people are dying at the hands of a military onslaught. Our prayers feel insufficient to defend those cowering in fear and exposed to bullets and bombs. But we know that the place where war lives is in the human heart. As the prophet Jeremiah teaches us, the heart is devious above all else; and it is in the devices and desires of hearts resisting God’s call to live in love that the first seeds of war take root. We often begin our prayers with the words “Almighty God.” But the deeper truth of our Christian faith is that we believe humanity has been redeemed, and the world forever changed, by an all-vulnerable God—a god whose love is finally victorious through the vulnerability of a naked man nailed to a cross. It is from that seeming defeat that the victory over death and sin is won forever—even the sin that lies at the heart of war. And so as we begin our season of Lent, we are called to give up our easy complacency about the durability of peace. We are called to consider again the reminders in our midst of war’s relentless cost to human life and God’s hope. And we are called to pray, and speak, and to labor for the truth that Christ has called us to transform this broken world through the hard work of love. God of timelessness, From chaos and disorder you brought forth the beauty of creation; From the chaos of war and violence Bring forth the beauty of peace. God of compassion You saw the humanity of the outcast and the stranger; Help us to see the evils of our hatreds and suspicions and to turn them into the embrace of your Beloved Community. God of peace, Through your love on the cross You overcame the power of violence and death; Turn us away from the love of power That we may transform a warring world through the power of your love. Amen. The Rt. Rev. Mark D. W. Edington Bishop in Charge The Convocation of Episcopal Churches in Europe

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