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Photo Gallery and Resources from Learning Forum with Shadia Q.- Saturday, January 25, 2025 More photos available on our website - click here. When we planned the Service of Prayer for Peace in Palestine and Israel on January 19 followed by a Learning Forum with Shadia Qubti we did not yet know that this would be the first day of the Hamas-Israel Ceasefire. Our prayers and laments uttered in the same hours as the Israeli hostages and Palestinian prisoners were being released took on an added sense of poignancy. Following our potluck lunch, Shadia with her grace and disarming presense put us all at ease as she spoke to us about her marginal position in Israeli society - as a woman and Palestinian Christian she was a minority within a minority. In the words of one participant, "[the presentation] shed some light on the very fraught events of the last months. I think that all of us had our views expanded by this." A learning that will stay with me--that is not widely reported in the mainstream media--is the use of plea bargains by the IDF with Palestinian prisoners imprisoned under administrative detention. The prisoners are offered to be released if they will sign a plea bargain confessing (in part or entirely) to having committed certain offenses. This may lead to false confessions in order to end their unbearable situation and avoid remainint imprisoned indefinitely. The photo gallery includes an image of books for further learning. Shadia has also contributed a chapter in a forthcoming book. Her chapter, "Noticing Sumac in Unexpected Places: Engaging Palestinian and Indigenous Writings on the Land" will be included in The Cross and the Olive Tree: New Palestinian Theological Reflection Amidst Gaza soon to be published by Orbis Books. Kairos Canada has a "Just Peace in the Middle East Ecumenical Hub" where you will find a list of ecumenical resources. You can also find further resources at the United Network for Justice and Peace in Palestine and Israel Trinity Grace United Church in Vancouver is holding a film series "See Palestine Together." The next one is this coming Tuesday, January 28 featuring, "Food as Weapon and Resistance." Doors open at 6PM and film starts at 6:30PM.
For more infomation visit: http://gloriadei.ca/blog/photo-gallery-and-resources-from-learning-forum-with-shadia-q
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A Prayer for Holocaust Remembrance Day
January 27 is International Holocaust Remembrance Day. This year marks the 80th anniversary of the liberation of the Auschwitz Birkenau German Nazi Concentration and Extermination Camp. Over one million people were murdered in this vast complex alone, most of them Jews. You can find essential information about the history of the Holocaust here, and read about the experiences of Holocaust survivors here. In its 1995 Statement to the Jewish Communities in Canada our Church painfully acknowledged the anti-Judaic diatribes contained in Luther’s later writings, and deplored their use "by anti-semites as part of their teaching of hatred toward the Jews and Judaism in our own day." The statement goes on to declare:
The horrific attacks by Hamas on October 7, 2023 and subsequent response of the state of Israel has incited fear, vandalism and hate speech against Jews. We want to commend to you Bishop Susan Johnson's and Archbishop Linda Nicholls joint letter before Easter last year calling on the church to stand against anti-semitism.
May the following prayer by The Council of Christians and Jews (CCJ) in the UK guide our actions. PrayerLoving God, you care for each We lament the loss of the six May our minds be clear and attentive Help us all to turn away from hatred Strengthen us so that we, in our Photo - Auschwitz by Karsten Winegeart on Unsplash
For more infomation visit: http://gloriadei.ca/news/a-prayer-for-holocaust-remembrance-day
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Catching up on News from our BC Synod
Bishop Kathy Martin returned to work last Fall following a lengthy recovery from heart surgery. In a post in the BC Synod News she expressed her gratitude "for your prayers, cards and words of encouragement while I was away on medical leave." One of Bishop Kathy's official acts upon her return was to extend a Warm Welcome to Bishop Larry Kochendorfer to our Synod. Bishop Larry served as Bishop to the Synod of Alberta and the Territories, until last year. Bishop Larry has moved to BC and is serving as pastor with the people of Our Redeemer Lutheran Chruch in Pentincton, BC. He is also been appointed as Assistant to the Bishop (A2B) and will focus on supporting ministry in our Northern Region and then move into some of the new mission ideas the Synod has been exploring in the southern Interior Region. As he sensed God calling him out of that role (as Bishop of the Alberta Synod) we had the opportunity to invite him to join us here in the BC Synod to once again take up his ministry as a parish pastor and to continue to serve the wider church through his work as our new Assistant to the Bishop for Special Service. To learn more about Bishop Larry please follow this link. |
To Be Torn in TwoSeeking Moral Clarity on the Israel-Gaza War Image Credit: Dan Knight At its June 2023 Special Convention, delegates passed a Resolution on Peace and Justice in Palestine and Israel. The resolution reaffirmed the commitment "of our churches to the pursuit of peace with justice for all in Palestine and Israel." As part of that commitment the resolution encourages churches to:
Guided by this resolution which encourages our Church to take concrete steps to live out the gospel values of compassion justice and peace, Gloria Dei invited Shadia Q. a Palestinian Christian and scholar to speak to us about the struggles Palestinians face living under occupation. In preparation for Shadia's visit Pastor Vida wrote the following letter to the congregation. If you click on the "Read More" button at the bottom, this will take you to our website where you can download the letter as pdf. ------------------------- January 16, 2025 Dear members of Gloria Dei, I write this in the first hours following the announcement of the first phase of a Hamas-Israel ceasefire which will see the release of a significant number of hostages as well political prisoners. Together with people of goodwill across the world I am relieved that the ordeal of the hostages and their families as well as the unfathomable suffering of the people of Gaza after a fifteen-month long campaign of genocidal violence will soon come to end (contingent on ratification by the Israeli Knesset). However, this moment while hopeful is also a fragile one. A long journey, fraught with much uncertainty, still lies ahead. The leadership of both Israel and the Palestinian people will have to put their peoples' interest ahead of their own before a just and lasting peace is achieved for both Israel and Palestine. When news of Hamas' brutal attacks broke on October 7, 2023 I was stunned and appalled, as we all were, at the unspeakable atrocities and criminal acts. I imagined the terror and dread that Israelis must be feeling and waited with unease, for the military response that I knew would come as the Israeli state exercised its right to self defense. However, the scale of the bombing campaign which in the first few weeks of the war dropped 25,000 tons of bombs (equivalent to two nuclear bombs), the targeting of schools, hospitals and designated safe areas on a population with no safe places to flee, the blocking of supplies of food, water, fuel and other necessities amounted to collective punishment and not self-defence. As Israel's relentless bombing campaign and indiscriminate shooting of civilians and children continued, human rights organizations, international law experts and scholars of genocide began to investigate whether Israel was committing genocide. In addition to the ruling by the International Court of Justice that there were plausible grounds that Israel's actions in Gaza could amount to genocide, last December, Amnesty International also concluded that Israel was indeed committing genocide against the Palestinian people. Against these judgements, "Israel has repeatedly argued that its actions in Gaza are lawful and can be justified by its military goal to eradicate Hamas." But as human rights and international law practitioners point out:
As a pastor, beginning first with Russia's full-scale illegal invasion of Ukraine in 2022, and then followed by the Israel-Hamas war, I have struggled in discerning how much emphasis of these conflicts and their attendant moral questions to place in my sermons and in the design of our Sunday liturgies. I know that for some, any emphasis is too much—the church should stay clear of any political discourse and focus on our personal relationship with God. But the faith our God calls us into is not a private or exclusive faith. The God we worship and pray to commands us to love our neighbor. Indeed, our professed love of God is proven by love for our neighbor (1 John 4:20). Yes, that means supporting food pantries, and donating to humanitarian aid, but it is not limited to acts of charity. In our Affirmation of Baptism (ELW, p. 236) we make promises to be faithful to God and the gospel by attending to the Scriptures and prayer, but it doesn't stop there. We also promise to follow the example of Jesus to "strive for justice and peace in all the earth." How do we understand this promise we make? In the gospel of Luke, Jesus inaugurates his ministry by quoting from Isaiah . . .that the Spirit of the Lord has anointed and sent him "to proclaim freedom for the prisoners, to recover sight for the blind and to release the oppressed." He is not simply talking about freeing people from the oppression of personal sins, but freeing people from systems of sin that dehumanize and de-spirit them. As in the days when Jesus walked the roads controlled by an occupying army. . .as in the days when Indigenous children were torn from their mothers' arms by agents of the state. . .as in the days when a Jewish girl by the name of Anne Frank hid from the Gestapo behind a bookcase in her secret annex in order to escape the gas chambers. . .and down to our own days where minority people like the Uyghurs of China get detained to suffer the indignities of re-education camps, and Ukrainians are imprisoned and tortured for simply being Ukrainian, and Palestinian children are arrested and kept in detention for months and even years simply for the crime of throwing rocks at soldiers of an occupying army, or for no crime at all . . . . . .As in all these days and times and places, the systems of sin Jesus came to release people from include oppressive systems of government and political regimes that are architects of repression and sponsors of state terror, war crimes, and crimes against humanity. Jesus' way of overturning these oppressive systems is not by military conquest but through love for all people, including our enemies, and in solidarity with the oppressed. I was struck by how the words of a Eucharistic prayer captures this solidarity with the oppressed:
Who are today's outcast and despised? Where are today's outcast and despised? To be faithful to our baptismal covenant, to strive for justice and peace entails advocacy on behalf of those suffering human rights violations and engaging with those who have influence and power to bring more justice and peace into the world. When the church speaks out on human rights violations it is not being partisan. It is aligning itself with humanity and those suffering among us. Canadian author and physician Gabor Mate, who is Jewish and a Holocaust survivor, said this in answer to the question, "Why is it important to support Palestinians?"
When we hear Gabor Mate's words through the lens of Luke's gospel, in supporting Palestinians' human rights, we are striving for that reign of justice and peace - which Jesus' ministry inaugurated. The former Rector of the Tantur Ecumenical Institute in Jerusalem in the 1980s - the late Donald Nicholl offered this profound observation from his time in Israel and Palestine when commenting on a Christian response amidst the conflict. This is what he said:
To be torn in two, and I would add, to also have the courage to speak up about serious moral issues. To speak and act in the public square in ways that are consistent with the theology and ethics of our faith. We are a small congregation, with not a lot of political capital or social influence. What can we do that can make a difference? In his sermon following the election of Donald Trump and titled "In Difficult Times We Find Out What Kind of Christians We Are," Michael Wolf, pastor of Lake Street Church in Illinois, pointed out that:
He astutely observes that to give a cup of water to a little one is to see their humanity. According to the French philosopher Emmanuel Levinas, we know God — the Sacred — when we encounter the face of the other. He wrote:
Beloved Ones of God, the Palestinian people and our Palestinian Christian siblings are asking us to see them and not let them die alone. They are asking us to see them, even as the first tentative steps toward a permanent ceasefire are being taken. We're never too small or too old to recognize our common humanity or to recognize the suffering and pain of another as if it were our own. It is in this spirit that I ask you to join together in welcoming Shadia Qubti to our learning forum this Sunday as she tells us her story of what it means to live as a Palestinian Christian in the world today and in the context of the Palestinian struggle for freedom and self-determination.
Yours in Christ, Pastor Vida
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Choose Presence
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