July 8, 2006
LAMBETH PALACE – The Archbishop of Canterbury,
Dr. Rowan Williams, will preach July 9 that faith communities can
best counter extremist terrorism by demonstrating extreme confidence
in God.
In a sermon to be preached in York Minster, England,
Williams says the pain of last July's terror attacks in London is
still felt deeply.
"Today it is inevitable that we should have much
in our minds all those whose lives were so brutally taken away,
as well as those whose lives were shattered by injury or bereavement,"
Williams' sermon reads. "People of faith have had to try and come
to terms with the horrible fact that there are those who want to
serve their God and their idea of justice by organized slaughter
and suicide."
Williams says that those who have used religion
to justify terrorist killing promote a blasphemy:
"For the person who resorts to random killing
in order to promote the honor of God or the supposed cause of justice
it is clear that God is too weak to be trusted. God is too weak
to look after his own honor and we are the strong ones who must
step in to help him. Such is the underlying blasphemy at work."
People of faith, he says, need to show confidence
and trust in God.
"What we need is people in all our communities
of such faith that they do not seek to fill the void in their souls
by feverish language and action that is blind to the reality of
others. It is people who are extreme in their confidence in God
who will most effectively challenge the extremists of murder and
fear."
Christians, he says, have the example of Jesus'
teaching in the gospels to "take nothing for the journey."
"For us to go on our way with nothing in the
way of securities for the future is our most eloquent witness to
the Lordship of Jesus."
Episcopal News Service
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