December 31, 2006 The Archbishop
of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams has said that we need to feel the same hunger
for justice that ended the slave trade if the world is to be changed for the better.
Speaking in his New Year message, broadcast on BBC Television in the UK on New
Year's Eve and repeated on New Year's Day, he drew on the example of William Wilberforce
to urge people to act to change the world. "Jesus talks
about being hungry and thirsty for righteousness, for justice. And if we hear
that in the way it's surely meant, we have to conclude that he means that we should
feel there's something missing in us, something taken away from us, when another
person, near or far away, has to face need and suffering. We get to be ourselves
only when we wake up to them and their needs." The message
was filmed in Holy Trinity Church in Clapham, and the Arndale Shopping centre
in Wandsworth, South London and also featured footage shot during his visit to
World Food projects in Southern Sudan. The reformers, he said regarded the slave
trade as making the whole of humanity less than human: "People
like William Wilberforce and Henry Thornton felt they were made less human than
they should be by the appalling injustice of the slave trade. They felt a hunger
for justice – a sense of being spiritually impoverished – "undernourished" because
of slavery. People, he said, may feel overwhelmed or
even bored by constant appeals, but change could only come if people were moved
to act: "When we look at the familiar images of other
people's suffering, do we feel a void inside ourselves, a yearning for something
different and a conviction that it needn't be like this? That's where change begins.
And it's one of the differences that faith can make; faith in God and in people.
It's worth remembering this year those who struggled to do away with the slave
trade. If we lived in a society that tolerated slavery now, wouldn't we feel soiled
and diminished by it? Wouldn't we feel hungry for something different? So what
are the things today that make us feel the same?" The
full text of the message is below. Here in this London
shopping centre – as in towns across the UK – the January sales are well underway
– after a Christmas when many of us probably spent more than we should and eaten
more than we should . It's all in stark contrast to Sudan where I visited last
February. The local church feeds several hundred each
day, using its school as the feeding point where the World Food Programme's supplies
can be distributed. Centres like this are few and far between – and the World
Food Programme is already warning that resources are running out. We
all respond as best we can to one emergency appeal after another. And we feel
just a bit guilty as we acknowledge that we're almost bored by yet another appeal
– yet another set of pictures of suffering children in need. It's
true that endless appeals lose their impact. Information – statistics, won't really
motivate us; The only thing that makes a difference is if we get to see those
faces and figures as somehow about us – not just Them. It's
when the hunger or the homelessness or the loneliness of someone else becomes
something that I feel for myself as an affront – something that makes me less
of a person. In the Bible, Jesus talks about being hungry
and thirsty for righteousness, for justice. And if we hear that in the way it's
surely meant, we have to conclude that he means that we should feel there's something
missing in us, something taken away from us, when another person, near or far
away, has to face need and suffering. We get to be ourselves only when we wake
up to them and their needs. 2007 marks two hundred years
since the slave trade was abolished. Here at Holy Trinity Clapham – a group of
Christians called the "Clapham Sect" were at the forefront of the fight to end
the slave trade. People like William Wilberforce and
Henry Thornton felt they were made less human than they should be by the appalling
injustice of the slave trade. They felt a hunger for justice – a sense of being
spiritually impoverished – "undernourished" because of slavery. This
is what made the difference. When we look at the familiar images of other people's
suffering, do we feel a void inside ourselves, a yearning for something different
and a conviction that it needn't be like this? That's
where change begins. And it's one of the differences that faith can make; faith
in God and in people. It's worth remembering this year
those who struggled to do away with the slave trade. If we lived in a society
that tolerated slavery now, wouldn't we feel soiled and diminished by it? Wouldn't
we feel hungry for something different? So what are the
things today that make us feel the same? People often
speak about the spiritual hunger of our society. But the answer to that isn't
in ideas or spiritual feelings; it's in the decision to act – to reach out to
feed, to heal, to befriend, knowing that this is where we discover who we're really
meant to be. We get the power for that when we believe
that there is a divine love that is waiting eagerly for us to cooperate. And
when we do, both physical and spiritual hunger can be met. We find our nourishment
as human beings together, as we really learn to share the world we've been given
to live in. God bless you all in this New Year and help
you find the nourishment you need for spirit and body. ©
Rowan Williams 2007 Anglican Communion News Service,
London The broadcast was first aired on New Year's Eve on BBC 2 at 20000hrs
and repeated on BBC 1 at 1245 hrs on New Year's Day. The footage from Sudan
was shot at two world food programme aid projects in southern Sudan; a church
school project in Malakal feeds around 700 puils their only solid meal of the
day. In nearby Obel, a food distribution point supports families seeking to re-establish
themselves on their farmland, having been displaced by conflict. The Church
featured is Holy Trinity Clapham, the home of the Clapham Sect, which included
reformers William Wilberforce and Henry Thornton. The shopping centre featured
is the Arndale Shopping Centre in Wandsworth, South London. |