Sunday, March 11, 2007

Images from Johannesburg: TEAM 2007


LEFT: Amy with Diana, chaplain of the conference, an amazing priest from Uganda and its future bishop!
RIGHT:Brian from the Seychelles modeling
a Salvadoran stole













Amy with other young women clergy:
Sally Su from Mexico and Irene Ayallo from Kenya,
currently studying in New Zealand














Amy con-celebrating the Eucharist planned and lead by the Latin American delegation with Bishop Julio Murray of Panama and Bishop
Maurício Araújo, primate of Brazil, with transitional deacon Sally Su from Mexico City.
Our tri-lingual liturgy (English, Spanish, and Portuguese) included music, dance, and was accompanied by artwork depicting some of the issues the conference discussed as lived in different parts of Latin America



Some members of the Latin American delegation grabbed a photo op with Presiding Bishop Katherine Jefferts Schori


Members of the Latin American delegation and staff of the Episcopal Church center enjoyed themselves at a fiesta hosted by the Anglican and Global Relations office of 815.

Saturday, March 10, 2007

Some Observations from the TEAM (Towards Effective Anglican Mission) Conference

March 8, 2007 Boksburg, Johannesburg, South Africa

I have been given the enormous privilege of being a delegate from IARCA, The Anglican Church in the Region of Central America, to TEAM, a conference of the world-wide Anglican Communion on prophetic mission, development, and HIV/AIDS. It is a privilege for me, an Episcopal missionary priest in the Anglican/Episcopal Church of El Salvador, to be representing my colleagues at an event which will hopefully have global implications for the mission of the Anglican Church and the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals. It is truly a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity (if you’re not a bishop and don’t attend Lambeth!) to be gathered with Anglicans from every part of the globe—I have met people from England, every part of Africa and Latin America, Madagascar and Seychelles, which I didn’t even know existed before! Perhaps even more importantly, the reason for which we are gathered is I believe critically important to the relevance and continued existence of the church and the life of God’s children on earth. We are gathered to attempt to ensure that the gospel we preach is truly good news for the poor. (Luke 4: 18)

In the morning we heard a stirring address by the Archbishop of Capetown and Southern Africa, our host, Njongonkulu Ndungane, who, referring to the current conflicts in the Communion assured us that, “As we better follow Jesus’ example in mission in response to the needs of the world we will better know how to follow his example in other areas and will be able to address our differences.” The Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, followed, giving a deeply intelligent and compelling “Bible study” on the topic. Noting that “knowing the Lord” is defined in Jeremiah 22:16 as “giving the poor a fair trial,” he defined the “essence of the law” in the Hebrew Scriptures as “ensuring that no one is forgotten and no one is invisible.” The law, and God’s final purpose for humanity, the Archbishop said, are “being uncovered in Jesus of Nazareth… as a human being creating community [in which] no one is forgotten.”

The spiritual head of our Communion (who actually is a lot taller than I thought he was!) went on to say something which, in conjunction with a question asked by a delegate from Canada, impressed upon me deeply the imperative and the necessary quality of the involvement of those of us from the “developed” world in this struggle to ensure that no one is forgotten by the tides of so-called progress. The question related to how, in the midst of the over-abundant prosperity in the rich countries, a gospel which is good news to the poor may be preached. The Archbishop said, “You can never settle down with the fantasy that one part of the human family can live at the expense of another part. There are no gated communities in the kingdom of God—none can be insulated from the loss and suffering of others… [for] when one part of the body suffers, all the others suffer with it. ” (1 Cor 12:26) He went on to quote St. Augustine as saying that the tragedy of injustice is “not only the suffering of the oppressed, but the corruption of the mind and heart of the oppressor.”

The imperative is this: our involvement in attempting to correct the injustices of this world, of which we are the beneficiaries, is nothing less than the working out of our own salvation, with fear and trembling. And the quality of that involvement is just as important (if not more important!) than the involvement itself. If we come knowing all the answers, ready to “fix” the problems of the poor (and just as unwilling to fix ourselves!) then we’ve missed the point. Several “first-world” delegates have brought up the question of how to deal with people in the churches who seem indifferent to these issues. The Archbishop’s answer was clear: what is called for is “that form of healing called conversion.” +Amy