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A Letter from the House of
Bishops
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Wednesday, March 22, 2006
The Sin of Racism: A Call to Covenant
A Pastoral Letter from the House of Bishops of the Episcopal Church
March 2006
We, the bishops of the Episcopal
Church, acknowledged the painful reality of the consequences of racism
in the 1994 pastoral letter “the Sin of Racism.” In that letter, we
stated “the essence of racism is prejudice coupled with power. It is
rooted in the sin of pride and exclusivity which assumes ‘that I and
my kind are superior to others and therefore deserve special
privileges.’” We issue this new pastoral on the pervasive sin that
continues to plague our common life in the church and in our culture.
We acknowledge our participation in this sin and we lament its
corrosive effects on our lives. We repent of this sin, and ask God’s
grace and forgiveness.
When Jesus entered the synagogue in his first public act of ministry
(Luke 4), he read from the prophet Isaiah. The vision proclaimed is
known as the desire of God, the peaceable kingdom, a society of
justice and shalom, or the city set on a hill. It is an icon of what
God intends for all creation – that human beings live in justice and
peace with one another, that the poor are fed and housed and clothed,
the ill are healed, prisoners set free, and that the whole created
order is restored to right relationship. That vision is our goal and
vocation as Christians.
The fundamental truth under girding this vision is that all are made
in the image of God. It is in our diversity that we discover the
fullness of that image. If we judge one class or race or gender better
than another, we violate that desire and intent of God. And when our
social and cultural systems exacerbate or codify such judgments, we do
violence to that which God has made. Racism is a radical affront to
the good gift of God, both in the creation described in Genesis, and
in the reality of the Incarnation. Jesus came among us to bring an end
to that which divides us, as Paul so clearly identifies in Galatians
3:28, “in Christ there is no longer Jew or Greek, there is no longer
slave or free, there is no longer male and female.”
Whenever individual or community behaviors work against God’s vision,
we have promised to respond in ways that will serve to heal: “Will you
strive for justice and peace among all people, and respect the dignity
of every human being? I will with God's help.” (BCP p 305) God has
created us with skins of many colors, God has created us in thousands
of tribes and languages, and none is adjudged more godly than another.
It is our behavior that gives evidence of godliness, not the color of
our skin.
The world has witnessed the evil of institutionalized racism and
classism in the United States in the aftermath of the hurricanes of
2005. The poor and persons of color were often served last – or not at
all – while wealthy and privileged residents had greater resources to
escape the immediate danger of the hurricanes and begin the process of
rebuilding. We are all shamed by the sin of racism in the reality of
inequity in housing, employment, educational and healthcare
opportunities, and the disaster response.
This House of Bishops, meeting in Hendersonville, North Carolina on 21
March 2006, which is the International Day for the Elimination of
Racial Discrimination, commit ourselves as bishops to discern and
confess our own prejudice and complicity in the pervasive sin of
racism, to confront it, and make amends for it in intentional ways
every time we gather as a House. We ask the Holy Spirit to empower the
House to fully live into this covenant, and we invite the members of
this Church to covenant with us, in the following actions personally,
corporately, and globally. With God’s help, we will:
-
renew our commitment to the
1994 pastoral letter, “The Sin of Racism”;
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take responsibility to
expose, dismantle and heal those situations of injustice based on
racism;
-
seek forgiveness for our
lack of charity and consciousness in recognizing those situations
which degrade the image of God in our neighbors;
-
make amends for our
undeserved position and benefit as a result of unjust situations
both now and in the past;
-
empower all members of
God’s human family, that they may live into the fullness of what God
intends;
-
encourage the larger church
to continue and expand its work of education, spiritual formation,
and anti-racism training, that all might discover the riches of
God’s diverse creation, especially in those who differ from us;
-
advocate for the
implementation of the Millennium Development Goals by the Domestic
and Foreign Missionary Society, our respective dioceses, the
parishes which comprise them, and our governments, as well as our
own households, that God’s desire may become increasingly evident
for all of humanity;
-
recruit and empower people
of all races and ethnic origins as leaders in our church, and as
members of all boards, agencies, commissions, and committees;
-
dedicate equitable
resources for all races and national origins in the funding of
theological education for all ministries, lay and ordained;
-
advocate for continued
response to the sinful legacy of slavery;
-
expose situations of
environmental racism and classism which poison and threaten the
poorest among us, and seek justice for those communities; and
-
advocate for compassionate
care of the stranger in our midst, and demand just immigration
policies.
Having entered into covenant with each other to root out the sin of
racism in very specific personal and corporate ways, we, the bishops
of the Episcopal Church, invite all members of our Church to join us
in this mission of justice, reconciliation, and unity. This is an
expression of our commitment to the fundamental covenant each of us
entered into at the moment of our baptism.
May God give us the will to do this reconciling work, and the power
and grace to accomplish it.
We ask that this pastoral letter be read in all churches as soon as
possible.
Episcopal
Church Social Justice Website
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