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   It is time for all to turn away from anger and vengeance and seek justice

Rt. Rev. Munib Younan, Bishop * Common Ground News Service (CGNews), 10 August 2006


 

Jerusalem - As I sit in Jerusalem watching the military actions and fighting in Lebanon and Gaza and the West Bank, I feel disorientated. I am not sure if I am in a state of shock, stunned by surprise, or simply overwhelmed by the enormity of what is going on. It is a time for deep reflection emerging from the ever-growing suffering and destruction.

 

I ask myself why this is happening. What in fact will be achieved at the end of the day, beyond the obvious: more destruction, more fear, more hatred, more anger and more retaliation on every side? There is no easy answer to this question. We see the people of Haifa and the Galilee fleeing their homes in search of refuge and burying their dead. We see the funerals in Gaza and the children sleeping hungry in the streets. We see a Lebanon which was beginning to stand on its own feet after years of civil war and conflict once again reduced to rubble with a flood of refugees and displaced persons. In my suffering, I ask, "Why?", as I see blood pooled in the streets without justification.

 

I am not looking for analytical answers as my heart cries out. I am looking for moral and spiritual answers. Is it not time to move from the logic of war, self-justifying violence and acts of terror? Is it not time for world leaders to repent -- to admit that they have failed to bring a just peace and then to humbly change course?

 

Instead of life-giving repentance we hear deadly lip service to a false peace: We are battered by initiative after initiative after initiative, all of which die unfulfilled. I ask, where is the repentance that will allow justice to stand and which will liberate all nations from hatred and fear?

 

It is time to see beyond the smoke and fire that assaults us from every headline, so that the powerful can move from behind their misplaced self-interest and hear the cries of our children and see the blood shed in the street. The Scriptures are clear, demanding "[j]ustice and only justice…" if we are to live ( Deut 16:20).

 

At this time, with the blood-soaked spectre of dominance and triumph hovering over all of us I fear, as much as I have ever feared anything, that the only "winner" will be political and religious extremism. If we don`t change our course and allow ourselves to take the path of justice we will hand over our future to extremists who seek death-laden solutions which will usher in the end of history.

 

I sit in Jerusalem and my heart is torn to shreds. I feel powerless.

 

But knowing the presence of the God of Life in all things, I can only cry out that this war must serve to unite all parties to think differently, to act differently -- to stop all military operations, to overcome hatred, to end the vicious cycle of retaliation, to ensure that no more human life is taken. It is time to negotiate around the unsolved and urgent core issue: the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Justice will be served and the conflict ended when we achieve a shared Jerusalem, the respect of the rights of the refugees, two states living side by side in peace and security according to international law. Now is the time to serve justice with action, not words or plans or maps. Such is the path to peace and reconciliation in the Middle East.

 

This war judges the International Community: in its lowering of the standard of justice, human rights and dignity; in affirming violence as the path to resolving differences; in creating the conditions which have pushed the Arab Christian community to the brink. The international community is accountable to justice for all people, nothing less. The shed blood is a judgment on their failure and is an opportunity to repent and do what is right.

 

This is a moral, spiritual and political crisis of global proportions. As a Lutheran Bishop my plea is for all Christians to commit themselves to prayer and fasting to seek God`s empowerment in addressing the call to repent and seek justice. This includes urging Christians to go beyond their excellent relief and emergency work to secure the future for a just peace. As a Palestinian mindful of the value of all human life I call on all people of conscience and faith to join in this spiritual act of prayerful fasting so that we can change our hearts and minds and act for an enduring peace. The prophet Isaiah reminds us: "Is not this the fast that I choose: to loose the bonds of injustice, to undo the thongs of the yoke, to let the oppressed go free…" (Isaiah 58:6).

 

We must reject the idea that we can fight our way to peace and security…we cannot!

 

Is this not the time, the "kairos moment" for Israel, Palestine, the United States, Europe and the Arab countries to repent and say we did not hear the Lord`s voice lifting up "justice and only justice"? Instead, we led the world into gross injustice at a gut-wrenching cost of human life, freedom and dignity.

 

In the depths of despair of unremitting destruction and blood shed, we hear God`s promise:"Behold I am making all things new". That includes us and the leaders of the world who can "do a new thing" -- repent and seek justice and only justice so all can live…and live abundantly.

 

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* Bishop Dr. Munib Younan is Head of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Jordan and the Holy Land, President of the Fellowship of Middle East Evangelical Churches and Vice President of the Lutheran World Federation. This article is distributed by the Common Ground News Service (CGNews)


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