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Bishop Vicken: A Call To Action In A Suffering World

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  • Bishop Vicken: A Call To Action In A Suffering World

    BISHOP VICKEN: A CALL TO ACTION IN A SUFFERING WORLD

    National Council of Churchs, NY, USA
    Feb 14 2007

    Washington, February 5, 2007 Bishop Vicken Aykazian, legate and
    ecumenical officer of the Diocese of the Armenian Church of America
    (Eastern) and president-elect of the National Council of Churches
    (NCC), spoke to a crowd of 700 people at the National Cathedral at
    the opening service of the National Workshop on Christian Unity on
    January 29.

    Bishop Aykazian's message was built upon the theme for this year's
    National Workshop on Christian Unity: "Ephphatha" (Be opened!).

    The full text of his remarks follows.

    A Call to Action in a Suffering World

    Thank you, your grace, for that kind introduction. I'm very touched
    and blessed to have been given such an opportunity to speak to you
    in this marvelous cathedral. And thank you, participants of this
    workshop, for your warm welcome. It is good to see so many familiar
    faces and an honor to be among so many friends - old and new. I can
    think of no other place I would rather be than here in Washington with
    you, my brothers and sisters of the National Workshop on Christian
    Unity. We meet at a time when the unity of the universal church is
    vital to our common ministry. In spite of the fact that we live in
    a time of unprecedented information, prosperity, and freedom, we are
    faced everyday with the reality of incredible tragedy, divisiveness,
    and suffering.

    How can we explain and try to understand this paradox? How is it
    possible that in this Age of Information, which has transformed the
    world into a global village, we have become immunized to the great
    suffering around us?

    Why are the blessings of human dignity confined mostly to the
    well-to-do?

    Are we quick to forget that love and forgiveness are rooted in the
    recognition of the rights and dignity of others?

    The prosperity and freedom that we enjoy today have come at a heavy
    price.

    The last century was the most violent in history. The extent of man's
    inhumanity to man has left a legacy that we have yet to fully confront.

    Genocide, poverty, and curable diseases are moral, ethical, political,
    economic, and spiritual challenges we face today. Time and again, in
    societies with diverse cultural and religious heritages, individuals
    and populations have been persecuted and have suffered often at the
    hands of their own government. Many have been left without a voice
    in a world where the loud and powerful often get the most attention.

    The massacre of 1.5 million Armenians during the First World War
    and its denial opened the door to a century of senseless bloodshed:
    the Holocaust of the Second World War, the killing fields of Cambodia,
    the forced famines in the Soviet Union and China, the slaughterhouse of
    Rwanda, and the ethnic cleansing in Bosnia. Today, the words "never
    again" must ring hollow to those suffering the same cruel fate in
    Darfur. Similarly, in an age of technology and innovation, extreme
    poverty and inequality remain endemic in many parts of the world.

    While we have more billionaires on earth than at any other time in
    history, more than one billion people lead a subsistence life. While
    we enjoy the benefits of medical advances here, HIV/AIDS has decimated
    generations of people on the African continent. In our own backyard,
    more than 45 million Americans remain without health insurance and
    are at the mercy of a system that continues to punish the uninsured.

    My brothers and sisters in Christ, we must give voice to the needs
    and suffering of those who remain voiceless in our world. Our Lord and
    Savior showed us the way. When all others feared a man with leprosy, He
    touched and healed the man's disease because he knew that the leper's
    faith was greater than his despair over the sickness. He broke bread
    with tax collectors and others considered sinners to teach us not to
    judge because we are all sinners in the eyes of God.

    He forgave those who persecuted him in order to teach us that before
    we can beseech God's forgiveness, we must first learn to forgive
    one another.

    In the Gospel of Matthew Chapter 22, verses 36 through 40, He was
    clear in his instructions. When asked: "Teacher, which is the greatest
    commandment in the Law? Jesus replied: "Love the Lord your God with
    all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. This
    is the first and greatest commandment. And the second is like it:
    'Love your neighbor as yourself.'

    All the Law and the Prophets hang on these two commandments." This
    is the foundation of our ministry, whether we were ordained many
    years ago, or we are studying to be ordained in the near future,
    like some of you here today.

    I stand before you, my brothers and sisters, as a humble servant of
    the Armenian Apostolic Church - a church that is one of many in the
    great Orthodox tradition that dates to the earliest Christians. Most
    Americans from the Orthodox Christian tradition immigrated to this
    country in more recent times. They came seeking the same opportunities
    and freedoms that earlier Protestant immigrants sought during our
    country's founding years.

    My ancestors received the Good News of our Lord through the teachings
    of Saint Thaddeus and Saint Bartholomew. Later, they became the first
    nation to adopt Christianity as the official religion in 301 A.D.

    They paid a very heavy price for that conversion throughout the years
    through invasions, occupations, forced re-conversions, massacres,
    and martyrdom. However, faith in our Lord sustained us, especially
    during the darkest days of the Genocide.

    Even though our ecclesiastical traditions vary, the bonds that unite
    us are far stronger than any differences that divide us. The teachings
    of the Sermon on the Mount are as powerful and meaningful whether
    you read them in Armenian or English. The cross serves to remind us
    of our Lord's obedience and unconditional love - the foundations of
    His ministry during his time on Earth. Regrettably, we have too many
    distractions in our information-overloaded world that draw us away
    from these basic teachings.

    Political expediency and commercial marketing have reduced the meaning
    and majesty of our Lord's love to powerless sentimentality.

    However, only through His Love and Grace can we speak with a unified
    voice, which can serve as a clarion call in our troubled world. When
    we place love and hope above greed and fear we can give voice to the
    voiceless. Only then will we realize that true power comes from the
    humility of unconditional love.

    The Sermon does not say "blessed are the peaceful." No. It says,
    "Blessed are the peacemakers." Therefore, our faith is not passive,
    but a call to action in a suffering world. That is who we are and
    where we stand. This is our message here and to the whole world.

    How do we respond to a world in need of voices that will be heard?

    What is our response to the forces of envy, greed, and terror?

    We begin by offering hope through the majesty and mystery of faith.

    We continue by uniting behind the meaning of the cross to serve our
    Lord and carry on His ministry.

    We persevere by proclaiming that expressions of faith are meaningless
    if they are not spoken with the recognition of the rights and dignity
    of others.

    We succeed by responding to a world in need of a clear voice by first
    speaking with humility and love in order to counter the hatred and
    suspicion that has poisoned much of our discourse today.

    What lurks behind the apparent evils of our world, whether it is
    disease, poverty, or Genocide, is something much worse and more
    devastatingly powerful. The greatest force opposing improvement, the
    greatest force that shackles men in their destitution and failing
    conditions, the greatest force that chooses Sparta over Calvary is
    the evil of despair. This is our adversary and our plague.

    My hope is that we resolve to give voice to the voiceless and work
    together to overcome this plague in our world. My prayer is that we
    speak with a unified voice through the power of hope and the strength
    of His Love. Let us dedicate ourselves to this purpose and fulfill
    our duty with humility and love.

    Thank you and God bless you all.

    Contact NCC News Service: 212-870-2252 | E-mail [email protected]
    http://www.ncccusa.org/news/07020 5vickencathedral.html
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