Today’s Scripture Reading (March 21,
2014): Jeremiah 21
We seem to
have established a pattern – we act as we want to act and then ask God to
perform a wonder. It is an old pattern. Jeremiah speaks to the pattern almost
six centuries before Christ. Israel had set itself on a path that would
ultimately carry them away from God. But when trouble came, then they went
running to Jeremiah (they didn’t have to go far, after all, they had imprisoned
him in the courtyard) and asked him to inquire of God – maybe then God will
move.
We saw the
same reaction during the Crusades – one of the darkest blots on Christianity’s
record. We ran ahead of God in declaring war against all who disbelieved in the
Christian God. We were bound that we would tear from the hands of the infidels
the city of Jerusalem. The cry of the Crusaders was a simple one - God wills
it. But it doesn’t appear that anyone actually asked. Instead we routinely
killed people – some of the victims were even Christians that just happened to
be in our path.
More
recently in Canada we have been involved in the fiasco of Native Residential
Schools – the last federally funded Residential School was not closed until
1996. There is absolutely no doubt in my mind that the Christian Church meant
well, that we even believed that we were following the will of God. But instead
of helping the Native Canadians, the church helped to spread disease which created
an unacceptably high death rate in the schools. We weakened the native Canadian
families and their connection with their own culture. The church caused irreparable
damage and we continue suffer the effects of the damage we created. And all of
this because we moved ahead of God – and we tried dress our own selfish will up
as if it was the will of God.
And so we
pray – “God move in this situation, even though we haven’t listened to you,
haven’t asked the questions of you that we should have asked.” And sometimes,
God moves. But other times his response to us is much the same as it was to
Jeremiah – “Now I am moving in a different direction. It didn’t have to be this
way, but this is the path that you have chosen, and I am willing to walk it in
my way.” Whenever we move ahead of God, destruction is always the result.
History has shown it over and over again. And God wants us – needs us to
understand that we need to hear his will before we embark on an action “because
God wills it.”
Maybe the
church needs to join with Archbishop Michael Peers in his apology from the Anglican
Church to the survivors of the Residential Schools.
I accept and I
confess before God and you, our failures in the residential schools. We failed
you. We failed ourselves. We failed God.
I am sorry, more
than I can say, that we were part of a system which took you and your children
from home and family.
I am sorry, more
than I can say, that we tried to remake you in our image, taking from you your
language and the signs of your identity.
I am sorry, more
than I can say, that in our schools so many were abused physically, sexually,
culturally and emotionally.
On behalf of the
Anglican Church of Canada, I present our apology.
We are all
sorry for the destruction that results whenever we move ahead of God. We are
sorry for proclaiming that “God wills it” when God has done no such thing. And
we are sorry for asking God to bail us out when all we needed to do was to listen
to God in the first place. To the world we ask for your forgiveness for
misrepresenting God.
And we promise
to listen better in the future.
Tomorrow’s Scripture Reading:
Jeremiah 34
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