For the People of the Episcopal
Church
From The Most Reverend Katharine Jefferts Schori
As the primates of the Anglican Communion prepare to gather next week in Dar es
Salaam, Tanzania, I ask your prayers for all of us, and for our time together. I
especially ask you to remember the mission that is our reason for being as the
Anglican Communion - God's mission to heal this broken world. The primates
gather for fellowship, study, and conversation at these meetings, begun less
than thirty years ago. The ability to know each other and understand our various
contexts is the foundation of shared mission. We cannot easily be partners with
strangers.
That meeting ends just as Lent begins, and as we approach this season, I would
suggest three particularly appropriate attitudes. Traditionally the season has
been one in which candidates prepared for baptism through prayer, fasting, and
acts of mercy. This year, we might all constructively pray for greater awareness
and understanding of the strangers around us, particularly those strangers whom
we are not yet ready or able to call friends. That awareness can only come with
our own greater investment in discovering the image of God in those strangers.
It will require an attitude of humility, recognizing that we can not possibly
know the fullness of God if we are unable to recognize his hand at work in
unlikely persons or contexts. We might constructively fast from a desire to make
assumptions about the motives of those strangers not yet become friends. And
finally, we might constructively focus our passions on those in whom Christ is
most evident - the suffering, those on the margins, the forgotten, ignored, and
overlooked of our world. And as we seek to serve that suffering servant made
evident in our midst, we might reflect on what Jesus himself called us - friends
(John 15:15).
Celtic Rune of Hospitality
I saw a stranger yesterday;
I put food in the eating place,
drink in the drinking place,
music in the listening place;
and in the sacred name of the Triune God
he blessed myself and my house,
my cattle and my dear ones,
and the lark said in her song:
Oft, Oft, Oft,
goes Christ in the stranger's guise.
Shalom,
Katharine
The Most Rev. Katharine Jefferts Schori is Presiding Bishop and Primate of
the Episcopal Church