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An Open Letter to Jewish, Muslim, and Christian
Leaders
August 9, 2006
Dear Colleagues:
As conflicts in the Middle East
intensify, casualties grow, and human suffering increases I
write urging us as leaders in the three Abrahamic faiths to join
publicly in a call for the cessation of all violence, for an
international peacekeeping force, and a negotiated agreement for
a just peace. I recognize that the meaning of these phrases may
differ significantly for each of us; in fact, the specific
meanings may finally be contradictory. Yet I am convinced that
the world needs our courageous public witness to what we hold in
common rather than the growing sense that religious beliefs are
being held captive in a global ideological conflict.
We share a deep and abiding
concern for and commitment to the people in our religious
communities whose lives are being devastated and whose futures
increasingly seem at risk. We can maintain those commitments
without having them become the sole defining mark of our
leadership in a time of war. As religious leaders I believe we
can agree that:
- Together we hold that every
human being is created by God.
- Together we believe the
earth is God's gift to all of us and we are called to be
stewards of that gift.
- The one God whom we worship
is a God not only of judgment, but of mercy and peace.
- The principles by which
people of faith have traditionally assessed the just nature
of war are no longer sufficient to guide our moral
deliberation and decisions.
Together, let us publicly:
- Call for a global
consultation of the leaders of the three Abrahamic faiths in
order to develop the principles for a just peace in light of
contemporary conflicts and warfare.
- Reject the growing anti
Semitism, Islamophobia, and the marginalization of Arab
Christianity.
- Reject violence and call for
an immediate end to all hostilities.
- Reject the perception that
violence can be justified on the basis of the Abrahamic
religions.
- Bear witness that all people
are created by God and share a unity far deeper than our
divisions.
- Testify that religious faith
is not to be used as an instrument of war and violence but
as a living trust in the God of peace.
- Pray for a just and lasting
peace.
The world daily sees how religion
is used to divide and destroy. It is time for us together to
publicly, clearly, and courageously give witness that the One in
whom we believe unites us in our diversity rather than divides
us in our hostilities.
With prayers for God?s peace,
The Rev. Mark S. Hanson Presiding Bishop Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
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