Showing posts with label Church of England. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Church of England. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 27, 2023

We give thanks today for the witness of John the Apostle and Evangelist: The Word Became Flesh

PRAYING for the long-suffering people of Sudan and South Sudan.

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Post script from Sudan Watch Editor

HERE are some of the most famous lines from the New Testament in the Bible (King James Version). Click on hyperlinked words to view the Context, full Chapter and the previous and next verse. Note that any words printed in red in a Holy Bible are to show the words spoken by Jesus.

John 1:1 - In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.

John 1:14 - And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us, (and we beheld his glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father,) full of grace and truth.

John 8:58 - Jesus said unto them, Verily, verily, I say unto you, Before Abraham was, I am.

And I say unto you, Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you”. ~ Luke Chapter 11, Verse 9,


ENDS

Monday, December 25, 2023

Let us respond to the plight of the suffering peoples of our world by our prayers, and by our support of means to help them find peace and security

Image courtesy of an email to Sudan Watch 
from Africa Faith and Justice Network
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From The News Letter
Story by Rev Dr William Morton
Published Saturday, 23 December 2023, 07:21 GMT - here is a full copy:

Thought for the Week: Let us pray for peace and security

A few days ago St Patrick’s Cathedral, Dublin hosted the carol service for the grammar school which bears its name.

As I prepared an opening, or bidding prayer, I began to think of how easy it is to hear the familiar words of the Christmas story and not stop, and reflect, and dwell upon them in their fullest meaning.

A child is born in a certain place, at a certain time; he is born in poverty to a young girl and the man to whom she was to be married. The baby was worshipped by angels, greeted by shepherds, searched for by wise men, and pursued by a tyrant, King Herod. The baby’s name is Jesus, Saviour. He is called Christ, the King. As the familiar Christmas hymn expresses it: “Lo, within a manger lies he who built the starry skies".


A most wonderful dimension to this story is the message of the angels to the shepherds who were looking after their sheep the night of Jesus’s birth: “Do not be afraid”. 


As I write these words, fear has gripped our world as never before: fear for the thousands upon thousands who have been bereaved and injured, not to mention those still being held hostage, or unaccounted for, in the terrible conflict in the countries of our Lord’s earthly home, and with them we think of the people of Ukraine, Syria, Afghanistan, Sudan, Somalia, Libya – the list goes on.


Our thoughts must surely turn to the awful plight of children in these situations, bereft of parents, or loved ones, who remain helpless and vulnerable, and who have no way of experiencing what we take for granted at Christmas – the love of family, food, accommodation, and the feeling of being wanted and cared for.


So let us respond to the plight of the suffering peoples of our world by our prayers, and by our support of means to help them find peace and security.


View source: https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/world/thought-for-the-week-let-us-pray-for-peace-and-security/ar-AA1lVYri


ENDS

Sunday, December 24, 2023

In Bethlehem, the birthplace of Christianity, Christmas celebrations have been cancelled

NOTE from Sudan Watch Editor: Watched this video at X and found the footage and chat by British journalist and author Peter Oborne interesting. 

It is here to provide food for thought and show different situations and perspectives. And why in Bethlehem, the birthplace of Christianity, Christmas celebrations have been cancelled and replaced by prayer.

ENDS

Monday, December 18, 2023

Global Refugee Forum: 114m people are refugees or displaced, 90% of world's refugees are in 40 countries

"One hundred and fourteen million people – that's more than live in Egypt and almost as many as are in Japan – are refugees or displaced. Ninety percent of the world's refugees are in just 40 countries.  Seventy five percent of the world's refugees are being hosted by low and middle-income states, yet most financing goes to upper-middle income states. Just 4% of funding is going to countries of refugee origin. With these statistics ringing in our ears, the Global Refugee Forum began in Geneva". Read more.


From Anglican News
By Glen Ruffle

Dated 18 December 2023, 1:35 PM - here is a copy in full:

Anglicans at the Global Refugee Forum


The Anglican Communion’s Assistant Permanent Representative to the UN in Geneva, The Revd Glen Ruffle, recently attended the Global Refugee Forum. He writes:


One hundred and fourteen million people – that's more than live in Egypt and almost as many as are in Japan – are refugees or displaced. Ninety percent of the world's refugees are in just 40 countries.  Seventy five percent of the world's refugees are being hosted by low and middle-income states, yet most financing goes to upper-middle income states. Just 4% of funding is going to countries of refugee origin.


With these statistics ringing in our ears, the Global Refugee Forum began in Geneva.


Held over 13–15 December, with side-events and build-up events beforehand, the Global Refugee Forum was arranged by the UN's Refugee agency, UNHCR, which gathered the world's states, along with NGOs, churches, faith organisations, and refugees themselves, to discuss the situation and what can be done.


The number of wars across the world is at a decades-level high; climate change is destroying agricultural land; famine and drought is increasing. Unless we invest in addressing these root causes, the numbers of refugees will continue to increase dramatically. Many will lose 20 years of their lives in government processing and relocating before they can properly settle and move forwards.


The sad fact is that UNHCR is still waiting for $400 million of funding promised by the world's states, yet never delivered. The Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, still host to more than half a million Syrian refugees, has only received 23% of the money promised to help. States can also work smarter: investing in much-need conflict-prevention measures, rather than dealing reactively, and with much greater expense, with every new crisis.


Anglicans, and Christians more broadly, will continue helping refugees with or without state or UN involvement, but it was important to place on the UN map, and to make the world know, that the Anglican Communion's churches are out there, doing the work, and often doing so on minimal budgets without support.


Provinces from around the Anglican Communion contributed to making pledges of what we hope to do over the next four years. Canada pledged to help resettle refugees; Tanzania pledged to advocate for refugees and ensure they receive proper care and have access to things like Savings Groups to build a future. The Province of Alexandria's Diocese of Egypt pledged to give holistic care via Refuge Egypt to help with integration of the refugees flooding into Egypt. The Church of England's Diocese in Europe has numerous projects, led by local churches across the continent, ranging from supporting refugees and advocating for them in Calais through to the distribution of aid in Bucharest.


The Episcopal Church pledged to advocate for the goals of UNHCR, support refugee resettlement and continue its refugee care. And the wider Anglican Communion pledged to place the care of refugees on the agenda at high-level meetings, to make sure Provinces discuss what they are doing and look at collaboration, and also to support the mental health of refugee children and to help develop faith-sensitive care.


States need to turn their pledges into action, deliver the money they promised and invest more seriously in conflict prevention. Beyond that, we hope to see greater collaboration between states, UN agencies and faith groups already doing the work to enable more effective delivery of support to those most in need. People of faith are often those on the front lines responding to crises and have the local trust and influence to begin to identify and address root causes. Strengthening this collaboration will be a focus of our work in the years to come.


It is not too late to add pledges from the Anglican Communion. If you want to explore a pledge, contact glen.ruffle@anglicancommunion.org

 

View original: https://www.anglicannews.org/blogs/2023/12/anglicans-at-the-global-refugee-forum.aspx


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