Anglican Communion News Service

Speech delivered at the American Embassy in Cairo for the Memorial Service of 11 September attacks

We come today to remember those five thousand innocent civilians who were killed in the tragic attack of September 11th. Not only to remember but also to share with the people of the United States of America over this difficult time when your peace and security have been shaken as a result of the repeated and different kinds of terrorist attacks.

We come to pray for and support the families who lost their loved ones during this great tragedy, especially as they miss them more over this Christmas season.

I was impressed during my visit to America last month when I saw many banners with the words,
"In God we Trust, together we stand"

It was encouraging to see many people going to churches to pray. These are the positive effects from the September 11th disaster.

The other positive thing is that America, Egypt and many other countries announced the war against terrorism. Here I want to stress two important points:

Firstly, we should not only fight terrorism in all its forms but we must destroy all its causes. We all know that the best climate for terrorism to grow and flourish is political and social injustice, ignorance and poverty. As Martin Luther King said, "Injustice anywhere is a threat to Justice everywhere". This is why all of us in the Middle East welcome the new policy of the USA for this region. This policy stresses the importance of allowing the presence of a Palestinian state next to the state of Israel. The efforts for peace should continue under all circumstances and in spite of all the trials to stop these efforts. It is said that, "returning violence for violence multiplies violence, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars."

As an Egyptian, I urge our American friends to consider the peace in the Middle East as a strategic necessity for the war against terrorism.

Secondly, it is really sad to see many in the West relating terrorism to Islam in spite of the assurances given by President Bush that there is no relationship between the two. I am an Egyptian Christian and live in the Islamic country of Egypt in peace and security. My Christian forefathers lived here alongside their Moslem brothers and sisters for 14 Centuries in complete peace. Individual incidents should not change this fact.

Ladies and Gentlemen, terrorism has no religion or home. As the Bible says,
"Whoever does not love, does not know God,
because God is love". 1 John 4:8
"Whoever hates his brother is in the darkness
and walks around in the darkness,
He does not know where he is going because
the darkness has blinded him." 1 John 2:11

May the God of all comfort fill your hearts and minds with the peace that passes all understanding.

Bishop Mouneer Anis
Bishop of the Episcopal Church in Egypt

Statement by Bishop Barry Rogerson

12 December 2001

The Anglican Co-chairman of the Formal Conversations, Bishop Barry Rogerson, has made the following statement upon the publication of 'An Anglican-Methodist Covenant':

"This report stands in obedience to God's gift of Unity and God's calling to all Christians to make that Unity visible. Both our churches agreed that the process would be undertaken by stages, which in the experience of the Church of England has worked well in our conversations with the Lutheran Churches in Scandinavia and the German and French Protestant Churches. We have laid the foundations which we hope will lead at some point further down the road to full communication with the interchangeability of ministers and subsequently to visible unity.

"Visible unity involves all churches and so the Conversations have taken place in an ecumenical setting with members of the Baptist Union, the Moravian Church, the Roman Catholic Church and the United Reformed Church. Each of our churches has covenanted to keep their own ecumenical partners informed, so that nothing which is said and done will unwittingly deny what has already been agreed, nor make things more difficult in the future.

"You will find at the end of the Report a section headed "An Anglican-Methodist Covenant" which provides a series of Affirmations in which, to put it simply, what we say about ourselves we say about our sister church as well. This includes, amongst others, affirmations that we both belong to the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church of Jesus Christ and that we affirm an authentic ministry of Word and Sacrament in each other's churches.

The bulk of the Report explores these matters and starts by discovering the enormous amount we have in common. It is honest enough to speak about those matters about which we do not agree and on which further work will need to be done. These include the nature and appropriateness of establishment, that all authorised ministries are open to both women and men and some of the practical issues surrounding the celebration of the eucharist. The Church of England has already begun to address the issue of women bishops with the setting up of the Rochester Working Party which will make its initial report to the General Synod in July 2002.

What will this Report achieve?

  • It is set in the context of the Mission of God, so that Church Leaders can be affirmed in what is already happening in many new housing areas, that is one church building, one congregation and often one minister acting on behalf of us all.
  • It will be an encouragement to Local Ecumenical Partnerships (LEPs) that both churches will affirm what they are already doing. Many LEPs were set up when the last Anglican-Methodist Scheme failed to find sufficient support in the Church of England some thirty years ago.
  • If our two churches agree at their summer meetings in 2003 then the work involved in resolving the outstanding issues can begin and the next stage brought to fulfilment.

"As someone who has spent the whole of his ministry involved in ecumenical issues and Anglican-Methodist relations in particular, this is a significant step forward and continues a process which could well change the face of English Christianity - which would be in obedience to God's gift and calling."

The Right Reverend Barry Rogerson

[Note to editors: The Right Reverend Barry Rogerson has been Bishop of Bristol since 1985 and at present in one of the Presidents of Churches Together in Britain and Ireland.]


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