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War

Israel and Palestine

Writing from Jerusalem, Robert Traer reflects on the conflicts between Jews, Muslims, and Christians and the search for an alternative to the present warfare.

Letters from Jerusalem 

Terrorism

In response to attacks on the World Trade Center in New York and the Pentagon, the United States has declared war on terrorism and is organizing a coalition of nations to support attacks on countries that harbor terrorists.  How are Christians to respond?  The following materials are offered to help Christians face this challenge to their faith.

Fighting Evil with Good by Robert Traer

Fighting the Cancer of Terrorism by Robert Traer

How Does the Church Respond? 

The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) offers worship and Christian education materials, examples of how congregations have responded to the war on terrorism, and a pastoral letter sent by the General Assembly Council after September 11th.

Christian Attitudes Toward War and Peace 

International Efforts to Combat Terrorism

Sermons by Robert Traer

From The Sin of Hypocrisy - As good Americans, we must confront the hypocrisy of our nation. President Bush said on Friday, "we must rid the world of evil." The notion that America is good, and those who hate it are evil is not only self-serving but wrong. Terrorism is evil, and the killing of innocent persons is evil. But the growing impoverishment of the majority of the world's peoples is also evil, and the violence and suffering that America is about to unleash in order to exact retribution for its suffering and shame will also be evil. Justice is good, but acts of vengeance are evil.

Our hearts go out to the families of those who lost loved ones, and we pray that the souls of all those who died may rest in peace. But we also pray for those who are so filled with hate for America, because of the transfer of wealth and power from their lands to the West and particularly to America, that they gladly sacrifice their own lives in violent acts that they understand as just retribution. And we pray that Christians in America will resist calls for vengeance and will remember the sins of the past that come with self-righteous anger, so these tragic acts of violence might not be repeated in our own time.

From Call to Repentance (a dialogue sermon)

Bob: Christian faith require us to face our complicity in evil, rather than simply attributing evil to those who are easily identified as evildoers. In faith, rather than judging others, we are called to ask how we have contributed to the circumstances in which others have done evil.

Sarah: You mean we might bear some responsibility for crime and terrorism?

Bob: That’s right. Crime in our cities is partly a reaction to our complicity in a society that values greed and materialistic life. And the terrorist attacks on America are partly a response to our indifference to the suffering and humiliation resulting from the expansion of American power and wealth in the last quarter of the twentieth century.

Sarah: Surely, criminals and terrorists should be held responsible for their actions.

Bob: Absolutely. But as American Christians, we are called to confess our sin — for depleting the earth’s resources for our own convenience, for ignoring the injustice suffered by so many millions of the earth’s peoples, and for not supporting justice through international law and global cooperation. We are called to confess our sin, to receive God’s forgiveness, and to repent by doing all we can to preserve the earth and to support the rule of law throughout the world.

 

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