Author: mrgsponderings

Justice for all

On April 22nd1993, a Black teenager, Stephen Lawrence, aged 18, stood at a bus stop in Eltham, South London, with his friend, Duwayne Brooks. A group of white youths appeared and attacked them – for no reason other than they were Black.
As a result of this racist attack, Stephen died.
That was 30 years ago and it began a struggle for Justice that is not yet fully resolved.

Two particular things marked the ensuing 30 years.
The first was that Stephen’s family and friends had to struggle against great odds for Justice.
The investigation into Stephen’s killing by the London Metropolitan Police has attracted a great deal of criticism over the years, with a bungling investigation, a disregard for evidence before them and a scandalous failure by them of transparency on a monumental scale. Despite a Coroner returning a verdict of  ‘unlawful killing’, it took the Lawrence family 18 years to secure partial justice when two of the five assailants were sentenced a jailed for the crime. Not everything has been resolved.

The second result of the murder was that in 1995, through the determination of the Lawrence Family to honour Stephen’s name, and assistance from the Methodist church they attended, Racial Justice Sunday was initiated.
Stephen’s mother Doreen (now Baroness Lawrence) has written:

“My fight for justice for Stephen, in many ways, has been a fight for justice for us all, and is driven by a core belief that every person, regardless of their background, should have the opportunity and support to flourish in a society that treats them with kindness, fairness and respect.”

The struggle for that to be to be fully established continues. In 30 years a lot has changed in attitudes towards Black people. The Movement, Black Lives Matter is helping, as are the churches but, as Baroness Lawrence has noted:

Too many young people  still struggle to succeed because they are disadvantaged by factors beyond their control, and too many of the institutions upon which they should be able to rely, are still infected with institutional racism and the structures of biasand discrimination that uphold it.”

Inspired by Stephen’s story, Churches Together in Britain and Ireland  has taken the Lawrence Family experience as the basis for this year’s theme for Racial Justice Sunday.
In particular, to help people to Remember, Reflect and Respond.

Remember the importance of racial justice;

Reflect on human diversity and thank God for it;

Respond by working to end injustice, racism and ignorance through prayer and action.

To help us to do this, a wealth of material for prayer and reflection has been produced by CBTI which is accessible from their website and through the publication of a book Race for Justice, offering in-depth explorations of how Race matters have been addressed by churches, congregations and individuals over the past 25 years. It is available from Amazon at £9.99

Here is a Thanksgiving from the Resources © CTBI

God of life and love,
In Your infinite wisdom
You created all things to live in harmony.
You choose to make us in the image of the Creator of the cosmos –
Born of the same imagination
And lovingly crafted from the same dust,
You breathed all peoples into being,
Blessing us with different gifts and talents,
A tapestry of cultures and stories
Interwoven into Your story of all creation.

We thank You for our world,
Tired and groaning though it may be,
But it is still beautiful and filled with so much potential
To reflect and display Your Glory.
Help us to work together for the care of our shared home.

We thank You that You have blessed us with each other,
Every nation and community, filled with beautiful and gifted people,
Each called to be fully who You made them to be,
And all called to be co-workers with You.

We thank You for the gift of immigrants and refugees
And the many blessings they bring to our communities.

We thank You for the gift of our young people,
Filled with hopes and fears, dreams and ambitions –

May they inspire and challenge us to be better.
We thank You for those who have been in our communities for many years,
The storykeepers and griots, the history makers and caretakers –
May their experience and wisdom enrich our lives.

We thank You for the diverse nature of Your people,
Each imbued with dignity and each worthy of value and respect.

Thank You for inspiring so many to lift up their voices against the sin of racism.
But we still lament that there are so many voices silenced or ignored,
Shouted over or made to feel irrelevant.
Move in power, God of justice,
So that we would no longer have to witness violence and loss of life,
As with the racist murder of Stephen Lawrence;
So that we would no longer have to witness miscarriages of justice and misuses
of power,

As with the unlawful killing of George Floyd;
So that we would no longer have to fight against systems of control and oppression
To make people understand that every human being has dignity
That needs to be seen, recognised and respected.

Lord, we thank You that we can meet together
And give thanks and praise for the progress made,
That we can sing in protest of injustice,
That we can cry out in anguish, giving voice to our lament,
That we can pray in hope together for a better future.
We seek the power of Your Holy Spirit
To guide, empower and sustain us.

Amen.

Pray for Syria and Turkey

Photo from Christian Aid UK

A Prayer for the Turkey and Syria Earthquake Appeal

God of time and space,
we cry to you for your children – our neighbours

– in southern Turkey and northern Syria,
following the earthquake that has devastated hundreds of lives.
Only they and you know what it is like to experience

such trauma in the middle of the night. 

We give thanks for the aid that is already being given
and for the promises of help that have been made by many nations. 

Comfort, we pray, 

those who are trapped in collapsed buildings; 
those who have lost loved ones; 
those who wait for news and 
those digging through rubble to save others. 

Grant the gift of hope
so that those caught between life and death know that you are with them
and that others are ready to support them
as they seek a future that overshadows the experiences of today. 

We ask this in the Name of Jesus,
who endured so much for love of them. 

Amen

If you are unable to pray the prayer for somereason, please look at the candle and make it your prayer.

from the CEO of Christian Aid…

  • On Monday 6 February, a magnitude 7.8 earthquake hit in southern Turkey close to the border with northern Syria. A second 7.5-magnitude earthquake struck nine hours later, followed by aftershocks.
  • Thousands of men, women and children have died or been injured in the aftermath of the earthquakes in Turkey and Syria. It is not too late to save lives. Christian Aid is already working with partners in north-west Syria to provide winter kits to people seeking shelter.
  • Even before this devastating earthquake, there were more than 4 million people in need of aid in north-west Syria. 
  • Nearly 3 million people have been displaced by the long conflict in Syria, 80% of whom are women and children.  
  • Now extreme weather events and the spiralling costs of food and fuel due to ongoing conflicts are making the situation even worse.  
  • People are facing a crisis on crisis.  

The scenes from this disaster are heartbreaking. And even before this devastating earthquake, we knew over four million people needed aid in Northwest Syria alone. We are hopeful that the British public will show the same spirit of solidarity and compassion that we saw in the aftermath of the invasion of Ukraine a year ago. Every prayer, every gift, every action brings hope to people hit by disaster. By joining us, you can help people in need rebuild their lives.

Patrick Watt

Please make a donation

You can do this in the United Kingdom through the DEC (Disasters Emergency Committee) which is a joint response of all the Aid Charities. You can donate through your usual Aid Charity such as Red Cross, Christian Aid, Cafod. The money will reach those who need it. If you are reading this outside the United Kingdom, please look for the DEC equivalent or contact your local Red Cross.

Dear Sister Irène

Photo from the Convent at Le Bec taken by the Sisters.

At the Weekend, I posted a blog item about Sister Irène-Marie, a beautiful nun and iconographer. She was a member of the community at the Monastère Sainte Françoise Romaine, Le Bec Hellouine, Normandy. You can read more about her if you scroll back two blog entries.

Her funeral is today, Thursday 9th, at the Convent and I just wanted to mark the entry into heaven of a dear friend.
So I have written the following poem.

Dear Sister Irène-Marie,
bearer of Peace,
held in the love of Mary,
you brought a singular joy into our lives.
We met you and sensed your nearness to God.
We were enraptured by your sacramental eyes
which mirrored the Divine.

Extending monastic  hospitium ,
you encircled us with welcome,
embracing our need with thoughtfulness
and gentle love, which was kept warm
within the folds of your habit.

Your listening expressed concern 
for a broken world from which you could draw
a reservoir of experience.
No hidden cell housed you.
The lives of others glazed your windows
and held open the door from which rays of love shone.

Most of all, you ‘wrote’ visible signs
of  God’s Presence  in Jesus and the Saints.
You dipped your brush and pen
in the palette and inkwell of God.
From the depth of your prayerful iconography
you led us into the heart of faith
which has led you now into the bosom of your Saviour,
for as you said, that is what you, (and we,) “are here for.”

Thank you for opening and sharing the images
of your faith with us.
By you we have been truly blessed.

[Mr. G. 8th February 2023]

Icon, Resurrection : Sister Irène-Marie.

Prayer after an earthquake

Photo source. CNN

A Prayer for After the Earthquake in Turkey & Syria

Lord, at times such as this,
when we realize that the ground beneath our feet
is not as solid as we had imagined,
we plead for your mercy.

As the things we have built crumble about us,
we know too well how small we truly are
on this ever-changing, ever-moving,
fragile planet we call home.

Yet you have promised never to forget us.
Do not forget us now.
Today, so many people are afraid.
They wait in fear of the next tremor.
They hear the cries of the injured amid the rubble.

They roam the streets in shock at what they see.
And they fill the dusty air with wails of grief
and the names of missing dead.
Comfort them, Lord, in this disaster.
Be their rock when the earth refuses to stand still,
and shelter them under your wings when homes no longer exist.
Embrace in your arms those who died so suddenly this day.
Console the hearts of those who mourn,
and ease the pain of bodies on the brink of death.

Pierce, too, our hearts with compassion,
we who watch from afar,
as the poorest on this side of the earth
find only misery upon misery.
Move us to act swiftly this day,
to give generously every day,
to work for justice always,
and to pray unceasingly for those without hope.

And once the shaking has ceased,
the images of destruction have stopped filling the news,
and our thoughts return to life’s daily rumblings,
let us not forget that we are all your children
and they, our brothers and sisters.
We are all the work of your hands
For though the mountains leave their place
and the hills be tossed to the ground,
your love shall never leave us,
and your promise of peace will never be shaken.

Our help is in the name of the Lord,
who made heaven and earth.
Blessed be the name of the Lord,
now and forever.

Amen

[Diana Macalintal]

Copyright © Diana Macalintal, Diocese of San Jose, CA. Used with permission. Permission is given to reprint for noncommercial use. Originally written after the 2010 earthquake in Haiti. For additional resources from the Diocese of San Jose, visit www.dsj.org/being-catholic/worship.
Catholic Relief Services

source: GOAL Global.