The Churches in Manicaland, on March 5, 2002, issued a pre-election statement, "A Time to Choose", to the people of Zimbabwe. In this post election period we wish to issue…
It's a February afternoon in the General Synod library. The phone rings and the caller is seeking a video from the national church's long-closed resource centre. It must be Lent,…
A national church committee will descend upon this tiny, remote First Nations community in the diocese of Keewatin for its March meeting. The gathering's setting is to inform the work…
Negotiators for the Anglican Church on the Indian Residential Schools issue concluded the third round of meetings with the federal government this week in Vancouver. The two-day meeting was attended…
The ecumenical group which has been negotiating with the federal government over financial settlements from residential school lawsuits has disbanded following the decision by the Anglican Church of Canada to…
At a meeting last week in Vancouver, representatives from the Anglican, Presbyterian, Roman Catholic and United Church organizations, concluded that there is no longer a basis for ecumenical negotiations with…
Got 'im, got 'im, need 'im. It's the sound of baseball and hockey card collectors, poring over their hoard. But a southern Ontario church is putting some unlikely heroes on…
An accounting software problem is to blame for thousands of tax receipts being sent out late to donors to the Anglican Journal appeal. Larry Gee, the Journal's business manager, reports…
This acknowledgement is crafted in light of the Principles of Reconciliation by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, as we seek to live faithfully in Christ and in right relationship with all.
We give thanks to the Creator for this land, its waters, forests and all living beings, and for the abiding presence of Christ among us. From coast to coast to coast, these have been cared for and nurtured by First Nations, Inuit and Métis through countless generations.
We honour the enduring relationship Indigenous Peoples have cultivated with these lands and waters, and the treaties and agreements that reflect these sacred bonds. We acknowledge the harms caused by colonial expansion, through frameworks like the Doctrine of Discovery and structures like the residential school system. We recognize our past failures as a Church, including disruption of connections to the land and suppression of Indigenous spiritualities.
Guided by the gospel of Jesus Christ, we confess our need for healing. We commit ourselves to seeking truth, pursuing reconciliation and nurturing harmony with all creation. We place our trust in Christ, through whom all things are reconciled to God.
May God strengthen us to live faithfully as stewards of the Earth. Let us walk in love, justice and reconciliation, joining in God’s work to restore all creation.