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Archbishop and Chief Rabbis Sign Historic Agreement
The Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams and the Chief Rabbis
of Israel, Chief Rabbi Shlomo Amar and Chief Rabbi Yonah Metzger today
signed a joint Declaration which sets out a framework for continuing dialogue
between them. Dr Williams described the agreement as historic:
“This is a most significant step in developing better mutual understanding
and trust between the Anglican Communion and the Chief Rabbinate and worldwide
Judaism.”
The Archbishop was supported in the meeting by the Coadjutor Bishop
in Jerusalem, The Rt Revd Suheil Dawani and by Bishops Michael Jackson
and John Stroyan. The Chief Rabbis were supported by Rabbi David Rosen
and by the Chief Rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations, Sir Jonathan
Sacks. The Archbishop paid tribute to Sir Jonathan and to Bishop Suheil
for their constructive roles in the discussions leading to this meeting.
The agreement adds to the growing network of bilateral and multilateral
dialogues between religious leaders in the Middle East and in the wider
world. This network of dialogue is a major contribution to a world in which
religious faith is an increasingly important dimension of people’s
lives and of national policies.
At a reception to witness the signing of the joint declaration, attended
by 70 leaders of the Jewish and Christian communities of England, the guests
heard a presentation by the Chief Executive of the Council of Christians
and Jews and by the Director of the Centre for the Study of Jewish Christian
Relations. The presentations illustrated the range of new initiatives taken
by these two complementary organisations to take forward relationships
between Christian and Jewish communities in England.
Dr Williams said that the agreement would help to advance inter faith
relations:
“This is a potentially fruitful development for relations between
Christians and Jews in general and for the peoples of the Holy Land in
particular. What we’ve agreed today will provide a framework within
which both practical and sometimes challenging issues can be discussed
on the basis of mutual trust and respect”.
The Archbishop and the Chief Rabbis also agreed on the need for a renewed
sense of urgency in the search for long term peace, justice and security
in the Middle East in general and in Israel and the Palestinian territories
in particular. The Archbishop and Chief Rabbis called for the greatest
possible response to the need now for reconstruction and rebuilding both
of the physical infrastructure and of the emotional and psychological relations
of Christian, Jewish and Muslim believers in the region. Dr Williams said
that the dialogue would make trust and cooperation easier to establish:
“We have acknowledged the tensions that shadow the present situation
particularly the ongoing tragic conflicts in the Holy Land. But our hope
has rested very firmly on this; that without friendship and mutual confidence,
without the ability to speak to one another candidly and lovingly, we shall
never be in a position where our relationship can change things and challenge
things and move the situation forward.”
The Chief Rabbis emphasised the responsibility of religious leaders
to do their utmost to ensure that religion is not abused for violent ends.
ENDS
The text of agreement:
Joint declaration by
The Archbishop of Canterbury The Most Revd Dr Rowan Williams
and
The Chief Rabbis of IsraelChief Rabbi Shlomo Amar and Chief Rabbi Yonah
Metzger
- The Most Revd Dr Rowan Williams, Archbishop of Canterbury, Chief Rabbi
Shlomo Amar and Chief Rabbi Yonah Metzger of Israel, met in friendship
at Lambeth Palace on 5th September 2006/12th of Elul 5766, to commit themselves
to a continuing relationship based on mutual trust and respect. They gave
thanks to the Creator and Lord of the universe for their meeting. At the
end of their meeting they made the following statement:
- “We meet today as religious leaders, Anglican Christians and
Israeli Jews, each part of the wider world community of Christianity and
Judaism. We seek a dialogue which draws both on our particularity and also
on the universal nature of our respective communities and which makes its
contribution to the wider dialogue of the religions of the world in which
we share.
- Our meeting forms a further and hopeful chapter in the long story of
the relationship between Christianity and Judaism. It is a story in which
Christianity emerges from within Judaism, but includes down the centuries
all too many times of violence and persecution by Christians of Jews. It
also includes significant signs of redemption and hope for a fruitful future
together, not least in the United Kingdom where the resettlement of the
Jewish communities after three and a half centuries of exile is being celebrated
this year. The United Kingdom, encouraged by its Christian community, was
involved in the origins of the State of Israel and the Church of England
was instrumental in initiating the first Council of Christians and Jews
in the dark days of 1942. Since those terrible times of the Holocaust a
relationship between our communities, nationally and internationally, has
grown from the steady work of encounter, discussion, reflection and reconciliation.
- This relationship has not been without setbacks and difficulties, but
for the Church of England and the Anglican Communion this is a commitment
that reflects a continued determination to honour the covenant made by
God with Abraham. The outworking of this determination is found in many
places: in our welcome for the foundational document ‘Nostra Aetate’[1] of
our sister Roman Catholic Church in 1965 which has happily led to her present
relationship of dialogue with representatives of the Chief Rabbinate of
Israel; in the recommendations of the Lambeth Conferences of 1988 and 1998
and the document ‘Sharing One Hope’[2] [3];
in the joint declaration by the Presidents of the Council of Christians
and Jews on anti-Semitism in 2001[4];
in the work of the office of the Archbishop of Canterbury towards the Alexandria
declaration in 2002 [5];
in our strong support for the inauguration of a national Holocaust Memorial
Day in the United Kingdom; and in the statements made by the Archbishop
on those occasions[6].
Our prayer is that the Almighty will redeem our past and direct our future.
- The dialogue between religions is an essential need of our time and
requires that all people of faith bend their best efforts to this common
task. In this connection we are sensitive in particular to the importance
of continuing to develop our relationships of trust with Islam, nationally
in our two countries and internationally. For Christians and Jews, however,
the task of building mutual relationship has a different and prior basis
than our dialogue with any other religion. Our relationship is unique,
not only historically and culturally, but also scripturally, and for both
religions, is rooted in the one overarching covenant of God with Abraham
to which God remains faithful through all time. It is unique historically
through the interaction of the Christian and Jewish communities, especially
in Europe down to the Holocaust; and it is unique in the contributions
made through the arts, science and humanities to a common culture.
- Our meeting today builds also on the personal relationships which have
grown between us from our previous occasions of personal meeting in Europe
and in Israel and from our correspondence. We expect and intend that the
friendship and respect that we hold for each other will continue to grow
and provide an example to our communities.
- We consider that the purpose of this and future meetings is to provide
new opportunities for dialogue between us. Dialogue has profound value
in its own right and its purposes are mutual understanding and respect
of each others’ traditions and beliefs; the sharing of common concerns;
the development of personal human relationships, and in all these things
an openness to God’s initiative. Neither evangelism nor conversion
has a place amongst the purposes of the dialogue and we emphasise the importance
of respect for each other’s faith and of rejecting actions intended
to undermine the integrity of the other.
- We recognise that we meet in the context of troubled times in many
parts of a world where religious faith has an increasingly significant
place in shaping the thoughts and actions of people and communities. We
note both signs of hope and of concern and we seek to play our part in
enabling mutual understanding between religions for the good of the world.
- Amongst our profound concerns is the rise of anti-semitism in Britain
and the rest of Europe, in the Middle East and across the world at the
present time. This is a scourge that we are committed to struggle against.
Where it is fostered within communities of faith we have particular responsibilities
which we will not shirk; where it is fostered by governments or political
parties we will openly oppose it; at all times we will seek to educate
the coming generations in the history of anti-semitism, recognising that
there have been times when the Church has been complicit in it.
- The Holy Land has a very special place in our heritage, as it also
has for Muslims. We long for the time of peace and justice spoken of by
Isaiah: ”I will make a new heavens and a new earth. They will neither
harm nor destroy on all my holy mountain”, but we are also conscious
that we are far from such a time. The Holy Land and its people, Jewish,
Christian and Muslim, continue to suffer all forms of violence and its
consequences. Terrorism remains rife. Governments and political and religious
movements deny the very right to existence of the State of Israel. There
is no agreement on the rights of the Palestinian people and the means to
mutual wellbeing and flourishing.
- In these circumstances we commit ourselves afresh to the task of peace
making in the Holy Land and we believe that our meeting today is both a
sign and a potentially fruitful action to that end.
- We reaffirm for ourselves today the condemnations of violence made
by our colleagues and predecessors such as in the 2002 Alexandria Declaration.
We reaffirm our belief in the rights of the state of Israel to live within
recognised and secure borders and to defend itself by all legal means against
those who threaten its peace and security. We condemn without reserve those
who deny a place for Israel and especially those who engage in the evil
work of seeking to bring about its destruction. We warmly encourage all
forms of constructive engagement, whether religious, humanitarian or economic,
which seek to enable closer bonds between individuals and communities.
- In our meeting today, we have listened carefully to each other and
have taken note of those aspects of our common experience and current situations
which can form the basis for further discussion and reflection. In this
connection we note in particular our respective relationships with national
governance and the potential for good and for ill that this offers; our
common hopes for the good of our societies; our concern to find ways in
which our younger generations will understand and appreciate their faith;
and in these times when worldwide the bonds of family and community are
weakened, we hope to share the possibilities open to us to seek together
ways to their strengthening.
- In all these matters we have at heart the imperative to seek ways to
show the love of God to our fellow human beings and our communities with
whom we share our times and places. Our hope is that by this dialogue we
may allay some of the misunderstandings and anxieties in our countries
by showing a mutual concern for peace, security and mutual respect.
- Conscious of the above, we express our mutual desire to begin a time
of dialogue and conversation in the coming years. We affirm that this will
be a dialogue of mutual respect in which we seek only to understand each
other better and to strengthen our own communities and their affection
and respect for each other. To this end we commit ourselves to further
meetings in Jerusalem and at Lambeth and to invite others in our wider
communities to join with us. We charge our colleagues together to put in
hand the necessary arrangements which will make for further fruitful meetings.
Signed
Chief Rabbi Shlomo Amar of Israel
Chief Rabbi Yonah Metzger of Israel
The Most Revd Dr Rowan Williams, Archbishop of Canterbury
Dated: 5th September 2006
12th of Elul, 5766
Notes
1. 1965 “Declaration
on the relation of the Church to non-Christian Religions” . Available
at:
www.vatican.va/archive/hist_councils/ii_vatican_council/documents/vat-ii_decl_19651028_nostra-aetate_en.htm
2. 1988 and
1998 Lambeth Conferences. “Jews, Christians and Muslims: The Way
of Dialogue”. Extract from the Report of the Dogmatic and Pastoral
Section Lambeth Conference 1988
3. 2001 Sharing
one Hope? The Church of England and Christian-Jewish Relations. Church
House Publishing
4. Joint declaration
by the Presidents of the Council of Christians and Jews on anti-Semitism
in 2004. Available at:
http://www.ccj.org.uk/ccj-frames.htm?contents=articles-docs.htm
5. Alexandria
declaration in 2002.
Available at:
http://www.ccj.org.uk/ccj-frames.htm?contents=articles-docs.htm
6.;2006 Holocaust Memorial Day statement by the Archbishop of Canterbury. Available at:
http://www.archbishopofcanterbury.org/386
Also See:
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