Title: Lambeth Conference Human Rights Resolution Endorsed and Commended
ID: EXC021979.02
Committee: Church in Society (report 3)
Citation: Executive Council Minutes, Feb. 14-15, 1979, Greenwich, CT, pp. 15-16.
Text:

Resolved, That the Executive Council hereby endorse the following resolution concerning "Human Rights" passed at the recent Lambeth Conference, and commend it to each of the members of this branch of the Anglican Communion:

The Conference regards the matter of human rights and dignity of capital and universal importance. We send forth the following message as expressing our convictions in Christ for the human family worldwide. We deplore and condemn the evils of racism and tribalism, economic exploitation and social injustices, torture, detention without trial and the taking of human lives as contrary to the teaching and example of our Lord in the Gospel. Man is made in the image of God and must not be exploited. In many parts of the world these evils are so rampant that they deter the development of a humane society. Therefore,

  1. We call on all governments to uphold human dignity; to defend human rights, including the exercise of freedom of speech, movement and worship, in accordance with the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights, the rights to be housed, freedom to work, the right to eat, the right to be educated; and to give human value and worth precedence over social and ethnic demarcations, regardless of sex, creed or status;
  2. We thank God for those faithful Christians who individually and collectively witness to their faith and conviction in the face of persecution, torture and martyrdom; and for those who work for and advocate human rights and peace among all peoples; and we assure them of our prayers, as in penitence and hope we long to see the whole Church manifesting in its common life a genuine alternative to the acquisitiveness and division which surround it, and indeed penetrate it;
  3. We pledge our support for those organizations and agencies which have taken positive stands on human rights and those which assist with refugee problems;
  4. We urge all Anglicans to seek positive ways of educating themselves about the liberation struggle of peoples in many parts of the world;
  5. Finally we appeal to all Christians to lend their support to those who struggle for human freedom and who press forward in some places at great personal and corporate risk; we should not abandon them even if the struggle becomes violent. We are reminded that the ministry of the Church is to reveal the love of God by faithful proclamation of His Word, by sacrificial service and by fervent prayers for His rule on Earth.
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