ENS reports on the Presiding Bishop's visit to Brazil

Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori is on an official visit to the Province of Brazil this week. ENS has its first report of her trip online. Here’s an excerpt:

Primate (or “Bispo Primaz” in Portuguese) since 2006, Andrade also pointed to the shared mission priorities engrained in the ties between the two churches, including pastoral and environmental care consonant with inter-Anglican commitments to achieving the United Nations Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

One emphases is environmental advocacy informed by Amazon-region experts vigilant in the protection of Brazil’s unique natural resources: 12 percent of the planet’s fresh water and 20 percent of the world’s animal species are found in this vast nation of more than 8.5 million square miles and 170 million people — South America’s largest country with 26 states and one federal district — now working systematically to fight deforestation and climate change.

Environmental minister outlines progress
Welcoming the delegation on July 6 to government offices in Brasilia, national environmental minister Marina Silva told the group of the “holistic, integrated” work of protecting the nation’s unique biodiversity locally, regionally and globally amid such factors as climate change and economic exploitation.

Silva’s perspective, shaped by her own upbringing in the Amazon, takes an egalitarian, comprehensive, multi-agency approach to environmental protection seeking “self-maintaining development,” she said.

Because Brazil is “a developing country, we cannot talk about the environment unless we talk about the social issues facing the nation, including the distribution of wealth and the reality of 53 million people living below the poverty line,” Silva said, speaking through interpreter Ruth Barros, wife of Amazonia bishop Saulo Barros, also present for the briefing.

The Barroses had earlier that afternoon outlined for the delegation the challenges of ministry in the newly formed Amazonia diocese where social services are stretched to capacity given demand. The diocese would benefit from a companion relationship with a dedicated and supportive diocese of the Episcopal Church, the delegation agreed.

Similar existing and emerging companion relationships, in addition to Brasilia-Indianapolis, include Sao Paulo-Central Pennsylvania; Rio de Janeiro-Atlanta; Curitiba-California (San Francisco Bay Area); and Pelotas-Ottawa, Canada. Open to new companion relationships, in addition to Amazonia, are the Recife, Southern, and Southwestern dioceses, as well as the Missionary District of the West.

“The great challenge is to achieve a process of social inclusion that is just,” environmental minister Silva said, noting that in the last four years of Brazilian President Luis Inacio Lula da Silva’s government, the number of persons living in poverty has decreased by some 19.4 percent.

“Developing countries don’t want to make the same mistakes developed countries have made,” she added.

Silva spoke of her agency’s tenacious work to overcome problems with large-scale private-sector development projects, including the building of roadways.

“Now a diverse group of various segments of society is involved in building this road, and this group is evaluating the process to see the government keeping its promises according to the plan,” Silva said. “Today, the road is being built, and deforestation has diminished by some 91 percent.”

She said the matter of “combating deforestation in the Amazon now involves 13 government ministries” coordinated by national officials under a plan begun in 2004.

“In the beginning, no one believed it would work. In its second year, the plan decreased deforestation in this area by 50 percent,” Silva said, “and this year, the plan’s third year, it appears that deforestation will decrease again.”

Noting Jefferts Schori’s own training as an oceanographer, Silva spoke of the need to protect Brazil’s fresh water supply and unique animal species.

Jefferts Schori, in sermons following the dialogue, said Silva “has passion and certainty about her work, and she believes it is about bringing peace that is only about bringing justice”¦ bringing abundance to those who suffer with so little,” considering the “whole garden” of creation.

Preaching in both the Brasilia and Porto Alegre cathedrals on the Sunday scripture lessons of Isaiah 6:1-8 and John 20:19-23, Jefferts Schori called the congregations to “Receive Holy Spirit, and go out there to build a world of peace.”

She asked: “What prevents us from being able to say ‘yes’ to God’s dream of a healed world? Who can God send? Who will go for us?

“The prayer of our hearts is that we will be able to say, ‘Here I am, send me,'” she said. “May peace be the product of our hands and hearts and minds. May we be peace for the whole world.”

The full article is here.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, - Anglican: Latest News, Anglican Provinces, Episcopal Church (TEC), Presiding Bishop

5 comments on “ENS reports on the Presiding Bishop's visit to Brazil

  1. Br_er Rabbit says:

    Sshhh.. Hush…. No one must say the world “Cavalcante”…

  2. BrianInDioSpfd says:

    The Diocese of Springfield still has a companion diocese relationship with the Diocese of Recife and Bishop Robinson Cavalcante. He visited us at our last diocesan synod.

  3. dwstroudmd+ says:

    environmentalism and social justice … just the things one needs to emphasize as the work of Holy Spirit … gospel de jour.

  4. Karen B. says:

    I was expecting to see a lot of comments here on the last line of the section excerpted above:

    [i][b]May we be peace for the whole world[/b][/i] !!!!!!!!

    We are not anyone’s peace. It is CHRIST of whom it is written:
    [i]For he himself is our peace, who has made us both one and has broken down in his flesh the dividing wall of hostility[/i] (Eph 2:14)

    Why not rather than this prayer-like “may we be peace” not use the perfectly good and Christ-centered prayer in 2 Peter 1:
    “May grace and peace be multiplied to you in the knowledge of God and of Jesus our Lord.”
    Peace is rooted in knowing Christ and through Him being in right relationship with the Father.

    +KJS (and ECUSA in general) does not seem capable of proclaiming this message.

    I’m continually surprised at the “tone-deafness” of so many statements and sermons and articles. And also continually amazed at their this-world secular focus. Pretty much every article like this or sermon I read leaves me echoing Mark’s question (also recorded in Matthew and Luke): For what does it profit a man to gain the whole world and forfeit his soul?

    Indeed, I wonder.

  5. Tom Roberts says:

    Skimming toplevels without glasses for me yields

    “May we be a piece of the whole world.”

    And I thought 815 was going “back to basics”.