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Thursday, 7 January 2021

God Bless America

To my American friends and all those affected by the events of yesterday on Capitol Hill; my prayers go with you.

Democracy has never been perfect; America has never been perfect, but yesterday both received a shocking blow to their fragile sense of order.

Democracy is fragile, but it is made strong by those who are committed to it.

Democracy is not perfect, but it is so much better than the vacuum that is left in its absence.

Yet there is hope, I believe, in the small but significant majority who know what happened was wrong; there is hope in the knowledge that even during this dark day, a black pastor and a Jewish son of an immigrant were voted into the Senate from Georgia, a southern state. There is hope that what we see in this moment is the fever breaking; that the last throws of this disease of anti-democratic, self-delusional denial of reality, in breaking to the surface in this moment, is finally burning itself out. This is the hope I cling to in this moment.

I cling to the hope that there will be a renewed commitment to honesty and truth. Though America’s democracy clearly needs to move to a place of forgiveness and reconciliation, that place needs to be reached by holding the truth to account, and this can only be done if those individuals and groups who have sought to abuse and abandon the truth are also held to account.

For the first time ever I will say this phrase, and I say it not with the nationalist triumphalism with which it is normally said, but with sadness, and sympathy, and the genuine hope that people of faith will take seriously the gravity of responsibility that is on their shoulders; I say it with the knowledge that it is not about a privilege received, but a covenant that American Christians should promise to uphold, in solidarity with the work of God throughout this world - may God bless America.


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